Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0677930 (primary tumor)
20,210 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

With better methods of diagnosis, patients will be identified earlier in the course of their disease and will often have atypical and borderline manifestations of the syndrome. Serum gastrin measurements with calcium and especially with secretin challenge will be the most important method of diagnosis. Any patient with acid hypersecretion who has a high serum gastrin level that does higher on secretin infusion should be considered to have the Zollinger-Ellison syndrome. A firm diagnosis of the Zollinger-Ellison syndrome should be made, if at all possible, prior to operation. At operation, a thorough search of the pancreas, duodenum, stomach, greater and lesser omentum and liver should be made for primary and secondary gastrinomas. If the preoperative data firmly establish the diagnosis of the Zollinger-Ellison syndrome, a total gastrectomy should be carried out even if no primary tumor is found. Similarly, a total gastrectomy should be done even if there are massive hepatic metastases. If total gastrectomy is not performed, the patient is apt to die of complications of acid hypersecretion. The only possible exceptions to the rule of always performing a total gastrectomy are in asymptomatic patients with easily excisable tumors or patients with tumors of the duodenum that are easily excisable, providing that in both instances after the excision of the tumor the output of gastric acid as measured at operation is immediately halted. All possible metastatic tumor tissue should be removed. The more tumor tissue removed, the longer the patient will survive. Metastases should be treated aggressively. They do not disappear after total gastrectomy in our experience, and they may kill patients. Patients should be followed after operation with serial measurements of serum gastrin concentrations and by hepatic scintillation scans and hepatic angiography. If hepatic metastases develop, intrahepatic artery infusions of 5-fluorouracil may slow tumor growth.
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PMID:Natural history and experience with diagnosis and treatment of the Zollinger-Ellison syndrome. 114 7

We have examined the effects of the somatostatin analogue (SMS 201-995) in 10 patients with gastrinoma syndrome. Four had hepatic metastases, one had a tumor in a peripancreatic lymph node, two had resectable intrahepatic and intraduodenal gastrinomas, and in three the primary tumor was not found. Acutely, SMS 201-995 decreased acid secretion and restored the BAO/MAO ratio to normal in eight of eight patients. Basal and secretin-stimulated gastrin responses were suppressed but not normalized in eight of eight patients. Suppression of endogenous gastrin restored responsiveness to exogenous gastrin. Treatment for up to 12 months with SMS 201-995 controlled symptoms in six of eight patients, suppressed serum gastrin in three of five, and suppressed acid secretion in three of three patients. Treatment with SMS 201-995 in three patients for 5 months decreased tumor secretion of gastrin and diminished basal acid secretion, an effect that persisted in two of three patients 48 hours after withdrawal of SMS. In patients with metastatic disease who had high levels of gastrin, SMS treatment for 5 to 12 months did not inhibit tumor growth or decrease gastrin levels. SMS treatment arrested progression of tumor growth only in patients who had a reduction in gastrin and gastric acid secretion. We conclude that SMS may be useful in the management of gastrinoma patients by decreasing hypersecretion of gastrin and gastric acid and, over a longer term, may even change tumor capacity to release gastrin and gastric acid secretion. SMS may thus be useful as a palliative agent and as an adjunct to conventional treatment of the gastrinoma syndrome. SMS does not appear to shrink tumor mass in patients with very high basal gastrin levels.
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PMID:Somatostatin analogue (SMS 201-995) in patients with gastrinomas. 290 62

The intestinal carcinoid tumors of 26 patients were stained for the presence of serotonin, gastrin, somatostatin, motilin, secretin, glucagon, pancreatic polypeptide, ACTH, and neurotensin. Argentaffin and argyrophil stains were also performed in all cases. Thirty-five separate tumors (counting metastases and multiple primaries) from the 26 patients were studied. Serotonin was present in 30 of the 35 tumors. Nineteen tumors contained serotonin only. Fourteen tumors contained multiple neuroendocrine products. One tumor contained gastrin only. One tumor did not stain immunohistochemically, but was argyrophilic. Metastatic deposits were studied in nine patients. Some metastases produced the identical neuroendocrine products as the primary tumor, whereas others produced either additional or fewer hormones than the primary tumor. Moreover, different metastases from the same primary tumor were observed to produce different hormones. Argyrophilic cells were present in all cases and were much more numerous than cells staining by immunohistochemistry. Argyrophilic cells probably contain monoamines and polypeptide hormones in addition to those studied in this series. The argyrophil stain was the best general stain in this study for the demonstration of neuroendocrine cells. Argentaffin staining was negative in ten cases that were serotonin positive and two argentaffin positive cases were serotonin negative. The carcinoid syndrome, as clinically defined by the presence of flushing and diarrhea, was noted in five patients, all of whom had serotonin-containing small bowel carcinoids. Endocrine-related symptoms were not clinically appreciated in the remaining patients.
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PMID:The neuroendocrine products of intestinal carcinoids. An immunoperoxidase study of 35 carcinoid tumors stained for serotonin and eight polypeptide hormones. 618 28

Duodenal gastrinoma is recognized as a relatively common cause of Zollinger-Ellison syndrome, but its clinical and biological features are not well known. Here we report a case of duodenal gastrinoma with lymph node metastasis which was confirmed by pathology examinations. Hypergastrinemia and gastric acid hypersecretion were documented, but the secretin test showed negative results. An enlarged peripancreatic lymph node lying close to the pancreas head was the only positive finding on preoperative imaging studies. The results of the selective arterial secretin injection (SASI) test suggested that the primary tumor was located in the gastrinoma triangle. Finally, surgical exploration was carried out and a submucosal tumor, approximately 15 mm in size, was detected by intraoperative palpation at the posterior wall of the proximal portion of the duodenum. Intraoperative pathology examination demonstrated metastases to regional lymph nodes. The present case calls attention to the unique features of duodenal gastrinomas, which differ from those of pancreatic origin: a highly malignant potential for its small size, and submucosal location in the proximal duodenum. The SASI test is recommended for assessing the location of a primary lesion if it cannot be identified by various conventional imaging studies.
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PMID:Duodenal gastrinoma--clinical features and usefulness of selective arterial secretin injection test. 977 40