Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
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Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
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Query: UNIPROT:P01350 (
gastrin
)
9,683
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
This review considers the pathologic features of epithelial tumors and tumor-like lesions of the duodenum and highlights potential pitfalls in their histological diagnosis. The tumor-like lesions include Brunner's gland hamartoma, myoepithelial hamartoma, and the mucosal polyps of the Peutz-Jeghers and juvenile polyposis syndromes. The true neoplasms are of two broad groups. The first includes duodenal adenomas and carcinomas, whose microscopic features, histogenetic relationships, and clinical significance closely mimic their commoner counterparts in the large intestine and which, when multiple, are closely associated with
familial adenomatous polyposis
coli. The second includes a number of uncommon endocrine cell tumors showing a great diversity of histological pattern, and which may be single or multiple. Among these are typical argyrophil carcinoids, which may secrete
gastrin
to give rise to the Zollinger-Ellison syndrome, and which may occur as part of the inherited multiple endocrine neoplasia syndrome type 1 (MEN-1); glandular somatostatin-rich, apparently nonargyrophil, carcinoids containing psammoma bodies that can be easily confused histologically with adenocarcinomas, and which are linked to type 1 neurofibromatosis (von Recklinghausen's disease) and phaeochromocytoma; and the gangliocytic paraganglioma, a rare tumor composed of neural elements, ganglion cells, and endocrine cells. Accurate histologic diagnosis of mucosal tumors and tumor-like lesions of the duodenum is important not only for immediate patient management, but also because it may provide the first clue to the existence of an inherited tumor syndrome, with its broader implications for the patient's family and potentially important consequences for genetic counseling.
...
PMID:Epithelial and neuroendocrine tumors of the duodenum. 192 22
Electron microscopical studies on endocrine cell hyperplasia of duodenal adenomas from five patients with
familial adenomatous polyposis
were performed. All the endocrine cell types normally found in the duodenal mucosa were identified. A constant feature was proliferation of duodenal-enterochromaffin cells but an increase in the number of all other endocrine cell types apart from pyloric-
gastrin
cells and somatostatin cells, was also observed. Certain types of intestinal endocrine cells (the intestinal enterochromaffin cell and the glicentin cell) are rare cells in the normal duodenal mucosa. The finding of these cells may indicate increased biological aggressivity.
...
PMID:Electron microscopic studies of endocrine hyperplasia in duodenal adenomas in familial adenomatous polyposis. 254 May 90
Fundic gland polyps (FGPs) are tiny multiple sessile polyps of the acid-secreting gastric mucosa. They have been described both in a sporadic form, mainly in middle-aged females, and in a syndromic form, associated with
familial adenomatous polyposis
(
FAP
)-Gardner's syndrome and attenuated variants (AFAP). They share the same histology, characterised by superficial and deep cystic dilatations, shortened gastric pits, with an inconspicuous lamina propria. They have been for a long time described as innocuous lesions, but some recent reports have shown that FGPs may harbour dysplastic foci and ultimately (particularly syndromic polyps) gastric cancer. Factors influencing their genesis are unknown. A circulating factor in
FAP
patients has been postulated and a role of female hormones has been suggested for sporadic FGPs. Whereas patients with sporadic FGPs have normal basal acid output, normal fast serum levels of
gastrin
and pepsinogen I, the role of
gastrin
seems crucial for the development of cystic changes in flat body-fundus mucosa, and for the appearance of FGPs in patients with Zollinger-Ellison syndrome. A role of H. pylori induced gastritis has been excluded. Actually, patients with both sporadic and syndromic FGPs appear consistently free from H. pylori colonisation, again for an unknown factor(s). Some recent reports have claimed a role for omeprazole in the genesis of FGPs, a highly controversial issue. Ultimately, the nature of FGPs is still debated: some have interpreted them as hamartomatous lesions, others as a peculiar form of hyperplastic polyp.
...
PMID:Fundic gland polyps: a still elusive entity on the eve of the year 2000. 1083 97