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Query: UMLS:C0677930 (
primary tumor
)
20,210
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Results of light and electron-microscopic studies of primary pancreatic tumor and of metastasis in a new case of
Pancreatic Cholera
(P.C.) are reported. The
primary tumor
but not the metastases, contained unusual, large cystic glandular formations, lined both by pancreatic-duct- and small-intestine-like epithelia and closely connected with the endocrine proliferation. A part from a few D-cells, the endocrine tumoral cells could not be identified by histochemical stainings. Their ultrastructural pattern, with small secretory granules (diameter less than 300 nm) and numerous cytoplasmic bunches of filaments, was very similar to that of gastric and duodenal D1-cells. Normal duodenal D1-cells have been said to produce gastric inhibitory peptide, a substance structurally and biologically similar to the vasoactive intestinal peptide actually secreted by the tumor. The normal histological appearance of gastric, gallbladder, jejunal, ileal, right and left colonic mucosae is consistent with the responsibility of the tumoral secretion in the impairment of gut functions in P.C.
...
PMID:Pancreatic cholera (W.D.H.A. syndrome). Histochemical and ultrastructural studies. 17 Jul 29
We report the case of a patient with
Verner-Morrison syndrome
due to a malignant MEN I-associated vipoma. Marked tumor-associated hypercalcemia could be treated successfully with somatostatin analogues prior to surgical therapy of the pancreatic tumor. Sixteen months after extirpation of the
primary tumor
recurrent tumor growth was diagnosed; at this time the patient was clinically asymptomatic and had no abnormal laboratory test results. Liver metastases and local metastases were identified using somatostatin receptor scintigraphy. We report and discuss the use of somatostatin in the treatment of tumor-associated symptoms in endocrine tumors and the possibility of identifying endocrine tumors by means of somatostatin receptor scintigraphy.
...
PMID:[Somatostatin in preoperative therapy and postoperative diagnosis of a patient with Verner Morrison syndrome]. 128 41
Endocrine pancreatic tumors are slowly growing neuroendocrine neoplasms with a malignant potential which may cause symptoms such as hypoglycemia, multiple ulcers, diarrhea, flush, hyperglycemia and skin rash. A prospective study was performed on 84 patients with endocrine pancreatic tumors. In 59 patients (70%) the tumors were malignant. Of the 84 patients, 23 had insulinomas, 25 gastrinomas, 20 nonfunctioning tumors, 14 the
WDHA syndrome
, 1 somatostatinoma and 1 glucagonoma. The median age at diagnosis was 53 years and the median delay from first symptom to diagnosis was 2 years. The most common site of the pancreatic
primary tumor
was the tail (41%), and metastases were most frequently located in the liver (60%) and lymph nodes (44%). Plasma chromogranin A + B was elevated in 94%, serum pancreatic polypeptide (PP) in 74%, plasma neurotensin in 67% and serum gastrin in 62%. Serum HCG-alpha and -beta subunits were elevated in 41 and 30% respectively, all except 3 having a verified malignant tumor. The median survival from first symptom and diagnosis was 14.2 and 8.7 years respectively. Patients with MEN-1 had a significantly better survival from diagnosis than sporadic cases (median 15.1 versus 5.8 years). Patients who received interferon after failing chemotherapy had a significantly better survival than those given chemotherapy alone (5-year survival 65 and 50% respectively).
...
PMID:Neuroendocrine pancreatic tumors. Clinical findings in a prospective study of 84 patients. 247 25
Gastrointestinal neuroendocrine tumors are slowly growing and metastases are often limited to the liver. As a result of their favorable biological behavior these tumors have a relatively good prognosis even in metastatic stage. Due to a variety of therapeutic options patients with malignant neuroendocrine tumors may survive for extended periods of time up to ten years. Often a combination of different treatments and also alternation between the different therapeutic regimes is needed. A patient with excessive
WDHA
-syndrome and severe metabolic disturbances due to a pancreatic VIPoma with metastatic spread into the liver and abundant hormonal secretion is presented. Cytotoxic agents (streptozocin, 5-fluorouracil and adriamycin) were able to alleviate clinical symptoms and to control tumor growth for six years. Analogues of somatostatin (octreotide) and interferon alpha had been very useful in controlling clinical symptoms and tumor progress for 18 months. Cytotoxic agents or octreotide were not able, however, to achieve any permanent cure. Eventually, treatment failure occurred with dramatic progression of symptoms and tumor growth, unresponsive to any medical therapy. Consequently, total hepatectomy and liver transplantation together with extirpation of the pancreatic
primary tumor
was performed and succeeded in providing a normal life to the patient. In our opinion the overall outcome of patients with metastatic VIPoma may be improved best by maintaining the patients on medical therapy until treatment failure occurs. In case of extended hepatic metastases orthotopic liver transplantation might be considered for patients with symptomatic disease who no longer respond to conventional treatment modalities.
...
PMID:Metastatic pancreatic VIPoma: deteriorating clinical course and successful treatment by liver transplantation. 957 8
A major problem in patients with small endocrine tumors is the difficulty in localizing the
primary tumor
site. Many endocrine tumors possess larger amounts of high affinity vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP) binding sites compared with normal tissue or blood cells. We used radiolabeled VIP to localize the tumor site in a patient with
Verner-Morrison syndrome
(VMS). Under octreotide therapy, the VIP levels had declined in this patient, but a tumor site could not be detected by conventional techniques or by radiolabeled octreotide. However, using 123I-VIP, the tumor was detectable in the pancreatic tail. Surgical resection of the tumor was followed by complete remission of the VMS. Expression of VIP binding sites in the tumor was confirmed by a radioreceptor assay and showed cross-competition between VIP and octreotide. The identity of the VIP binding site in the tumor was analyzed by Northern blotting and revealed the expression of somatostatin receptor subtype 3, which binds both somatostatin-14 and VIP with higher affinity than octreotide. Iodine-123-VIP scintigraphy would be an effective tracer to identity the tumor site in VMS patients.
...
PMID:Location of a VIPoma by iodine-123-vasoactive intestinal peptide scintigraphy. 974 46