Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P01350 (gastrin)
9,683 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A 40-year-old woman had persistent Zollinger-Ellison syndrome despite excision of a 4-cm duodenal gastrinoma. Localizing studies including ultrasonography, computed tomography, magnetic resonance imaging, duodenal endoscopy, endoscopic ultrasonography, and intraoperative endoscopic transillumination of the duodenum failed to detect a tumor. Selective intra-arterial methylene blue injection was used to identify a 6-mm gastrinoma in the duodenum, which was locally excised. Postoperatively, the patient had a negative secretin provocative test result. This novel method uses selective arterial secretin injection with hepatic venous gastrin sampling to identify the vessel feeding the gastrinoma. An angiographic catheter is then positioned in this artery. At laparotomy, methylene blue is injected through this catheter to selectively stain the gastrinoma, facilitating its identification. Selective intra-arterial methylene blue injection can enhance intraoperative detection of small gastrinomas and may improve the rate of curative resection in the Zollinger-Ellison syndrome. Further evaluation of this novel localizing technique is warranted.
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PMID:Selective intra-arterial methylene blue injection: a novel method of localizing gastrinoma. 153 97

The chronic hypergastrinemia in diseases such as the Zollinger-Ellison syndrome has trophic effects on the gastric mucosa, causing increased parietal cell mass reflected by increased maximal acid output (MAO) and basal acid output (BAO). The time course for the development of these gastric changes in humans is unknown, and controversy exists regarding whether reversal of the hypergastrinemia results in rapid normalization of gastric secretory function. To address these uncertainties, gastric secretory function was prospectively evaluated in 20 patients with the Zollinger-Ellison syndrome undergoing successful curative resection of gastrinoma. Each patient had gastric acid measurements, imaging studies, fasting serum gastrin and secretin provocative testing preoperatively, postoperatively at 3-6 months, and yearly thereafter. Preoperative mean BAO was 39 mEq/h, MAO 56 mEq/h, BAO-MAO ratio 0.73, and fasting gastrin output 1020 pg/mL. All patients were evaluated at 6 months, 17 at 1 year, 15 at 2 years, 13 at 3 years, and 9 at 4 years. By 3-6 months, MAO decreased by 50% in men (mean, 30 mEq/h) and by 35% in women (mean, 29 mEq/h) and then remained relatively unchanged for up to 4 years. Before surgery, 14 of 20 patients (70%) had an elevated MAO, whereas 4 years after resection, none of 9 patients had elevated levels. By 3-6 months, BAO decreased by 75% and remained unchanged for up to 4 years. At 3-6 months, 56% of patients were mild hypersecretors and 67% remained hypersecretors up to 4 years. Preoperatively, the BAO-MAO ratio was elevated in 16 of 20 patients (80%); postoperatively, only 5 of 18 patients (28%) at 3-6 months, 2 of 15 (13%) at 1 year, and 2 of 10 (20%) at 4 years continued to have elevated ratios. Preoperatively, the mean ranitidine dose was 1597 mg/day, whereas after surgery the mean dose was 535 mg/day at 3-6 months and approximately 300 mg/day at 1-4 years with 8 patients requiring no antisecretory drug. These results show that the trophic effects of chronic hypergastrinemia are, in general, rapidly reversible with a 50% decrease in MAO within 3-6 months of cure. Similarly, BAO decreased by 75% within 3-6 months. Despite these decreases, careful monitoring of acid secretion is required after reversal of the chronic hypergastrinemia in diseases such as the Zollinger-Ellison syndrome, because 55% of patients at 3-6 months and up to 67% at 4 years continue to remain mild hypersecretors and require low doses of antisecretory drugs.
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PMID:Effects of curative gastrinoma resection on gastric secretory function and antisecretory drug requirement in the Zollinger-Ellison syndrome. 153 14

Following the curative resection of a pancreatic gastrinoma in a cat, gastrin peptides were purified from the tissue and sequenced. The sequence of cat gastrinoma G17 (18-34) confirms the previously published sequence. The sequence of cat G34 (1-34) is reported for the first time. The NH2-terminal portion of cat G34 differs from that of dog by having a Q (Gln) for L (Leu) at position 10 from the NH2-terminus.
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PMID:Cat gastrinoma and the sequence of cat gastrins. 158 19

Fasting serum gastrin levels greater than 1000 pg/ml are said to establish the diagnosis of gastrinoma in a patient with peptic ulcer disease. The authors observed a patient with recurrent peptic ulcer disease, diarrhea, and a fasting serum gastrin of 1044 pg/ml who had a gastrocolic fistula, not the Zollinger-Ellison syndrome. The provocative tests of gastrin secretion, including secretin infusion and standard meal test, were helpful in ruling out a gastrinoma. This is the first reported association of gastrocolic fistula and hypergastrinemia. The patient demonstrates that the differential diagnosis of markedly elevated serum gastrin should be expanded to include gastrocolic fistula.
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PMID:Case report: gastrocolic fistula mimicking Zollinger-Ellison syndrome. 160 71

A 63-year-old male was admitted to our department for further examination of hypergastrinemia. Secretin provocation test and calcium infusion test suggested Zollinger-Ellison syndrome and percutaneous transhepatic portal venous sampling (PTPVS) demonstrated gastrinoma in the jejunum, although CT, ultrasonography and angiography could not accurately detect the location of the gastrinoma. Laparotomy findings showed a solid tumor 1.5 cm in diameter in the jejunal mesentery 5 cm distal to the ligament of Treitz, and primary gastrinoma was confirmed in the submucosa of the jejunum immediately adjacent to this tumor. An immunohistochemical study using the PAP method revealed gastrin secreting cells in the tumor. In addition to this case of jejunal gastrinoma, a review of literature in Japan and other countries was presented.
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PMID:A case of jejunal gastrinoma diagnosed by percutaneous transhepatic portal venous sampling. 162 82

Achlorhydria has been discussed as a possibly dangerous consequence of therapeutic inhibition of gastric acid secretion since the introduction of H2-receptor antagonists. The risk of long-term hypergastrinaemia has only been considered for about 5 years. The reason for this was the demonstration that gastric carcinoids (ECLomas) observed after life-long treatment of rats with the proton pump inhibitor omeprazole could also be produced in rats by other methods leading to long-lasting profound hypergastrinaemia. Such methods were the 80% resection of the oxyntic mucosa or feeding of ranitidine (2000 mg/day) for 2 years. The endocrine tumours corresponded to the gastric carcinoids found in patients with long-lasting hypergastrinaemia due to pernicious anaemia or with a gastrinoma as part of the MEN I syndrome. Neither in animals nor in man could other endocrine tumours or adenocarcinomas of the gastrointestinal tract be related to hypergastrinaemia. Epidemiologic data do not support gastrin dependence of adenocarcinoma of the stomach or the colon. Experimental findings of gastrin effects on tumour growth in vivo and in vitro have been contradictory and may be explained by the presence of gastrin receptors on tumour cells and the role of gastrin as an autocrine growth factor in some of these tumours. Since acid blockade by proton pump inhibitors or H2-receptor blockers dose-dependently increase serum gastrin levels, patients with ranitidine-resistant peptic ulceration receiving long-term treatment with high-dose omeprazole have been followed up with serial gastric biopsy specimens for up to 5 years. Complete healing, moderate hypergastrinaemia, and a slight hyperplasia but no dysplasia of the ECL cells in the oxyntic mucosa have been observed, which seemed to be correlated to chronic gastritis progressing over the years. Despite these negative findings excessive hypergastrinaemia by overdosage of potent drugs for inhibition of gastric secretion should be avoided and monitoring of plasma gastrin levels is recommended in case of long-term treatment.
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PMID:Is hypergastrinaemia dangerous to man? 167 24

A diagnostic and therapeutic strategy for ZES is proposed based on the vast experience (180 cases) of this rare disease gained at hospital Bichat (Paris, France). The first step is diagnostic and relies essentially a) upon measurements of gastric acid and serum gastrin in the basal state and b) upon the results of secretin test because of the overlap between ZES and duodenal ulcer disease in a large proportion of cases. In sporadic ZES cases, after adequate control of acid overproduction and attempt to localize the tumoral process(es), surgery is indicated (at the exception of patients with advanced metastatic disease). Surgery aims essentially at eradicating gastrinoma(s) as often as possible and whenever it is feasible without endangering patient's life. An apparently definite cure is attained in 60 to 80% in extrapancreatic gastrinoma(s) and 20 to 30% when gastrinomas are located within the pancreas. Liver involvement (25% of ZES cases) remains the major concern and death cause in these patients. Although liver metastases frequently stabilize and sometimes regress upon chemotherapy and chemoembolization, liver transplantation may, in the future, represent the major chance for these patients; but in this frequently slowly evolving condition, the time for liver transplantation is exceptionally difficult to settle.
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PMID:[Which diagnostic and therapeutic approach to the Zollinger-Ellison syndrome should be adopted in 1990?]. 167 64

All 95 portal venous sampling (PVS) procedures performed in patients with Zollinger-Ellison syndrome in the past 10 years at the authors' institution were reviewed. It was possible to catheterize at least one branch of the pancreaticoduodenal venous arcade in all but two procedures (98%). The highest concentration of gastrin was found in a selective sample from the pancreaticoduodenal venous arcade or the transverse pancreatic vein in 56 of 91 procedures (62%). Selective sampling of pancreatic head veins yielded a gastrin gradient sufficient for localization in 60 patients (63%). Among 55 solitary sporadic gastrinomas identified at surgery, PVS allowed correct localization of the tumor in 32 (58%); if selective samples had not been obtained, only eight (15%) would have been localized (P less than .0005). Sensitivity was the same for tumors in the gastrinoma triangle (64%) and the body or tail of the pancreas (60%). There were no false-positive results. The overall complication rate was 20%, but most complications were abdominal pain lasting 3 days or less. Six patients (6%) had serious complications.
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PMID:Zollinger-Ellison syndrome: technique, results, and complications of portal venous sampling. 172 89

Recently, gastrinoma cells were demonstrated to release gastrin when directly stimulated by secretin both in vivo and in vitro. In this study, the reaction of antral G cells was investigated. Secretin was injected into the right gastroepiploic artery in canines, and into the common hepatic artery during a selective arteriography in patients without gastrinomas. G cells obtained from the antrum of rats were attached to 0.45-microns filters and irrigated with medium containing secretin. The serum gastrin concentration increased rapidly in significant amounts and very quickly after an intraarterial injection of secretin, both in humans and in dogs. The rate of gastrin release from the rat antral G cells in vitro increased significantly when the medium contained secretin. In conclusion, secretin stimulated gastrin release from antral G cells both in vivo and in vitro.
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PMID:Gastrin release from antral G cells stimulated with secretin. 173 97

Duodenal gastrinomas are increasingly found at surgery, yet information about their location and characteristics is based on the results of either pooled series or retrospective reviews of small numbers of selected cases. To address these issues we have analyzed the location, incidence, and malignant potential of duodenal gastrinomas in 65 consecutive patients who underwent removal of all tumor as part of a 10-year prospective study to resect gastrinomas in patients with sporadic Zollinger-Ellison syndrome. The primary gastrinoma was located in the duodenum in 24 patients (37%). There were 19 men and five women aged 32 to 69 years (mean 49.4 years), with symptoms for 0.6 to 35 years (mean 7.9 years). Preoperative studies included serum gastrin levels of 114 to 35,798 pg/ml (mean 2060 pg/ml), basal acid output of 7 to 95 mEq/hr (mean 37.6 mEq/hr), and a positive secretin test result in 22 patients. Preoperative imaging studies identified tumor in the duodenal area in 11 patients (46%), but most positive imaging findings were metastatic gastrinoma in lymph nodes, and the primary duodenal tumor itself was identified in only two patients. Portal venous sampling had a localizing gastrin gradient in the inferior or superior pancreaticoduodenal vein in 17 of 23 patients (74%). Each of the 24 patients had a single, small duodenal wall tumor of 2.8 to 10.1 mm diameter (mean 6 mm). Each tumor stained positive for gastrin by immunohistochemistry. Seventeen tumors (71%) were located in the first portion of the duodenum, five (21%) in the second, and two (8%) in the third. Each tumor originated in the submucosa, and 13 (54%) were limited to the submucosa, whereas 11 (46%) were locally invasive, four (16%) extending into the muscularis mucosa and seven (29%) into the muscularis propria. Thirteen patients (54%) had spread to regional lymph nodes, whereas two (8%) had liver metastases. Lymph node metastases were seen with larger duodenal tumors (mean 7.1 vs 5.4 mm; p less than 0.01). The data suggest that a single duodenal wall gastrinoma is a common cause of Zollinger-Ellison syndrome (37%). These small (less than 1 cm) tumors are located in the submucosal layer of the proximal duodenum (92%) and are malignant more often than previously thought (54%).
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PMID:Location, incidence, and malignant potential of duodenal gastrinomas. 174 77


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