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Target Concepts:
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Query: UNIPROT:P01275 (
glucagon
)
26,492
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
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
Apudoma was found in the gall bladder removed in a 76-year-old woman because of the chronic calculous cholecystitis exacerbation.
Carcinoid syndrome
was absent clinically. Histologically, the tumour was a poorly differentiated carcinoid with areas of small cell and polymorphic carcinoma. Argyrophilic Pasquale reaction in the tumour cells was negative, electron microscopically small neurosecretory granules were found. Numerous ACTH-reactive cells and single serotonin-reactive cells were revealed in the tumour parenchyma by means of immunohistochemical PAP-method using antibodies against ACTH, serotonin, calcitonin, somatostatin, insulin,
glucagon
, P-substance. Focal hyperplasia and intestinal metaplasia of epithelium with the increase of the number of argyrophilic, ACTH-reactive cells were observed outside the tumour.
...
PMID:[A poorly differentiated apudoma of the gallbladder]. 170 8
Serotonin-producing pancreatic endocrine tumours are rare neoplasms which in most cases exhibit malignant biological behaviour. These tumours, in the majority of the well-documented cases, are composed of argyrophil- and argentaffin-positive cells which contain large pleomorphic neurosecretory granules. In contrast, argyrophilic non-argentaffin pancreatic endocrine tumours with tumour cells containing round neurosecretory granules are exceptional. In this study we describe such a tumour not associated with clinical evidence of
carcinoid syndrome
in a 60-year-old woman. Histological examination revealed tumour extension in pancreatic lymphatic vessels and veins but no evidence of locoregional or distant metastases. Ten months after surgery the patient showed no recurrence of the disease. Immunohistochemistry revealed cytoplasmic serotonin production in the tumour cells which were negative for anti-gastrin, insulin,
glucagon
, somatostatin, pancreatic polypeptide (PP), vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP) and ACTH. This study emphasizes the usefulness of combined ultrastructural and immunohistochemical investigations in order to identify and characterize the rare pancreatic endocrine tumours with serotonin production.
...
PMID:Serotonin-producing pancreatic endocrine tumour. Histological, ultrastructural and immunohistochemical study of a case. 196 80
Octreotide is a long-acting cyclic octapeptide with pharmacologic actions mimicking those of the natural hormone somatostatin. It can suppress the secretion of serotonin, as well as the gastroenteropancreatic peptides gastrin, vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP), insulin,
glucagon
, secretin, motilin, and pancreatic polypeptide. It also suppresses growth hormone and decreases splanchnic blood flow. Octreotide is completely and rapidly absorbed following subcutaneous injection and has an elimination half-life of 1.5 hours. Clinical trials reviewed here show octreotide useful in the treatment of diarrhea associated with VIP secreting tumors, as well as diarrhea and flushing associated with
carcinoid syndrome
, both conditions for which the drug is approved. Clinical trials involving the use of octreotide in the treatment of acromegaly are also reviewed. Adverse reactions to octreotide are mild to moderate and most commonly involve injection site pain and diarrhea. Drug interactions are apparently related to the drug's pharmacologic effects. Octreotide is given subcutaneously two to three times daily, with daily doses ranging from 50mcg to 1,500mcg per day. Further research appears necessary to clarify dosing issues.
...
PMID:Debut of a somatostatin analog: octreotide in review. 255 39
The chemistry, pharmacology, pharmacokinetics, clinical uses, adverse effects and drug interactions, dosage, availability and cost, and indications for use of octreotide, a new synthetic analogue of the peptide hormone somatostatin (SS), are reviewed. Like SS, octreotide suppresses secretion of pituitary growth hormone (GH) and thyrotropin and decreases release of a variety of pancreatic islet cell hormones including insulin,
glucagon
, and vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP). Octreotide also reduces splanchnic blood flow, gastric acid secretion, GI motility, and pancreatic exocrine function and alters the absorption of water, electrolytes, and nutrients from the GI tract. The elimination half-life of i.v. octreotide is 72-98 minutes, compared with 2-3 minutes for i.v. SS. Usual administration of octreotide is by the i.v. or s.c. route. Octreotide has been studied in the treatment of hormone-secreting pituitary tumors and pancreatic islet cell tumors. Octreotide therapy lowers GH secretion and improves clinical symptoms in patients with acromegaly and may suppress clinical symptoms to a greater degree than bromocriptine. Patients with
carcinoid syndrome
and VIP-secreting tumors (vipomas) have had substantial improvement in clinical symptoms with administration of octreotide. This agent does not appear to be effective in the treatment of nonvariceal upper GI bleeding and acute pancreatitis; its relative usefulness in the treatment of variceal bleeding is not established. Adverse effects associated with octreotide therapy generally have been mild, including pain or burning at the injection site, abdominal pain, and diarrhea. Octreotide has been shown to interfere with absorption of oral cyclosporine. Standard initial therapy is octreotide acetate 50-100 micrograms s.c. every 8-12 hours, with titration based on clinical and biochemical effects. Up to 3000 micrograms/day of octreotide acetate has been administered to patients with acromegaly without serious adverse effect. Octreotide is marketed under the brand name Sandostatin and is available in 1-mL ampuls containing 50, 100, and 500 micrograms of octreotide acetate. Because the conditions for which octreotide appears to be most effective are uncommon, the drug should be considered for addition to the formulary in tertiary-care institutions only; addition of octreotide to the formulary of a community hospital is probably unnecessary. The synthetic analogue octreotide is longer acting and more specific in pharmacologic action than SS.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Octreotide, a new somatostatin analogue. 265 11
The aim of this retrospective study was to correlate the results of hormonal immunocytochemistry of 46 endocrine tumors to the corresponding clinical syndromes in 24 patients. They were divided as following: 14 cases of insulinoma, 3 cases of Zollinger-Ellison syndrome, 1 case of glucagonoma, 1 case of
carcinoid syndrome
and 5 cases without any obvious endocrine manifestations. Each tumor was tested with anti-insulin, anti-
glucagon
, anti-pancreatic polypeptide, anti-vasoactive intestinal peptide, anti-gastrin immune sera according to the peroxidase-antiperoxidase method. The presence of insulin was proved in 13 of 14 cases of insulinomas and the presence of gastrin in 2 of 3 cases of Zollinger-Ellison syndrome. Among the 5 asymptomatic cases, a somatostatinoma and a vipoma were individualized. More than 50 p. 100 of the tumors showed plurihormonal secretion with one predominantly secreted hormone responsible for the clinical syndrome. This study demonstrated the diversity of the hormonal secretion by some tumors and their metastasis in the same patient. Malignant insulinomas correspond either to poorly secreting tumors or to plurihormonal tumors secreting gastrin and
glucagon
as well.
...
PMID:[Hormone immunocytochemical studies of 46 endocrine tumors of the pancreas in 24 patients]. 301 9
Eight ovarian heterologous Sertoli-Leydig cell tumors containing gastrointestinal-type cells, including two tumors that contained carcinoids, were stained for argyrophilia and argentaffinity; in addition, these specimens were stained by immunohistocytochemical techniques for the demonstration of chromogranin, serotonin, and a variety of peptide hormones. Intestinal- and gastric-type epithelial and carcinoid cells within the tumors were focally argyrophilic and chromogranin-positive, but only intestinal-type epithelial and carcinoid cells contained argentaffin granules, serotonin, and corticotropin. Somatostatin, gastrin, neurotensin, and
glucagon
were demonstrated additionally in varying numbers of specimens containing intestinal-type epithelium and carcinoid, and somatostatin was present in gastric-type epithelium in one case. Staining for calcitonin and insulin was negative. Despite the frequent identification of serotonin and peptide hormones in the tumors in the present series, evidence of the
carcinoid syndrome
or syndromes associated with peptide hormone excess was lacking on review of the patients' records.
...
PMID:Ovarian heterologous Sertoli-Leydig cell tumors with gastrointestinal-type epithelium. An immunohistochemical analysis. 375 27
Twenty-five endocrine tumors of the rectum (rectal carcinoids) were examined immunohistochemically for various pancreatic and gut neurohormonal polypeptides. Twenty-one of the tumors were found to contain cells displaying pancreatic polypeptide (PP),
glucagon
, somatostatin, insulin, substance P, enkephalin or beta-endorphin immunoreactivity. At least 11 of the tumors contained more than one peptide hormone. In some of the tumors PP cells made up the major cell population, in others the
glucagon
cells constituted the majority. Only four of the tumors contained 5-hydroxytryptamine. Rectal endocrine tumors seem unique among gut endocrine tumors in that they may store immunoreactive enkephalin, beta-endorphin and even insulin. None of the patients displayed the
carcinoid syndrome
; symptoms were usually vague and uncharacteristic. In many cases the tumor was found at routine examination.
...
PMID:Immunohistochemical evidence of peptide hormones in endocrine tumors of the rectum. 617 Apr 21
Twenty unselected breast carcinomas were examined for argyrophilia by the Sevier-Munger stain and for dense-core secretory granules by electron microscopy. All cases were examined for lactalbumin and five cases were also studied for gastrin, insulin, calcitonin, somatostatin,
glucagon
, ACTH, prolactin, and pancreatic polypeptide by an immunoperoxidase technique; two cases were further analyzed for lactalbumin by ultrastructural immunoperoxidase stain. Focal or diffuse argyrophilia was present in ten cases. Intracytoplasmic lactalbumin was present in seven of these cases, but immunoperoxidase staining for the neuroendocrine hormones was negative. Fine structural examination demonstrated varying numbers of 95 to 450-nm-diameter, round, membrane-bound, dense-core secretory granules in 13 cases. Nine of the granule-containing cases were also argyrophilic, and seven of these contained intracytoplasmic lactalbumin. Both the argyrophilia and the dense-core secretory granules thus correlated with the presence of intracytoplasmic lactalbumin. None of the 20 patients had clinical evidence of
carcinoid syndrome
or showed evidence of other hormone secretion. Argyrophilia and granular lactalbumin staining in a somewhat similar pattern was found in pregnant and lactating breast controls. Argyrophilia and ultrastructural dense-core granules are common in breast carcinomas and might represent lactational differentiation. These findings do not indicate the presence of a carcinoid tumor because in most of these tumors the secretory granules appear to contain milk protein secretory product rather than neuroendocrine polypeptides, and most argyrophilic tumors do not morphologically or clinically resemble carcinoid tumors.
...
PMID:Argyrophilic breast carcinomas: evidence of lactational differentiation. 618 Jun 51
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.
...
PMID:The neuroendocrine products of intestinal carcinoids. An immunoperoxidase study of 35 carcinoid tumors stained for serotonin and eight polypeptide hormones. 618 28
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