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Query: UNIPROT:P01350 (
gastrin
)
9,683
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Immunocytochemical stains for various pancreatic hormones were performed on 77 pancreatic endocrine tumors from 59 patients [17 with hypoglycemia, three with glucagonoma syndrome, 18 were Zollinger-Ellison syndrome, six with WDHA (watery,
diarrhea
, hypokalemia, and achlorhydria) syndrome and 15 without endocrine symptoms]. In all tumors that caused either hypoglycemia or glucagonoma syndrome, insulin and glucagon were respectively identified. On the other hand, only 10 tumors from 18 patients with Zollinger-Ellison syndrome were positive for
gastrin
, and only four of six patients with WDHA syndrome had a vasoactive intestinal peptides-positive tumor. Ten of 15 clinically silent tumors contained hormone-producing cells but without a consistent pattern. Ten neoplasms were negative for all hormones tested. Twenty-six tumors showed positively for more than one hormone and usually one cell type predominated. Four patients had multiple tumors which showed variation in the architecture and cellular composition. The tumors were classified into three major histopathologic groups: solid, gyriform, and glandular. The correlation between the pattern of growth and the hormonal production was generally poor. However, a pure gyriform pattern was often associated with insulin production, and glandular differentiation was commonly seen in tumors associated with Zollinger-Ellison syndrome. This study demonstrates the reliability of the immunocytochemical method for the specific identification of cell types in pancreatic endocrine tumors.
...
PMID:Retrospective study of 77 pancreatic endocrine tumors using the immunoperoxidase method. 612 37
Review of a 5 year clinical experience with the histamine H2-receptor antagonists metiamide, cimetidine, and ranitidine in 20 patients with Zollinger-Ellison syndrome disclosed a treatment failure rate of 50 percent. The criterion for failure was hemorrhage in four patients, obstruction followed by hemorrhage in one patient, perforation in one, and intractable pain in four. Nine of the 10 patients in whom treatment failed required total gastrectomy for control of complications; the 10th patient refused operation. Retrospective analysis identified hepatic metastases, the multiple endocrine adenomatosis-type I syndrome, refractory
diarrhea
, and breaks in the medication schedule as being more common in the treatment failure group, but these trends were not statistically significant in our small series of patients. Nonhealing or recurrent ulcers were found in 90 percent of the patients in whom drug therapy failed and in only 10 percent of those patients in whom therapy was successful (p less than 0.01). There were no differences related to age, sex, duration of symptoms, previous gastric operation, ulcer location, presence of
diarrhea
, or amount of drug prescribed. Basal and peak acid outputs, basal serum
gastrin
levels, and response to secretin challenge were also nondiscriminatory. The degree of acid inhibition in response to cimetidine was highly variable from one patient to another and on repeat testing in individual patients, and there was no correlation between acid secretory inhibition and clinical course. When severe complications occurred, reinstituting H2-receptor antagonist therapy or increasing the dose did not avert the need for total gastrectomy. Patients refractory to drug treatment who have persistent or recurrent ulcers should be managed with prompt total gastrectomy to prevent life-threatening complications.
...
PMID:Failure of histamine H2-receptor antagonist therapy in Zollinger-Ellison syndrome. 612 12
Nine patients with the Zollinger-Ellison syndrome seen at a single referral centre between 1976 and 1981 are presented to highlight changes in the recognition, diagnosis and management of the condition. Less well recognized manifestations such as
diarrhoea
and features of the multiple endocrine neoplasia (MEN) type I syndrome are described, and the simplification of the pre-operative diagnosis by the use of both the serum
gastrin
estimation and the secretin provocation test considered. The problem of tumour localization is discussed with special reference to the newer techniques such as ultrasound, endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP) and CAT scanning, and the value of arteriography confirmed. The striking advances in management during the past few years are stressed with special reference to the role of the H2-receptor blocking drugs. Despite their profound inhibitory effect on both acid secretion and symptoms, all patients with the exception of those with proven metastases or the MEN type I syndrome underwent laparotomy to exclude a resectable lesion. If no resectable lesion was found truncal vagotomy was performed to facilitate acid secretory control post-operatively and H2-receptor blocking drugs continued in a dose necessary to maintain basal acid secretion under 5 mmol/hr.
...
PMID:Changing concepts in the presentation, diagnosis and management of the Zollinger-Ellison syndrome. 613 24
The mucosal concentrations of seven regulatory peptides and the density properties and integrity of their storage granules have been studied in mucosal biopsies from the human jejunum in eight gastrointestinal disease states and compared with normal controls. In diseases with associated mucosal inflammation (coeliac disease, Crohn's disease with jejunal involvement, postinfective tropical malabsorption, and common variable immunodeficiency) there was a selective increase in fragility of the gastric inhibitory polypeptide (GIP) and somatostatin storage granules. The
gastrin
, motilin, enteroglucagon, secretin, and vasoactive intestinal polypeptide granules had normal properties in these conditions. In diseases in which
diarrhoea
occurred in the absence of changes in jejunal mucosal histology (irritable bowel syndrome, pancreatic insufficiency, jejuno-ileal bypass for morbid obesity, and purgative abuse) there were no abnormalities of the storage granules. Increased mucosal concentrations of all peptides except vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP) were found in coeliac disease and selective increases of VIP found in Crohn's disease, motilin in the irritable bowel syndrome and
gastrin
and GIP in pancreatic insufficiency. It is suggested that the storage granule abnormalities in the diseases with abnormal mucosal histology are secondary to the inflammatory changes.
...
PMID:Gastrointestinal regulatory peptide storage granule abnormalities in jejunal mucosal diseases. 614 62
Four patients with Zollinger-Ellison Syndrome (ZES) are presented to highlight the difficulties in the recognition, diagnosis and management of this rare disease. The presentation of ZES is usually indistinguishable from ordinary peptic ulcer disease and in those patients with symptoms not related to peptic ulcer, i.e.,
diarrhoea
, as their main complaint, the diagnosis is often not even considered. A high index of suspicion is required, however, in patients with recurrent ulcers, multiple ulcers and in those with resistant or rapidly relapsing ulcers after conventional therapy. A presumptive diagnosis can be made by the demonstration of grossly elevated fasting serum
gastrin
levels combined with a secretin stimulation test in doubtful cases. The main problem is the location of the
gastrin
-secreting tumour which is usually pancreatic but often too small to be detected by currently available techniques. Histamine H2-receptor antagonists in high doses are effective in controlling the gastric acid hypersecretion which is chiefly responsible for the morbidity and mortality in ZES. They provide the treatment of choice in patients where the tumour cannot be located, though every attempt should be made to do this as surgery is the treatment of choice for this invariably malignant tumour. Total gastrectomy is now reserved for those patients in whom medical therapy has failed. The role of chemotherapy in metastatic disease has yet to be established.
...
PMID:Zollinger-Ellison syndrome--report of four cases and review of literature. 614 89
We report the case of a 43 year old man with multiple endocrine neoplasia (Zollinger-Ellison syndrome-hyperparathyroidism) diagnosed during investigations for a severe ulcer with
diarrhoea
. The history suggested Zollinger-Ellison syndrome, especially as basal acid production and blood
gastrin
levels were high. Hypercalcaemia and low blood phosphate levels suggested hyperparathyroidism, which was confirmed by ultra-sound of the neck, showing two parathyroid adenomas. The aim of treatment was two-fold: suppress the hyperparathyroidism and treat the Zollinger-Ellison syndrome. The approach is surgical in most cases, but the tumour is often impossible to remove and total gastrectomy has become rare with the progress in anti-secretory therapy. When the tumour behind a case of Zollinger-Ellison syndrome cannot be found, complementary chemotherapy is indicated. Other endocrine lesions must always be sought and the family investigated to exclude Wermer syndrome.
...
PMID:[Multiple endocrine neoplasms associated with Zollinger-Ellison syndrome and hyperparathyroidism]. 615 41
Somatostatin (4 micrograms/min, cyclic form) was infused for 24 h on six occasions in four patients with carcinoid ileal tumor and multiple liver metastases. During infusion, spontaneous flushes and/or
diarrhea
were markedly reduced with a return to the pretreatment pattern on the next day. Urinary 5-hydroxyindole acetic acid excretion and plasma
gastrin
were not significantly changed, whereas plasma insulin presented the expected decrease and rebound. These results confirm that carcinoid symptoms are somatostatin-sensitive but do not provide evidence that serotonin or
gastrin
play a major role in inducing these symptoms.
...
PMID:Effects of somatostatin infusion in four patients with malignant carcinoid syndrome. 618 12
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
The main clinical signs of three dogs with Zollinger-Ellison syndrome were vomiting,
diarrhoea
, poor appetite and weight loss. The diagnosis was confirmed by histological examination and by
gastrin
immunocytochemistry.
Gastrin
was extracted from pancreatic tumours of two dogs.
Gastrin
-component III predominated in one dog while
gastrin
-component II and
gastrin
-component III were demonstrated in almost equal amounts in the other dog. In one dog serum
gastrin
concentration was high. Postmortem examination revealed pancreatic tumours in all three dogs and metastases in the regional lymph nodes and liver in two. The pancreatic tumours contained three patterns of growth: solid, trabecular and acinar. Electron microscopy of liver metastases showed cells with secretory granules. In all three dogs there was an erosive oesophagitis and thick gastric mucosa caused mainly by glandular proliferation. Two dogs had erosions and ulcers in the duodenum, one also in the first part of the jejunum. Villous atrophy and cellular infiltration of the duodenal mucosa were found in all dogs.
...
PMID:Zollinger-Ellison syndrome in three dogs. 624 88
We examined susceptibility to the murine rotavirus, epizootic
diarrhea
of infant mice virus (EDIM), in normal suckling and weaned mice and in suckling mice treated with glucocorticoids. Normal mice 1 to 40 days old were inoculated by
gastrin
intubation with high doses of EDIM and subsequently evaluated for rotavirus infection by solid-phase radioimmunoassay, by electron microscopy of intestinal tissue sections or by both. Radioimmunoassay and electron microscopy showed a concordance of 89.5% in the detection of rotavirus infection. After a period of low susceptibility to EDIM infection during the first 3 days after birth (23%), susceptibility was high for the next 11 days (95%), but decreased abruptly as mice approached weaning (41% on days 15 through 17). Mice 34 days or older did not develop EDIM infection after inoculation, but rotavirus antigen was detected in 12% of uninoculated mothers nursing inoculated litters. Administration of cortisone acetate to 8-day-old mice induced partial intestinal maturation prematurely. At 3 to 6 days after cortisone acetate treatment, susceptibility to EDIM infection decreased to 60% compared with 94% in age-matched controls. Our data suggest (i) that susceptibility of mice to EDIM infection is age dependent, decreasing in concert with intestinal maturation, and (ii) that glucocorticoids, which induce premature partial intestinal maturation, modulate susceptibility of mice to EDIM.
...
PMID:Susceptibility of mice to rotavirus infection: effects of age and administration of corticosteroids. 626 47
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