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Query: UNIPROT:P01275 (
glucagon
)
26,492
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The
glucagonoma
syndrome is a rare clinical condition characterized by a distinctive cutaneous eruption associated with a
glucagon
-secreting islet cell neoplasm of the pancreas. A 19-year-old woman manifested typical features of this condition: a polymorphous skin eruption with characteristic distribution of lesions in perioral and paragenital regions; lesions in sites of cutaneous trauma; a skin biopsy that showed epidermal cleavage; glossitis; weight loss; mild anemia; abnormal glucose tolerance test results. Plasma
glucagon
levels, determined by radioimmunoassay, were approximately five times normal. Angiography indicated a pancreatic tumor with liver metastases. Islet cell origin was confirmed histologically. It is hoped that wider recognition of the distinctive clinical features of this syndrome will result in earlier detection and possible surgical cure of the underlying malignancy.
...
PMID:The glucagonoma syndrome. A distinctive cutaneous marker of systemic disease. 20 56
The
glucagonoma
syndrome is characterized by necrolytic migratory erythema, glossitis, ungual dystrophy, diabetes mellitus, anemia, weight loss, elevated plasma
glucagon
levels and an alpha-cell
glucagon
-secreting neoplasm of the pancreas. We are reporting a case of this syndrome in a middle-aged woman, in whom the first complaints and signs were cutaneous. The recognition of the distinctive skin manifestations of the syndrome led to early diagnosis and treatment of the underlying malignant pancreatic tumor.
...
PMID:The glucagonoma syndrome. 20 68
The
glucagonoma
syndrome is another of those systemic disorders in which skin manifestations provide a clue to the diagnosis. The patient will most often be a middle-aged woman who has the characteristic, indolent skin lesions in the face of diabetes mellitus and additional features to suggest an occult carcinoma. Marked elevation of the levels of plasma
glucagon
should confirm the suspicion cure of the skin lesions follows cure of the tumor. Two lines of speculation seem promising. Either the initial event is an overproduction of
glucagon
and all other observations follow. Or the syndrome is another of the polyendocrine disorders. Cases are still too few to resolve either the pathophysiology, prognosis, or even to guess at the true frequency of the syndrome.
...
PMID:The glucagonoma syndrome. 21 45
A case of
glucagonoma
syndrome with necrolytic migratory erythema, glossitis, anemia, hyperglucagonemia and a malignant, pancreatic A-cell tumour in a 68-year-old male is described. Gel filtration of the highly elevated circulating
glucagon
immunoreactivity (2200 pg/ml) demonstrated 60% pancreatic
glucagon
and 30% "proglucagon". Metabolic studies before operation demonstrated suppression of the total plasma
glucagon
concentration on oral glucose tolerance test, unchanged total plasma
glucagon
concentration during intravenous glucose tolerance test and insulin-induced hypoglycemia. Administration of arginine was followed by a rise in both the pancreatic
glucagon
and the "proglucagon", whereas alanine increased only the pancreatic
glucagon
. The plasma somatostatin level was immeasurable preoperatively. Somatostatin infusion completely suppressed the release of the pancreatic
glucagon
but did not significantly affect the "proglucagon". After removal of the tumour the skin lesions disappeared and the total plasma
glucagon
values fell to normal levels (120 pg/ml). Also, other abnormal laboratory findings returned to normal, including the preoperatively observed renal glucosuria.
...
PMID:Metabolic studies and glucagon gel filtration pattern before and after surgery in a case of glucagonoma syndrome. 21 26
Pancreas and gut hormones are involved in many endocrine and gastrointestinal diseases. Radioimmunoassays for these hormones have proved particularly valuable in diagnosis, localisation and control of treatment of endocrine tumours, of which many are mixed. An estimate based on ten years experience in a homogenous population of 5 million inhabitants (Denmark) suggests, that endocrine gut tumour-syndromes on an average appear with an incidence of 1 patient per year/syndrome/million. At present six different syndromes are known: 1) The insulinoma syndrome, 2) The Zollinger-Ellison syndrome.3) The Verner-Morrison syndrome. 4) The
glucagonoma
syndrome. 5) The somatostatinoma syndrome, and 6) the carcinoid syndrome. Accordingly diagnostically valuable RIAs for pancreas and gut hormones include those for insulin, gastrin, VIP, HPP,
glucagon
, somatostatin, and presumably also substance P. It is probably safe to predict that the need for gut and pancreas hormone RIAs within the next decade will increase greatly in order to assure proper management of tumours producing gastroentero-pancreatic hormones.
...
PMID:Radioimmunoassay in diagnosis, localization and treatment of endocrine tumours in gut and pancreas. 22 84
Most, if not all, of the
glucagon
-producing tumours of the pancreas are malignant. For this reason an early diagnosis is essential. The
glucagonoma
syndrome is associated with a skin rash, stomatitis, anaemia, glucose-intolerance, hypoaminoacidaemia, weight loss, elevated sedimentation rate and hyperglucagonaemia. The more important and constant findings are the skin lesion, the low level of aminoacids in the blood and the increased
glucagon
concentrations. The skin lesion is not pathognomonic, but any therapy-resistant bullous dermatosis which microscopically is characterized by epidermal changes should alert the clinician to suspect a
glucagonoma
. The syndrome can be proved by demonstration of hyperglucagonaemia and a pancreatic tumour.
...
PMID:Possible entries to the diagnosis of a glucagon-producing tumour. 22 89
Gastro-entero-pancreatic (GEP) and bronchial endocrine tumours have been studied by immunohistochemistry using specific antisera against a variety of hormonal and neuronal peptides. In gastrinomas numerous tumour cells were found to contain GH-like immunoreactivity. These cells were identical with those storing gastrin. Gastrinomas as a rule were extremely heterogeneous containing a variety of minority cell populations, including CCK immunoreactive cells and neurotensin immunoreactive cells.
Glucagonoma
cells were found to store GIP-like material in addition to
glucagon
. In some insulinomas calcitonin-like material was encountered in the insulin producing tumour cells. In both glucagonomas and insulinomas other pancreatic endocrine cell types constituted minority cell populations. One intestinal somatostatinoma contained gastrin cells as a minority cell population. Bronchial endocrine tumours contained scattered cells displaying ACTH-like or enkephalin-like immunoreactivity. Two such tumours in addition contained cells displaying neurophysin immunoreactivity.
...
PMID:Majority and minority cell populations in GEP and bronchial endocrine tumours. 22 92
A 34-year-old man presented with classic
glucagonoma
syndrome manifested by weight loss, dermatitis, stomatitis, anemia, and mild diabetes mellitus. The diagnosis of
glucagonoma
was made by light and electron microscopic demonstration of a metastatic alpha cell carcinoma in a liver biopsy specimen. Plasma
glucagon
concentration was abnormally high. The patient also had symptoms and signs of involvement of the central nervous system. Radionuclide and CAT scans of the brain, negative CSF cytology and myelography excluded the possibility of metastases or other space-occupying lesions.
Glucagon
was demonstrated in the CSF. We postulate that the neurologic symptoms were due to direct or indirect effect of this hormone on the brain. Following therapy with streptozotocin and 5-fluorouracil, the patient had a subjective and objective clinical and hormonal remission of his disease including amelioration of his neurological impairment.
...
PMID:Neurologic involvement in glucagonoma syndrome: response to combination chemotherapy with 5-fluorouracil and streptozotocin. 22 32
Three cases of
glucagonoma
syndrome caused by
glucagon
producing pancreatic islet cell tumors are reported. Modern procedures for diagnosis, localization, and classification are presented and advocated.
...
PMID:[Glucagon-producing endocrine pancreas tumors. Symptoms, diagnosis, localization, therapy and follow-up]. 23 72
The normal physiological role of
glucagon
is in controlling hepatic glucose output.
Glucagon
subserves the role of homeostasis by maintaining plasma glucose and of a stress hormone by producing hyperglycaemia. While control of
glucagon
release by circulating metabolites and also other hormones is clearly important, it seems likely that the nervous system exerts an over-riding influence. The parasympathetic nervous system maintains homeostasis and the sympathetic acts in stress.
Glucagon
levels are found to be high in cirrhosis and also after acute hepatic failure. It is likely that these changes in
glucagon
concentration are secondary to metabolic abnormalities. While some
glucagon
is cleared by the liver, a similar clearance is seen by many other tissues and it is not likely that the elevation of
glucagon
seen in liver failure is due solely to a gross deficiency of
glucagon
clearance. No liver abnormality is seen in the
glucagonoma
syndrome, where
glucagon
concentration are chronically high, or in patients who have had a total pancreatectomy, where plasma
glucagon
is undetectably low. It thus seems unlikely that liver mass is importantly controlled by
glucagon
.
...
PMID:Signals for glucagon secretion. 24 99
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