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Query: UNIPROT:P01350 (
gastrin
)
9,683
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
This study was undertaken to assess the prevalence and characteristic hormonal profile of endocrine cells in Barrett's mucosa and to determine to what extent this profile was shared by endocrine cells of adenocarcinomas arising therefrom. In addition, lower oesophageal carcinomas, not associated with columnar metaplasia, were examined to see if they exhibited a different hormonal profile. The patients studied comprised 43 who had had multiple oesophageal biopsies. 35 who had had oesophagogastric resection for adenocarcinoma arising in Barrett's mucosa and 26 in whom the resection showed no metaplastic epithelium adjacent to tumour. Argyrophil cells were present in 90% of biopsies and resections of Barrett's mucosa combined, irrespective of the histological type of metaplastic epithelium. By immunocytochemistry the most frequently identified substance in mucosal endocrine cells was serotonin (82%) followed by somatostatin (54%), secretin (22%) and pancreatic polypeptide (17%).
Gastrin
, bombesin, cholecystokinin,
ACTH
and substance P were not identified in metaplastic mucosa in any case. The difference in expression of serotonin by endocrine cells of tumours arising in Barrett's mucosa (31%) and those not (3.8%) was statistically significant (P less than 0.0186). Carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) was demonstrated in 60% of oesophageal carcinomas, both endocrine positive and endocrine negative. Focal CEA expression was seen in 4.6% of biopsies and 14% of Barrett's mucosa adjacent to tumour. These results indicate a higher prevalence of endocrine cells in Barrett's mucosa than hitherto documented and suggest that serotonin may be a useful marker in distinguishing between primary oesophageal and putative gastric cancers at the gastro-oesophageal junction. The identification of CEA in oesophageal columnar epithelium is of little value in predicting the development of malignancy.
...
PMID:The relationship of endocrine cells, dysplasia and carcinoembryonic antigen in Barrett's mucosa to adenocarcinoma of the oesophagus. 288 73
Four patients with advanced endocrine malignancies were treated with a somatostatin analogue (SMS 201-995) for palliation of hormone-induced symptoms during 3-6 months. Two had the carcinoid syndrome (one midgut and one foregut), one had medullary thyroid carcinoma and an ectopic
ACTH
syndrome, and one patient had a metastatic gastrinoma. The carcinoid patients had excellent symptomatic relief with a low dose of the drug, 50 micrograms subcutaneously twice daily, in one case despite progression of tumour disease and biochemical tumour markers. These findings indicate an action of the drug not only on hormonal release but also at peripheral sites. The patient with medullary thyroid carcinoma had relief of gastrointestinal symptoms when the drug dose was increased (100 micrograms twice daily). The levels of
ACTH
in peripheral blood were reduced, but not the calcitonin levels. The gastrinoma patient had undergone a major pancreatic resection (Whipple procedure) and was treated with omeprazole. SMS 201-995 reduced the peripheral
gastrin
levels acutely, but during the treatment fasting
gastrin
values increased, and the tumour growth progressed. Treatment was stopped owing to elevated fasting glucose level, increased steatorrhoea, and clinical attacks of cholangitis. Special attention is advocated for patients with major pancreatic resection and biliary reconstruction, who may be susceptible to physiological effects of somatostatin (or its analogues)--that is, impaired insulin release and decreased motility.
...
PMID:The use of a long-acting somatostatin analogue in the treatment of advanced endocrine malignancies with gastrointestinal symptoms. 289 Nov 86
The presence of a number of regulatory peptides (bombesin,
gastrin
, glucagon, somatostatin, calcitonin and
ACTH
) was compared in 30 typical carcinoid tumours and 27 well differentiated neuroendocrine carcinomas (atypical carcinoids) using conventional immunocytochemistry. Strong immunostaining for one or more peptide was observed in 97% of the typical carcinoids (29/30) whereas only 67% of the neuroendocrine carcinomas showed immunoreactivity. The peptide most frequently detected in typical carcinoids was bombesin (67%), while
gastrin
was more common in neuroendocrine carcinomas (44%). Immunoreactivity for more than one peptide was present in 33 tumours and in three cases, six different peptides were detected. The study shows that immunoreactivity to various peptides is more common in typical carcinoids than well differentiated neuroendocrine carcinomas. The significance of these findings is discussed.
...
PMID:Immunoreactivity of various peptides in typical and atypical bronchopulmonary carcinoid tumours. 290 52
Seventeen human subjects fasted without electrolyte replacement for 3 days and hormone levels were measured before, during and after the fast. Immediate consequences of the fasting state in healthy human subjects include a marked increase in plasma cortisol.
ACTH
, beta-endorphin, beta-lipotrophic hormone, adrenaline, noradrenaline and dopamine. Levels of all these hormones were much greater on the first morning of the fast than in the post-prandial state, even though the plasma glucose level was no lower than that observed on the morning before the fast began. A clear fall in TSH and tri-iodothyronine (T3) levels was observed, but thyroxine levels did not change significantly. Insulin levels fell whereas proinsulin levels did not fall during the fast, though they did rise markedly upon re-feeding. An increase in GH levels was particularly apparent in male subjects, but was also seen in females when evening samples were compared. Pancreatic glucagon showed a modest rise during the fast, but fell again on refeeding; total glucagon also rose as the fast proceeded, but increased markedly upon re-feeding. Levels of
gastrin
and peptide YY remained low during the fast. Plasma electrolyte levels were unchanged. The following were closely correlated: cortisol with
ACTH
, T3 with log10 TSH, dopamine with noradrenaline, and (negatively, during the fast) pancreatic glucagon with glucose.
...
PMID:The effect of a 72-h fast on plasma levels of pituitary, adrenal, thyroid, pancreatic and gastrointestinal hormones in healthy men and women. 292 6
Neuroendocrine (NE) neoplasms of the human bronchopulmonary tract were examined by electron microscopy, immunocytochemistry, and gel electrophoresis of cytoskeletal proteins from microdissected tissue samples. All samples (carcinoids, well-differentiated NE carcinoma, NE carcinomas of intermediate type, NE carcinomas of the small cell type) contained significant numbers of cells that immunostained for one or more of the following neuroendocrine markers tested: bombesin, calcitonin,
ACTH
, leu-enkephalin,
gastrin
, serotonin, somatostatin, alpha-melanocyte-stimulating hormone, vasoactive intestinal peptide, glucagon, insulin, substance P, and neuron-specific enolase. Electron microscopy revealed typical NE cell features, including variable abundant and frequently heterogeneous neurosecretory granules. Tumor cells contained filaments specifically stained with different conventional and monoclonal antibodies to cytokeratins and displayed punctate plasma membrane staining with antibodies to desmoplakins, in agreement with the electron microscopic demonstration of tonofilament bundles and desmosomes. Immunocytochemistry for NE markers and cytoskeletal proteins on consecutive sections revealed both cytokeratins and neuroendocrine substances in single cells. Using gel electrophoresis of cytoskeletal proteins of tissue regions extracted with high salt buffer and detergent, we could detect, in the tumors tested, appreciable amounts of cytokeratin polypeptides 8, 18, and 19, i.e., major cytokeratins also found in certain other lung carcinomas such as adenocarcinomas. Tumor cells were not significantly stained with antibodies to other intermediate filament proteins such as vimentin, desmin, glial filament protein, and neurofilament protein. The results show that NE substances can be synthesized in cells containing a typical epithelial cytoskeleton, i.e., cytokeratin filaments and desmosomes. These findings support the notion of an epithelial character of these tumors and appear in contrast with recent reports that neurofilaments are the only type of intermediate filaments present in carcinoids and other pulmonary NE tumors. These observations may have important implications for the histogenesis of NE carcinomas and for diagnostic pathology.
...
PMID:Coexpression of neuroendocrine markers and epithelial cytoskeletal proteins in bronchopulmonary neuroendocrine neoplasms. 298 72
A case of simultaneous presentation of a small-cell carcinoma involving the ovary and the uterine endometrium is reported. We consider the endometrium as the primary localization of the tumor. The epithelial origin and neuroendocrine differentiation were confirmed by electron microscopy. Tumor cells were attached by small desmosomes, and in the cytoplasm typically neurosecretory granules measuring 100-200 nm were found. Immunohistochemically, no content of polypeptide hormones (
ACTH
, Calcitonin,
Gastrin
, Glucagon, Insulin, Somatostatin and VIP) were encountered. The tumor stained strongly for neuronspecific enolase. The histogenetic possibilities are shortly presented.
...
PMID:Simultaneous presentation of a small-cell carcinoma involving the ovary and the uterine endometrium. 298 80
A patient with a calcifying chronic pancreatitis was found to have a neuroendocrine islet cell tumour (a previously unreported association). The tumour secreted both
gastrin
and
ACTH
leading to clinical manifestations of both the Zollinger-Ellison syndrome and Cushing's syndrome.
...
PMID:Neuroendocrine islet cell tumour producing gastrin and ACTH in a patient with calcifying chronic pancreatitis. 298 96
Thirty-eight infiltrating ductal carcinomas, nine infiltrating lobular carcinomas, two tubular carcinomas and one papillary carcinoma were studied by light microscopy, immunocytochemistry and electron microscopy. Seventeen cases showed immunoreactivity for NSE. Immunostaining for different peptide-hormones was observed in 12 of these 17 cases and in none of the 10 NSE-negative cases used for controls. Scattered cells were positive for
gastrin
in five cases, pancreatic polypeptide in five, leu-enkephalin in three, sub-P in two,
ACTH
in one, bombesin in one and beta-endorphin in one case. Four cases revealed immunoreactivity for more than one peptide-hormone. Typical neuroendocrine granules were seen in five cases (all positively stained for NSE). Small, electron dense granules of possible neuroendocrine nature were not found in any of the 33 NSE-negative tumours. Our results confirm that immunoreactivity for NSE is present in a high proportion of breast carcinomas, but that neuroendocrine differentiation cannot be proved to be present in all these cases.
...
PMID:Neurone specific enolase immunostaining in the diagnosis of breast carcinomas with neuroendocrine differentiation. Its usefulness and limitations. 300 12
A 54 year old woman suffered from acromegaly due to a pancreatic islet cell tumour producing GHRH. The tumour was demonstrated on CT scan. The diagnosis was established from elevated plasma levels of GHRH, GH and prolactin, and by the lack of signs of a pituitary adenoma in trans-sphenoidal surgery. Acromegaly was cured by tumour removal. Light microscopically, the tumour showed a medullary and microlobular pattern. The cells were large and often cuspidal. Small granules were found in semi-thin sections. Small aggregations of amyloid fibres were seen, mostly around capillaries. Immunocytochemistry revealed GHRH, NSE, neurotensin, serotonin, VIP and PP. S 100 was positive only in nerve fibres. Staining for GH,
ACTH
, calcitonin, alpha-HCG, beta-HCG, insulin, glucagon,
gastrin
, substance P, bombesin and somatostatin was negative. Ultrastructure showed oval partly lobulated nuclei with small nucleoli, moderate amounts of rough endoplasmic reticulum, many free ribosomes, some large Golgi fields and small numbers of secretory granules measuring 150 nm or, in a few cells, 650 nm. Only 4 other cases of pancreatic endocrine tumours causing acromegaly by ectopic GHRH secretion are described in the literature and these were similar to our case in many respects.
...
PMID:Morphology of a GHRH producing pancreatic islet cell tumour causing acromegaly. 301 79
A patient with metastatic islet cell carcinoma demonstrated multiple clinical syndromes simultaneously with secretion of
ACTH
,
gastrin
, glucagon, and serotonin. Hepatic arterial embolization resulted in an initial decrease in all secretory products, which was sustained for glucagon and serotonin. Recrudescence of the Cushings and Zollinger-Ellison syndrome was managed by surgical extirpation of the primary tumor and regional metastases as well as bilateral adrenalectomy. Electron microscopy and immunocytochemistry of the primary tumor and the metastatic lesions revealed the presence of multiple types of granules within single cells and, different patterns of secretory profiles in different tumor sites.
...
PMID:Metastatic islet cell tumor with ACTH, gastrin, and glucagon secretion. Clinical and pathologic studies with multiple therapies. 303 1
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