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Query: UNIPROT:P01350 (
gastrin
)
9,683
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Metiamide an histamine H2-receptors antagonist has been used to treat a case of Zollinger-Ellison syndrome characterized by a long standing
diarrhea
, an important gastric hypersecretion and a moderatly elevated plasma
gastrin
but without digestive ulceration. At the dose of 600 mg per day, Metiamide induced a complete suppression of acid secretion, an effect which lasted for 15 days after stopping the drug. Accordingly and since the only finding at time of laparotomy was a small lymph node enlarged with endocrine metastatic tissue, the stomach was left intact and Metiamide pursued. During the first 4 months of chronic administration of Metiamide, acid secretion was maintained at levels below 25 p.cent of initial values. Ulteriorly however, although dosages of Metiamide were increased, acid hypersecretion resumed and a duodenal ulcer developed. Total gastrectomy was then performed 11 months after the beginning of Metiamide. In spite of the failure of Metiamide treatment, the long term follow up of this case of Zollinger-Ellison Syndrome, allowed us to get theoretical and practical informations.
...
PMID:[Zollinger-Ellison syndrome treated medically by an inhibitor of H2 histamine receptors]. 0 Jun 53
H2-Histamine receptor blocking agents metiamide and cimetidine were assessed in seven patients with Zollinger-Ellison syndrome (serum
gastrin
greater than 300 microgram/ml, basal acid output greater than 15 meq/h, ratio of basal acid output to maximal acid output greater than 0.5). Intravenous or oral administration of the drugs lowered acid secretion by at least 70% in all cases. Subsequent treatment of six patients for 3 to 15 months (oral therapy) and one patient for 1 month (intravenous therapy) showed that the drugs abolished symptoms in all seven, abolished
diarrhea
in five, allowed ulcer healing in six, and were well tolerated without adverse effects in seven. No patient failed to respond to the drug, although one died from tumor progression and two required total gastrectomy for complex reasons. The results indicate that patients with Zollinger-Ellison syndrome can be managed medically and, in light of current mortality trends, gain little from the extra risks attending total gastrectomy.
...
PMID:H2-Histamine receptor blocking agents in the Zollinger-Ellison syndrome. Experience in seven cases and implications for long-term therapy. 2 4
Functioning tumors of the pancreatic islets are now recognized as the source of clinical syndromes affecting the gastrointestinal tract which have a wide variety of catastrophic symptoms. Experiences with thirty-six cases suggest at least four separate diagnostic categories in the ulcerogenic tumor syndrome. These include: a typical history, gastric analysis, and roentgenographic findings with boderline fasting serum
gastrin
levels; ulcerogenic tumor with evidence of hyperparathyroidism; iatrogenic ulcerogenic syndrome associated with failure of a previous operation for duodenal ulcer; and the classic ulcerogenic syndrome associated with a fulminating ulcer diathesis or
diarrhea
and high serum
gastrin
levels. The problems presented at operation include: decisions to be make in the presence of a negative exploration; the finding of a solitary tumor in the wall of the duodenum; solitary pancreatic tumors particularly in the body and tail; ulcerogenic tumors in the very young; liver metastases in the elderly; and the wisdom of removing gross metastases in combination with total gastrectomy. The long-term survival in the ulcerogenic tumor syndrome approximated 50 per cent, with 40 per cent of those having proved malignancy living five years. Evidence of hyperparathyroidism is relatively common in association with both the ulcerogenic and the diarrheogenic tumor syndromes. The association may by a result of a congenital abnormality, metabolic alkalosis, or a direct effect of the islet cell tumor. Parathyroidectomy may be indicated when both the serum calcium and parathormone levels are elevated in the presence of borderline fasting
gastrin
levels. The latter may return to normal after parathyroidectomy. The evidence of hyperparathyroidism closely parallels the episodes of
diarrhea
in the diarrheogenic syndrome, and hyperparathyroidism may regress spontaneously after total removal of the pancreatic tumor. Just as routine calcium determinations made the diagnosis of hyperparathyroidism more commonplace, it is suggested that the gastrointestinal syndromes associated with islet cell tumor would receive wider recognition if radioimmunoassays for
gastrin
as well as secretin, and the other secretin-like polypeptides, were carried out routinely.
...
PMID:Islet cell tumors of the pancreas and the alimentary tract. 16 36
Three patients with profuse
diarrhea
, hypokalemia, metastatic nonbeta islet cell carcinoma, and the absence of gastric hypersecretion were found to have elevated levels of vasoactive intestinal peptide. One patient also had elevated serum
gastrin
levels. Two patients experienced prolonged remissions of
diarrhea
after operations in which only tumor biopsies were done. These cases further implicate vasoactive intestinal peptide as the agent mediating the
diarrhea
in the syndrome of pancreatic cholera.
...
PMID:Islet cell carcinoma, pancreatic cholera, and vasoactive intestinal peptide. 17 21
A case of watery
diarrhea
, hypokalemia and hypercalcemia associated with an islet cell tumor was described. A 62-year old man exhibited frequent watery
diarrhea
and hypokalemia for two years. He had no peptic ulcer and serum
gastrin
level was normal. His serum calcium was abnormally high and serum phosphate was lowered. He had secretin-like activity in his plasma. Autopsy revealed a small islet cell tumor in the pancreas and several metastatic masses in the liver. Microscopic examination revealed the tumor cell was not beta, alpha nor D cells. By electron microscopy the secretion granules of the tumor cell resembled those of S, M and T cells. It was not possible to decide which of the tree cell types was responsible for the pancreatic cholera.
...
PMID:A case of watery diarrhea, hypokalemia and hypercalcemia associated with nonulcerogenic islet cell tumor of the pancreas. 17 23
In a healthy subject infusions of either secretion or glucagon caused no
diarrhea
. A combinations of
gastrin
and glucagon induced severe watery
diarrhea
immediately after the end of the 3 hour infusion. No
diarrhea
occurred from the combination of secretin and
gastrin
.
...
PMID:Hormone-induced diarrhea in man. 17 61
The role of prostaglandins in endocrine diarrheagenic syndromes was evaluated by measuring peripheral concentration of immunoreactive PGE and PGF in patients with non-endocrine
diarrhea
as well as those with the Zollinger-Ellison (Z-E) syndrome, MCT, carcinoid tumors and the WDHA syndrome. In 21 normals, PGE and PGF levels averaged 272 +/- 18 and 119 +/- 14 pg/ml, respectively. Twenty eight patients with
diarrhea
of non-endocrine origin (mainly inflammatory bowel disease) had levels indistinguishable from normal, i.e. 353 +/- 25 and 77 +/- 37 pg/ml, respectively. Among 29 patients with the Zollinger-Ellison syndrome (mean
gastrin
6127 +/- 3267 pg/ml) only 2 had significantly elevated PGE levels; mean PGE levels, 382 +/- 32 pg/ml, were not significantly different from normal and did not correlate with either
diarrhea
or the serum
gastrin
concentration. In contrast, 18 of 22 patients with carcinoid tumors (mean blood serotonin concentration 1655 +/- 604 ng/ml; mean urinary excretion of 5 HIAA 66.8 +/- 16.7 mg/day) had elevated peripheral concentrations of PGE. The mean PGE level (1367 +/- 245 pg/ml) was significantly elevated (P less than 0.001). Nonetheless PGE levels did not correlate with
diarrhea
, blood concentrations of serotonin, or urinary indole excretion. MCT (mean serum calcitonin 24.5 +/- 6.3 ng/ml) was similarly associated with consistent (18/19) elevation in peripheral concentrations of PGE (mean 1922 +/- 541 pg/ml; P less than 0.001). Inthis syndrome, PGE levels were higher in patients with
diarrhea
and in those with markedly elevated serum thyrocalcitonin levels. Finally, 8 of 21 patients with the WDHA syndrome had increased levels of PGE. Although 13 of 17 patients had high levels of VIP (mean 8133 pg/ml), 2 patients had hyperprostaglandinemia in the face of normal peripheral concentrations of VIP. In one patient the serum PGE level was elevated prior to resection of the primary pancreatic neoplasm (9939 pg/ml) as well as the subsequent extirpation of a solitary hepatic metastasis (1063 pg/ml); following each procedure the
diarrhea
abated and the PGE level returned to normal. In none of these syndromes were mean PGF levels elevated. The study has documented hyperprostaglandinemia in some endocrine diarrheagenic syndromes and validated the usefullness of measurements of PGE in patients with unexplained
diarrhea
.
...
PMID:Prostaglandins E and F in endocrine diarrheagenic syndromes. 18 8
A 61-year-old woman had watery
diarrhea
, hypochlorhydria, hypokalemia, and elevated serum
gastrin
levels. She had islet cell carcinoma of the body of the pancreas with multiple metastases to the liver. Radioimmunoassay and immunofluorescence demonstrated both vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP) and
gastrin
in the surgically removed carcinoma and in a metastatic focus. Electron microscopical findings confirmed the presence of two cell types whose secretory granules had characteristics ascribed to these two hormones. Plasma prostaglandin E levels were also elevated above normal. Serum VIP levels became elevated to the Verner-Morrison range prior to her death of a bleeding duodenal ulcer two years after initial symptoms.
...
PMID:Vasoactive intestinal polypeptide and gastrin-producing islet cell carcinoma. 19 71
A case of chronic secretory
diarrhea
with elevated plasma vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP) and serum
gastrin
levels is described. Plasma secretin, glucagon, insulin, and cyclic adenosine and guanine monophosphate (cAMP and (CGMP) concentrations were normal. Administration of a prostaglandin synthetase inhibitor failed to decrease the volume of
diarrhea
. There was no evidence of laxative abuse, antral cell hyperplasia, gastric hypersecretion, or pancreatic hypersecretion. The pancreatic histology was interpreted as islet cell hyperplasia. Jejunal tissue cAMP and cGMP concentrations were in the same range as those obtained from three control subjects. This report suggests that cyclic nucleotides may not mediate intestinal secretion in hormone-induced
diarrhea
.
...
PMID:Normal jejunal cyclic nucleotide content in a patient with secretory diarrhea. 21 Jul 31
A father and son each presented with severe watery
diarrhea
. The son was found to have a pancreatic islet-cell tumor associated with the pancreatic cholera syndrome, as well as a parathyroid adenoma. The father was found to have multiple islet-cell adenomas and the Zollinger-Ellison syndrome. Pancreatic tumor tissue from each patient contained detectable
gastrin
and vasoactive intestinal peptide; however, a much higher
gastrin
concentration was found in the tumor tissue from the father and a much higher vasoactive intestinal peptide content in the tumor tissue from the son. Thus, watery
diarrhea
may be mediated by different hormones in families having multiple endocrine neoplasia; the precise cause of the diarrheal syndrome should be defined to ensure the proper therapy.
...
PMID:Hormone-mediated watery diarrhea in a family with multiple endocrine neoplasms. 22 Aug 98
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