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Query: UNIPROT:P01350 (
gastrin
)
9,683
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In children with chronic renal failure (CRF)
anorexia
, nausea, and vomiting are common yet poorly understood symptoms. We studied oesophageal and gastric motor function in 12 children (age 7 months-6.8 years) with severe CRF not undergoing dialysis who had persistent
anorexia
and vomiting. Eight of 12 patients had significant gastro-oesophageal reflux (reflux index 5.2% to 21.9%, mean 11.3%; controls < 5%), 7/10 had altered gastric half emptying times (T1/2) for 5% glucose or milk (glucose meal--controls: 8-14 min, two CRF patients: 18-25 min; milk meal--controls: 48-72 min, five CRF patients 27, 28, 82, 83, and 110 min). Gastric antral electrical control activity was abnormal in 6/11 patients, with different types of gastric dysrhythmias whereas the remainder and controls showed a regular dominant frequency of 0.05 Hz. In 7/9 patients fasting serum
gastrin
concentration was raised (53 to > 400, mean 168 pmol/l, controls < 40 pmol/l). All CRF patients with
anorexia
and vomiting had one or more disorder of foregut motility. The nature and variety of the motor disorders and the raised concentrations of circulating
gastrin
suggest that the normal environment generated by CRF affects the function of the smooth muscle of the foregut.
...
PMID:Foregut motor function in chronic renal failure. 147 84
In order to determine possible mediators for development of
anorexia
in pigs infected with Ascaris suum, serum levels of
gastrin
, insulin and glucagon were measured. After a single high oral dose of 100,000-200,000 embryonated eggs the serum levels of
gastrin
and insulin in the infected pigs did not significantly differ from those in controls. Serum glucagon levels in the infected groups, however, were lower than those in controls and the difference was more evident 24 days postinoculation and later.
...
PMID:Serum levels of gastrin, insulin and glucagon as possible factors of anorexia in pigs infected once with Ascaris suum. 220 42
A 7-year-old spayed female Cocker Spaniel was hospitalized with a history of chronic vomiting,
anorexia
, and weight loss. Laboratory abnormalities included leukocytosis, metabolic alkalosis, hypoglycemia, hypoproteinemia, and hyperinsulinemia. Gastroscopy and ultrasonography revealed multiple gastric masses and a possible pancreatic mass, respectively. Examination of tissues obtained at necropsy showed a pancreatic adenocarcinoma with hepatic metastasis, gastric hypertrophy, and multiple duodenal ulcers. Immunocytochemical staining of the neoplasia was positive for pancreatic polypeptide (PP) and insulin and negative for
gastrin
, calcitonin, adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH), serotonin, L-enkephalin, chromagranin, glucagon, and somatostatin. Subsequent serum
gastrin
and PP assays showed a fasting hypergastrinemia with a normal response of
gastrin
to provocative testing and extremely increased PP values. The high PP values may have resulted in the vomiting and gastrointestinal ulceration. A PP-secreting tumor has not previously been reported in the dog.
...
PMID:Pancreatic polypeptide and insulin-secreting tumor in a dog with duodenal ulcers and hypertrophic gastritis. 267 25
Eleven adult Basenji dogs with immunoproliferative small intestinal disease (IPSID) were studied. Two items of history related to the digestive tract were characteristic: (i) chronic intractable diarrhea in most dogs, and (ii) progressive emaciation.
Anorexia
was intermittent in only a few dogs. In addition, skin lesions of various degrees of severity were observed, including alopecia of pinnae and ventrum, hyperpigmentation and hyperkeratosis of pinnae, and necrosis and ulcerations of margins of pinnae. The cause of the skin lesions was not determined; however, hypothyroidism did not appear to contribute to the skin changes. Standard hematologic and serum chemical values were not consistently abnormal. However, a poorly regenerative anemia, mild neutrophilia, and increased aspartate aminotransferase and alanine aminotransferase activities were generally observed in severely affected dogs. The Pelger-Huet anomaly was identified in dog 3. Maldigestion and malabsorption as determined by the N-benzoyl-L-tyrosyl-p-aminobenzoic acid and d-xylose test was documented to varying degrees in dogs with IPSID. Maldigestion was correlated with functional pancreatic exocrine insufficiency. Severe malabsorption was documented in only 3 dogs. Serum
gastrin
values were evaluated in these dogs because of a prior observation of parietal cell hyperplasia and gastric ulceration. Hypergastrinemia was documented in 3 dogs. Additional studies will be necessary to determine whether an acid hypersecretory state contributes to the pathogenesis of IPSID in Basenjis.
...
PMID:Clinical and laboratory characterization of Basenjis with immunoproliferative small intestinal disease. 660 87
Cholecystokinin (CCK) and
gastrin
are members of an important family of gastroenteropancreatic polypeptides. Distribution of CCK both in the digestive system and central and peripheral nervous structures correlates with the variety of its actions; more than a classic hormone, CCK is a peptidergic neurotransmitter. CCK plays a predominant role in multiple digestive functions: contraction and emptying of the gallbladder, stimulation of pancreatic secretion of enzymes, delay of gastric emptying, diminution of gastric acid secretion, regulation of insulin secretion, reduction of food intake, etc. Distinction between pharmacologic and physiologic effects has been difficult in all of these areas. Modern technological procedures have generated significant progresses: reliable plasmatic bioassay, understanding of molecular heterogeneity, identification and characterization of receptors and their subtypes, agonists and antagonists, some of them currently available for research studies. The integrationist perspective of normal and pathological physiology has been considerably enhanced. Therapeutic use of CCK and its derivatives in some specific problems, i.e. obesity and
anorexia
, remains incipient and restricted.
...
PMID:[Advances in gastrointestinal hormones: cholecystokinin]. 800 26
There are (at least) two types of receptor for cholecystokinin (CCK)/
gastrin
peptides. Highly potent specific antagonists are available for both types. The CCKA-receptor mediates classical CCK-like effects on the gut. Antagonists given to man inhibit pancreatic enzyme secretion and generally shorten gastrointestinal transit times. Potential clinical indications include
anorexia
, gastro-paresis, pseudo-paresis, pseudo-obstruction, severe constipation and chronic pancreatitis. However gallbladder contraction is markedly inhibited and this led to gallstone formation in baboons. This will obviously have to be avoided if CCKA antagonists are to be used in man. CCKB-receptors mediate the effects of
gastrin
on the gut and the effects of CCK in the brain. They inhibit
gastrin
-stimulated acid secretion. If used in acid-peptic disease they might inhibit the trophic effects of
gastrin
on enterochromaffin cells. CCKB-antagonists can also inhibit the growth of some
gastrin
-dependent tumours, including certain human colonic cancer cell lines which produce
gastrin
. CCKB-antagonists have a potent anxiolytic-like effect in animals, and this effect might become their main clinical application.
...
PMID:CCK/gastrin antagonists--clinical perspectives. 826 65
We previously established pluripotent transformed rat islet cell lines, MSL-cells, of which certain clones have been used to study processes of islet beta-cell maturation, including the transcriptional activation of the insulin gene induced by in vivo passage. Thus, successive sc transplantation in NEDH rats resulted in stable hypoglycemic insulinoma tumor lines, such as MSL-G2-IN. Occasionally, hypoglycemia as well as severe weight loss were observed in the early tumor passages of MSL-G and the subclone, NHI-5B, which carry the transfected neomycin and human insulin genes as unique clonal markers. By selective transplantation, it was possible to segregate stable anorectic normoglycemic tumor lines, MSL-G-AN and NHI-5B-AN, from both clones. These tumors cause an abrupt onset of
anorexia
when they reach a size of 400-500 mg (< 0.3% of total body weight), and the observed weight loss parallels that of starved rats until death results from cachexia. After tumor resection, animals immediately resume normal feeding behavior. Comparative studies of hormone release and mRNA content in anorectic lines, MSL-G-AN and NHI-5B-AN, vs. those in the insulinoma line, MSL-G2-IN, revealed selective glucagon gene expression in both of the anorectic tumors, whereas insulin and islet amyloid polypeptide gene expression were confined to the insulinoma. Both tumor phenotypes produced cholecystokinin and
gastrin
in variable small amounts, making it unlikely that these hormones contribute to the anorectic phenotype. Tumor necrosis factor (cachectin) was not produced by any of the tumors. Proglucagon was processed as in the fetal islet to products representative of both pancreatic alpha-cell and intestinal L-cell phenotypes, with glucagon and Glp-1 (7-36)amide as the major extractable products. In contrast to the administration of cholecystokinin, neither glucagon, Glp-1 (7-36)amide, nor their combination, affected feeding behavior in fasted mice, suggesting the presence of a hitherto unidentified anorectic substance released from the glucagonoma. We conclude 1) that glucagonomas and insulinomas can be derived from a common clonal origin of pluripotent MSL cells, thus supporting the existence of a cell lineage relationship between islet alpha- and beta-cell during ontogeny; and 2) that our glucagonomas release an anorexigenic substance(s) of unknown nature that causes a severe weight loss comparable to that reported in animals carrying tumor necrosis factor-producing experimental tumors.
...
PMID:The dissociation of tumor-induced weight loss from hypoglycemia in a transplantable pluripotent rat islet tumor results in the segregation of stable alpha- and beta-cell tumor phenotypes. 840 49
Feeding problems,
anorexia
and vomiting are common in infants and children with chronic renal failure (CRF), and play a major role in the growth failure often found in this condition. However, the gastroenterological and nutritional aspects of CRF in children have received little attention, hence therapeutic interventions are usually empirical and often ineffective. Gastritis, duodenitis and peptic ulcer are often found in adults with CRF on regular haemodialysis and following renal transplantation. Despite persistent hypergastrinaemia, gastric acid secretion is decreased rather than increased in most of these patients, and active peptic disease appears to be promoted by the removal of the acid output inhibition (neutralisation of gastric acid by ammonia) that follows active treatment. Helicobacter pylori, on the other hand, does not seem to play a significant role in the pathogenesis of peptic disease in CRF. Gastro-oesophageal reflux has been found in about 70% of infants and children with CRF suffering from vomiting and feeding problems, and thus appears to be a major problem in these patients. In a number of symptomatic patients with CRF, gastric dysrhythmias and delayed gastric emptying have also been found; hence there appears to be a complex disorder of gastrointestinal motility in CRF. Serum levels of several polypeptide hormones involved in the modulation of gastrointestinal motility [e.g.
gastrin
, cholecystokinin (CCK), neurotensin] and the regulation of hunger and satiety (e.g. glucagon, CCK) are significantly raised as a consequence of renal insufficiency, and can be reverted to normal by renal transplantation. Furthermore, several other humoral abnormalities (e.g. hypercalcaemia, hypokalaemia, acidosis, etc.) are not uncommon in CRF. By directly affecting the smooth muscle of the gut or stimulating particular areas within the central nervous system, all these humoral alterations may well play a major role in the gastrointestinal dysmotility,
anorexia
, nausea and vomiting in patients with CRF. Specific pharmacological and nutritional interventions should thus be considered for the treatment of vomiting and feeding problems in CRF.
...
PMID:Gastrointestinal function in chronic renal failure. 874 22
A 9-year-old male German Shepherd Dog was presented with the primary complaints of vomiting, profuse watery diarrhea,
anorexia
, and severe weight loss. The dog developed hematemesis and melena, which were unresponsive to treatment with an H2-receptor antagonist and a gastrointestinal protectant. A marked neutrophilia, panhypoproteinemia, hypokalemia, and mildly increased activities of alkaline phosphatase and alanine aminotransferase were the only relevant abnormalities found on a CBC, serum biochemical profile, and urinalysis. An exploratory laparotomy revealed several small nonresectable masses at the root of the mesentery, which were identified histologically as a neuroendocrine neoplasm. Immunohistochemical staining of the neoplasm was positive for
gastrin
and negative for insulin, glucagon, pancreatic polypeptide, and vasoactive intestinal polypeptide. Fasting serum
gastrin
concentrations were high. Zollinger-Ellison syndrome was diagnosed, and the dog was treated with omeprazole, an H+,K(+)-ATPase inhibitor. All clinical signs resolved, and the dog remains asymptomatic 2 years later. Omeprazole may be the gastric acid antisecretory drug of choice for dogs with gastrinoma.
...
PMID:Omeprazole in a dog with gastrinoma. 947 Jan 66
Serum
gastrin
and pepsinogen concentrations, food intake, abomasal pH and abomasal aerotolerant and anaerobic bacterial populations were measured in sheep infected with Ostertagia circumcincta to search for links between hypergastrinaemia, food intake and changes in the abomasal environment. Abomasal pH and serum
gastrin
and pepsinogen concentrations were elevated in each of five sheep infected via abomasal cannulae with 150000 exsheathed larval stage three, followed 11 days later by 100000 sheathed larvae given intraruminally. Unparasitised abomasa contained aerotolerant bacterial population densities of between 10(3) and 10(6) cells ml(-1) and these did not change significantly following parasitism. In contrast, anaerobic bacterial population densities increased markedly by about 10(4)-fold following parasitism. Anaerobic numbers changed rapidly when abomasal pH increased from 2.5 to 3.5. At pH 4 and above, anaerobic bacterial numbers approached levels expected in rumen contents but parameters other than pH did not relate to bacterial numbers. Brief periods when serum
gastrin
was lower than expected, coinciding with raised abomasal pH, were not explicable by increased bacterial numbers. Food intake, which decreased for a variable period from around Day 5 p.i., correlated poorly with serum
gastrin
concentration, suggesting hypergastrinaemia is not the sole cause of
anorexia
in parasitised animals. The survival of substantial numbers of rumen bacteria in the abomasum at only slightly raised pH may significantly lower the bacterial protein available to the sheep.
...
PMID:Hypergastrinaemia, abomasal bacterial population densities and pH in sheep infected with Ostertagia circumcincta. 1050 16
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