Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UNIPROT:P01350 (gastrin)
9,683 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The serum concentrations of immunoreactive gastrin and immunoreactive calcitonin were measured in 13 fasting patients with achlorhydria and pernicious anaemia and in 10 age- and sex-matched fasting control subjects. All patients had highly elevated concentrations of gastrin in serum (1468 +/- 336 pg/ml, mean "/- SEM). The mean concentration in the controls was 35.2 +/- 6.4 pg/ml. No difference in the concentration of calcitonin was found between the pernicious anaemia patients and the controls, the levels being 0.93 +/- 0.08 and 0.89 +/- 0.03 ng/ml, respectively. Suppression of endogenous gastrin secretion in 5 of the patients by intragastric acid administration was not accompanined by any decrease in calcitonin concentration in serum. The findings suggest that chronically elevated endogenous gastrin is without influence on calcitonin secretion.
Acta Endocrinol (Copenh) 1977 Sep
PMID:Serum calcitonin in hypergastrinaemia due to achlorhydria. 57 6

Intracellular microelectrode technique and standard organ bath technique were used to investigate the effects of pentagastrin, G17, and G34 on the electrical and mechanical activities of canine antral circular muscle. All three molecular forms increased the amplitude and duration of the plateau of the gastric action potential and the frequency of spontaneous action potentials. They also increased the amplitude and frequency of spontaneous contractions. G17 was equal to or less potent than pentagastrin in all of its actions on this tissue. G34 had an equal or greater activity than G17. The electrical studies indicate that G17 is active in this tissue in a physiological range of concentrations. The ED50 for the effect of G17 to increase the amplitude of the plateau potential is less than that for the effect of G17 on gastric secretion, indicating that this is a physiological action of gastrin. Atropine studies indicate that only part of the in vitro inotropic action of gastrin is caused by the release of acetylcholine from nerve terminals, but that the chronotropic action is attributable to a direct effect on the smooth muscle membrane.
Gastroenterology 1978 Sep
PMID:Effects of pentagastrin, G17, and G34 on the electrical and mechanical activities of canine antral smooth muscle. 68 Apr 95

Restricted feeding at two distinct times of the day was associated with different adaptive responses in rats. Animals meal-fed from 1400 to 1800 hours for 6 days demonstrated feeding-cued circadian rhythms in liver weight and in liver transaminase and lactic dehydrogenase enzyme activities. Daily fluctuations in the levels of blood immunoreactive insulin and gastrin were also found to be cued by food intake. By comparison, rats fed from 0700 to 1100 hours for 6 days exhibited altered liver function and blood immunoreactive gastrin patterns. It is suggested that meal-feeding in rats is associated with certain adaptive responses which are dependent upon the timing of the meal. The observed metabolic alterations consequent to meal-feeding are much more apparent in morning-fed than in afternoon-fed animals.
J Nutr 1978 Sep
PMID:The effects of meal-feeding at different times of the day on daily changes in serum insulin, gastrin and liver enzymes in the rat. 68 44

The effects of recent diagnostic and therapeutic advances were assessed in 65 patients with the Zollinger-Ellison syndrome (ZES). Twenty-seven patients seen between 1955 and 1970 were compared with 38 patients seen between 1971 and 1977. The earlier patients had a higher incidence of virulent ulcer disease (56% vs. 24%), other endocrinopathies (48% vs. 13%), and malignant gastrinoma (44% vs. 25%). Earlier diagnosis is the result of liberal use of serum gastrin measurements and provocative tests for gastrin release (calcium and secretin), and an increased awareness of this syndrome. Because their basal gastrin values were in a range that overlapped ordinary ulcer disease, 47% of patients encountered in recent years required provocative testing with secretin for diagnosis. If the gastrin concentration falls to normal following resection of a gastrinoma, the tumor has probably been completely removed. In our patients, gastrin measurements after total gastrectomy had no prognostic significance in regards to clinical progression or regression of the neoplasm. Of 12 patients treated with cimetidine, nine experienced symptomatic improvement, and three did not. Resection of the gastrinoma should be attempted if the lesion is solitary and located in the body or tail of the pancreas, or if it is an isolated duodenal lesion. Otherwise, total gastrectomy remains the treatment of choice. In 38 patients, total gastrectomy with Roux-en-Y esophagojejunostomy was followed by 97% survival and minimal difficulties with nutrition or dumping.
Ann Surg 1978 Sep
PMID:The Zollinger-Ellison syndrome--23 years later. 68 1

The influence of selective proximal vagotomy (SPV) and of an additional pyloroplasty (Heineke-Mikulicz) on gastric emptying, acid and gastrin secretion, and duodenogastric reflux was examined experimentally. After SPV, gastric emptying of fluids and a solid meal was significantly faster than before surgery. An additional pyloroplasty did not influence gastric emptying time significantly. Gastrin secretion after stimulation with a protein-rich meal increased significantly after SPV and did not change much after pyloroplasty was added. It can be concluded that increased gastrin secretion after SPV is not a result of delayed emptying. Pentagastrin-stimulated acid secretion was reduced by 70% after SPV and after additional pyloroplasty as well. The results show that reduced acid secretion after SPV causes the rise in serum gastrin levels. After SPV no duodenogastric reflux occurred. An additional pyloroplasty led to a significant rise of bromsulphaleine used as a marker for bile in gastric aspirate. Obviously destruction of the pylorus leads to a loss of its antireflux function. This leads to an antral gastritis which after 3 months is of chronic-atrophic type. A stimulation of gastrin output by bile could not be demonstrated. It can be concluded that after SPV gastric emptying is not delayed. A pyloroplasty does not affect gastrin release and acid secretion. Drainage procedures together with SPV should be avoided to prevent duodenogastric reflux and antral gastritis.
Chirurg 1978 Sep
PMID:[Experimental studies on the effect of pyloroplasty on gastric emptying, serum gastrin and duodenogastric reflux in selective proximal vagotomy (SPV)]. 68 38

New manometric techniques in for examining the lower oesophageal sphincter (LOS) were applied an investigation of the oesophago-gastric junction after partial gastric resection. Pressure and blood gastrin data are reported for eight cases examined before and after surgery, under basal conditions and after stimulation with a protein meal. It was found that gastric resection leads to a decrease in LOS performance (43.6% fall in maximum pressure) and length (-33.3%). There is also a 93.5% decrease in the pressure response to a protein meal, and hence a predisposition to gastroesophageal reflux.
Minerva Chir 1978 Sep 15
PMID:[The lower esophageal sphincter in gastrectomized patients. Manometric study]. 69 88

Somatostatin, a growth hormone-release inhibiting hormone, has been found to be a powerful inhibitor of gastric and pancreatic secretion as well as of hormone release in the digestive system. This study was undertaken to determine the influence of somatostatin on the myoelectrical activity pattern of the small bowel. Three conscious dogs were prepared with electrodes spaced 25 cm apart along the entire small intestine. Intravenous infusions of somatostatin were administered in various doses (0.6--5.0 microgram/kg.h) while spike activity and slow waves were recorded under fasting conditions, after a meat meal, or during intravenous infusion of gastrin, caerulein, or insulin. Somatostatin at a dose of 0.6 microgram/kg.h almost doubled the frequency of the interdigestive myoelectric complex. Somatostatin in fed dogs caused a dose-dependent decrease of the normal fed spike activity, and at higher doses it induced a pattern like that seen in fasting animals. The slow-wave frequency in both fasted and fed conditions was not changed significantly. We conclude that somatostatin given under basal conditions increases the frequency of the interdigestive complex and, when administered after feeding, converts the fed-type pattern to the fasted-type pattern. It may therefore play a promoting role in initiating the interdigestive myoelectric complex.
Am J Physiol 1978 Sep
PMID:Effect of somatostatin on myoelectrical activity of small bowel. 69 18

Three adult sheep were prepared with a denervated pouch of fundus of the abomasum and a reentrant fistula system that connected the remaining proximal and distal portions of the abomasum. The proximal cannula of the reentrant system was close to the omasoabomasal orifice, allowing for easy collection of fluid leaving the omasum. Intravenous injection of 0.5, 1.0, or 2.0 microgram/kg/hr of synthetic human gastrin I caused a marked decrease in flow rate of fluid from the omasum. The concentration of particulate matter in the digesta was inversely related to rate of omasal outflow. An increase in acid output from the denervated abomasal pouch during gastrin injection indicated that the hormone was given at pharmacologically effective doses. Results indicate that gastrin has a modulating effect on the flow of ingesta through the ruminant forestomachs. Actual sites of action were not identified.
Am J Vet Res 1978 Sep
PMID:Effects of gastrin on emptying and composition of digesta of the omasum of sheep. 69 56

The serum immunoreactive gastrin (IRG) level in infants with confirmed idiopathic hypertrophic pyloric stenosis (IHPS) has been determined and compared to that found in vomiting infants without IHPS, in normal infants, and in normal adults. The mean serum IRG level of normal infants (103 +/- 9 pg/ml (mean +/- SEM) exceeded that of normal adults (28 +/- 5 pg/ml). The preoperative mean serum IRG level in IHPS infants (256 +/- 26 pg/ml) was significantly higher than that of both normal infants and vomiting infants without IHPS (93 +/- 9 pg/ml). Twenty-five per cent (5/20) of the IHPS infants had serum IRG levels within the upper range of normal infants. Fasting serum IRG levels in IHPS infants were not altered immediately by pyloromyotomy. The results from this study suggest a relationship between gastrin and idiopathic hypertrophic pyloric stenosis.
Gut 1978 Sep
PMID:Increased serum immunoreactive gastrin levels in idiopathic hypertrophic pyloric stenosis. 71 Sep 68

Suspension of magnesium and aluminum hydroxide (30--60 mEq/24h) or a comparable volme of water was orally administered by gastric intubation to two groups of 20 male Wistar rats each over 60 days. The antacid treatment led to a significant increase in the height (0.464 +/- 0.02 mm v. 0.318 +/- 0.06) and in the volume (472 +/- 32 mm3v.328 +/- 45) of the fundic mucosa of the stomach, in the average count of parietal cells per unit area of the mucosa (32.37 +/- 1.8 v. 22.3 +/- 1.6), and in the total parietal cell population of the stomach (53.6 +/- 3.5 x 10(6) v. 43.2 +/- 3.7 x 10(6)). Furthermore fasting serum gastrin concentration was significantly higher in the antacid treated rats (81.2 +/- 7.4 pg/ml) than in control animals (56.9 +/- 6.9 pg/ml).
Gut 1978 Sep
PMID:Parietal cell hyperplasia induced by long-term administration of antacids to rats. 71 Sep 69


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>