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)

Gastrin concentrations were measured in the gastric blood of eviscerated cats. Blood flow was recorded concomitantly thus enabling quantitative determination of the gastrin output. Electrical vagal stimulation within the "physiological" frequency range (0.5-3 Hz) did not regularly result in any detectable changes in the peripheral gastrin level but an increase in this level was always observed on stimulation with frequencies above 3 Hz. A constant gastrin release per stimulus was then obtained, as long as the total number of vagal stimuli did not exceed 2,000-3,000. A larger number of impulses resulted in rapid fatigue of the release mechanism, indicating either a rapid and sustained fatigue of the neural control mechanism or the existence of a rather small pool of gastrin for immediate release-amounting to less than one per cent of the total antral store of immunoreactive gastrin. The rate at which such a releasable pool was refilled would suffice to compensate for the depletion induced by vagal stimuli at physiological frequencies i.e. less then 3-4 Hz only. The two vagi innervate separate gastrin pools, which behave independently as far as release and refilling are concerned.
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PMID:Quantitative aspects of the vagal control of gastrin release in cats. 125 45

A patient with ectopic adrenocorticotrophic hormone (ACTH) production from a neuroendocrine tumour of the nasal roof is presented. By indirect immunoperoxidase techniques the tumour cells were shown to be distinctly positive for ACTH and beta-endorphin but negative for other peptides derived from pro-opiomelanocortin. Neither corticotropin releasing hormone (CRF) found in some tumours associated with ectopic Cushing's syndrome, nor gastrin immunoreactivity, which coexists with ACTH in normal rat pituitary and in rat and human gastrointestinal cells, were demonstrable in the tumour. A review of other, previously recognized locations of CRF/ACTH producing tumours is given to increase the awareness of the ectopic Cushing's syndrome, which may lack the classical features and is characterized by fulminant clinical course, extreme fatigue, weakness, pale facial swelling, oedema and hypokalaemic alkalosis.
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PMID:Cushing's syndrome due to an ACTH-producing neuroendocrine tumour in the nasal roof. 298 19

There is an increasing use and variety of beta-adrenoceptor blocking agents (beta-blockers) available for the treatment of hyperthyroidism. Recent comparative studies suggest that atenolol (200mg daily), metoprolol (200mg daily); acebutolol (400mg daily), oxprenolol ( 160mg daily), nadolol ( 80mg daily) and timolol (20mg daily) produce a beneficial clinical response equal to that seen with propranolol ( 160mg daily). Most beta-blockers reduce resting heart rate by approximately 25 to 30 beats/min, although a lesser reduction is seen with those possessing intrinsic sympathomimetic activity such as oxprenolol and pindolol. While earlier studies employing large doses of intravenous propranolol concluded that beta-blockade reduced myocardial contractility, more recent non-invasive studies suggest that the predominant cardiac effect is on heart rate. In patients with cardiac failure, beta-blockers may, however, produce a profound fall in cardiac output. Nevertheless, in combination with digoxin they may be useful in controlling the atrial fibrillation of thyrocardiac disease. beta-Blockers improve nervousness and tremor (although to a lesser extent with cardioselective agents) and severe myopathy, and they also reduce the frequency of paralysis in patients with thyrotoxic periodic paralysis. There is often subjective improvement in sweating but usually no major effect on eye signs. Recent studies show a 10% reduction in oxygen consumption/basal metabolic rate with long term oral use of selective or nonselective beta-blockers. In addition, many agents (propranolol, metoprolol, nadolol and sotalol but not acebutolol, atenolol or oxprenolol) reduce circulating tri-iodothyronine (T3) concentration by between 10 and 40%, although the clinical significance of this effect (if any) is not established. beta-Blockers may also have endocrinological effects on gastrin, cyclic AMP, catecholamines and other hormone levels. Given in adequate dosage, propranolol has been shown to control thyrotoxic hypercalcaemia. Minor side effects (nausea, headaches, tiredness, etc.) are quite common but overall beta-blockers are well tolerated by the thyrotoxic patient. The major use of these drugs is in symptomatic control while awaiting definitive diagnosis or treatment. As an adjunct to antithyroid drugs or radioactive iodine, beta-blockers will produce a satisfactory clinical response in the weeks to months before these forms of therapy produce a euthyroid state. beta-Blockers are more convenient than antithyroid drugs in the control of patients receiving therapeutic radioiodine, in that continuous therapy and assessment of biochemical response is possible.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Use of beta-adrenoceptor blocking drugs in hyperthyroidism. 614 1

A 48-year-old woman with type II diabetes developed fatigue, arthralgia and myalgia. A few weeks later she was found to have hepatomegaly. The erythrocyte sedimentation rate was raised (53/93 mm), as were liver enzyme activities (GOT 186 U/l; GPT 240 U/l; gamma-GT 199 U/l), the gamma-globulin levels (40.7%;IgG 4470 mg/dl, IgA 698 mg/dl, IgM 245 mg/dl), antinuclear antibodies and antibodies against double-strand DNA, smooth muscles and actin. Laparoscopy revealed small-nodular liver cirrhosis. The autoimmune hepatitis was treated with prednisolone (initially 60 mg daily, then reduced to 10 mg daily) and azathioprine (initially 100 mg daily, reduced to 50 mg daily). The symptoms markedly improved. But one year later, during follow-up examination, gastric polyps were found, excised and histologically found to be carcinoid. The gastrin level was raised to 765 pg/ml. Another year later the liver cirrhosis had advanced further and the type A gastritis was still present, but there was no sign of carcinoid recurrence.
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PMID:[Autoimmune hepatitis, autoimmune gastritis, hypergastrinemia and stomach carcinoid]. 788 17

H. pylori is a major cause of primary chronic gastritis and peptic ulcer disease in children. The authors give an account of H. pylori infection (cagA+, vacA+) in a 15-year-old girl where the initial clinical features included fatigue, collapses, and anorexia, elevated serum gastrin level (> 1000 mIU/l) raised the suspicion of gastrinoma. H. pylori gastric infection was also associated with iron-deficiency anemia. After treatment for H. pylori infection (omeprazole, clarithromycin, amoxycillin), clinical symptoms improved consistently, the serum gastrin level was repeteadly quite normal and hematologic and iron profiles were within the normal range. There is compelling evidence that H. pylori must be taken into account as a cause of hypergastrinemia other than gastrinoma in childhood.
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PMID:[Hypergastrinemia associated with Helicobacter pylori infection and sideropenic anemia in a 15-year-old girl]. 1265 31

Type I gastric carcinoid tumors result from hypergastrinemia in 1%-7% of patients with pernicious anemia. We diagnosed pernicious anemia in a 48-year-old female patient with complaint of fatigue for three months. She had no gastrointestinal symptoms. Endoscopic examination ot the upper gastrointestinal tract revealed atrophic gastritis and a polypoid lesion in the corpus of 3-4 mm in size. Endoscopic polypectomy was performed. Histopathological examination of the specimen revealed positive chromogranin A and synaptophysin stainings compatible with the diagnosis of a carcinoid tumor. Serum gastrin level was increased, urinary 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid was within the normal range. There was no other symptom, sign, or laboratory finding of a carcinoid syndrome in the patient. No metastasis was found with indium-111 octreotide scan, computed tomographies of abdomen and thorax. Type I gastric carcinoid tumors are only rarely solitary and patients with tumors < 1 cm in size may benefit from endoscopic polypectomy.
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PMID:Treatment of solitary gastric carcinoid tumor by endoscopic polypectomy in a patient with pernicious anemia. 1683 Mar 92

Somatostatinomas are rare tumors; ampullary somatostatinomas are very rare. We report a case of a small pure somatostatin-producing neuroendocrine tumor of ampulla of Vater in a 54-year-old woman with neither neurofibromatosis nor somatostatinoma syndrome, "incidentally" discovered during an abdominal computed tomography. The patient initially refused other adjunctive exams but after 2 years she was admitted, presenting with itch, night sweats, severe fatigue, and unintentional weight loss. The size of the tumor (1.5 cm) and the other radiologic findings had not changed since the abdominal CT scan 2 years before. The somatostatin, gastrin, glucagons, serotonin, vasoactive intestinal peptide, dopamine, norepinephrine, epinephrine, and calcitonin plasma levels were normal. ERCP-obtained biopsies revealed a neuroendocrine tumor with psammoma bodies; immunohistochemical profile was positive for chromogranin and somatostatin. The patient underwent surgery; intraoperative histologic examination of lymph nodes sampling of perihepatic and periduodenal lymph nodes was negative for metastasis. We performed, therefore, a transduodenal ampullectomy. The patient continues to do well at 3 years' follow-up with no evidence of local or distance recurrence of disease.
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PMID:Incidental small ampullary somatostatinoma treated with ampullectomy 2 years after diagnosis. 1696 13

A 27-year-old male, who had developed diabetes mellitus type 1 (DMT1) since the age of eighteen and alopecia areata universalis nine months later, attended the outpatient clinics complaining of general fatigue and shortness of breath. A Schilling test was indicative of pernicious anemia. Antigastric parietal cell (AGPA) and anti-intrinsic factor antibodies were positive, confirming diagnosis of pernicious anemia. Thyroid and Addison's disease were excluded. Gastroscopy revealed atrophic gastritis without any evidence of carcinoid tumors. The aim of this case, which, to our knowledge, is the first one to describe a correlation between diabetes mellitus Type 1 (DMT1), pernicious anaemia, and alopecia areata universalis, is to remind the clinician of the increased risk of pernicious anaemia and gastric carcinoids in DMT1 patients. Screening for AGPA followed by serum gastrin and vitamin B(12) levels constitute the most evidence-based diagnostic approach.
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PMID:Pernicious anemia in a patient with Type 1 diabetes mellitus and alopecia areata universalis. 1861 80

A 55-year-old female with a history of psychosis and rheumatoid arthritis was admitted to the hospital for fatigue and dizziness. At admission, macrocytic anemia, high serum lactic acid dehydrogenase (LDH) and gastrin concentrations, decreased serum vitamin B12 concentration, with macroovalocytes and poikilocytes in peripheral blood smear suggested the diagnosis of pernicious anemia. Indirect antiglobulin test (IAT) was negative. Surprisingly, treatment by vitamin B12 and folic acid administered for two weeks was ineffective and followed by transitory worsening of hemoglobin concentration on day 8. Repeat direct antiglobulin test (DAT) and IAT were positive. This immunotransfusion conversion, suggesting the presence of autoimmune hemolytic anemia, could be explained by change in the macroblastic erythrocyte population, i.e. emerging red cells with completely exposed membrane antigens due to vitamin B12 treatment and/or higher degree of dysregulation of the lymphocyte clone secreting erythrocyte autoantibodies. We proposed the coexistence of pernicious and autoimmune hemolytic anemia; therefore, methylprednisolone was added to vitamin B12 treatment. This therapy successfully improved hemoglobin and erythrocyte concentration. Although megaloblastic-pernicious anemia is a common disease, association of pernicious and autoimmune hemolytic anemia with two mechanisms of hemolysis (ineffective erythropoiesis and immune mechanism) is a rare condition, with only several dozens of cases described so far.
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PMID:Combined megaloblastic and immunohemolytic anemia associated--a case report. 1938 72

Autoimmune polyglandular syndrome by definition consists of two or more endocrinological insufficiencies or two organ specific autoimmune diseases. There are no stringent criteria for endocrinological evaluation of patients with one endocrine insufficiency. However, detailed endocrinological evaluation should be undertaken in patients with two autoimmune diseases. Additionally, follow up thereafter should be a must in these patients in order to avoid the possibility of not diagnosing subsequent autoimmune diseases that can occur. The aim of this case report is to point to the necessity of endocrinological screening to be made in patients presenting with gastric carcinoid type 1. We report on a 62-year-old woman who was diagnosed with primary hypothyroidism in 1993. In 2011, she was re-admitted to the hospital due to increasing fatigue. Macrocytic anemia, low vitamin B12 levels and positive parietal antibodies confirmed pernicious anemia. Furthermore, she underwent gastroscopy, which revealed two polyps in the corpus of the stomach and one in the fornix. Endoscopic mucosal resection was performed and histopathologic analysis confirmed three G1 gastric carcinoids (Ki67 2%). Additional endocrinological evaluation disclosed positive glutamic acid decarboxylase antibodies, but normal fasting and postprandial glucose and HbA1c. In 2013, she was diagnosed with glucose intolerance and subsequently with latent autoimmune diabetes of adulthood. Plasma glucose and HbA1c normalized after dietary intervention. Due to the increase of serum chromogranin A, prophylactic antrectomy was performed in 2014. The patient is still followed-up and has normal chromogranin A, gastrin and HbA1c levels.
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PMID:GASTRIC CARCINOID TYPE 1 IN A PATIENT WITH AUTOIMMUNE POLYGLANDULAR SYNDROME: ADDITIONAL ENDOCRINOLOGICAL EVALUATION REQUIRED. 2701 30


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