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)

Twenty-three patients with hyperparathyroidism from six families with the multiple endocrine adenomatosis (MEA) I-syndrome were tested by secretin provocation. In nine cases this led to increases in serum gastrin ranging from 298 to 13 300 pg/ml, whereas the maximum rise in gastrin in the other 14 patients was 32 pg/ml. In all nine patients with marked gastrin responses to secretin, the Zollinger-Ellison syndrome was diagnosed by gastric acid hypersecretion and large increases in gastrin after calcium administration. Six of these nine patients had, at most, minor postprandial rises in gastin and two had demonstrable tumors. In 34 normal subjects, 23 nonaffected members of families with MEA I-syndrome, and 42 patients with various diseases the maximum gastrin response to secretin was 21 pg/ml. We conclude that secretin provocation is helpful in the diagnosis of the Zollinger-Ellison syndrome, especially when basal serum gastrin levels are only slightly elevated.
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PMID:Secretin-stimulated serum gastrin levels in hyperparathyroid patients from families with multiple endocrine adenomatosis type I. 1 40

A 58-year-old patient with hypergastrinemia (basal and after stimulation by means of protein food, calcium, glucagon, and secretin), acid hypersecretion, recurrent anastomotic ulcer, gastrocolonic fistula, steatorrhea, and malabsortion (hypocalcemia, hypocholesterolemia and a rather elevated 5-HIAA) is reported. The definite preoperative diagnosis of Zollinger-Ellison syndrome was established after the intravenous secretin test (75 U) which produced a significant stimulation peak 5 minutes after being injected. The possible existence of a multiple endocrine adenomatosis syndrome type I was discarded. During the operation no pancreatic or extrapancreatic macroscopic tumor was found. A total gastrectomy, transverse colectomy, splenectomy, and subtotal pancreatic resection were performed; Rosanow's techniques was used to re-established the gastrointestinal continuity. The morphological study of the excised pancreatic tissue showed a diffuse hyperplasia of the Langerhans islet cells; indirect immunofluorescence in the presence of antigastrin antibodies was faintly positive and difficult to evaluate. However, gastrin levels clearly decrease after the operation may be because the inhibitory effect of total gastrectomy or because of the partial pancreatectomy. Furthermore, the inhibitory effect of tyrocalcitonine onthe pre- and postoperative gastrin levels measured by radioimmunoassay could be verified. For the moment the importance of this test in the diagnosis of Zollinger-Ellison syndrome, and especially in the diagnosis of ZES-type II, is not known.
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PMID:[Zollinger-Ellison syndrome type II due to diffuse hyperplasia of the pancreatic islet cells (author's transl)]. 38 7

At present at least seven different endocrine cell types have been identified in the stomach. According to their relative frequency and secretion products the antral gastrin producing G cell and somatostatin producing D cell and the fundic histamine producing ECL cell are the best characterized cell types. Total endocrine cell mass is controlled by various factors from inside and outside the stomach. Density of antral G and D cells depends on the presence and absence of food, on the antral pH and on additional humoral and/or neural factors. Gastrin and not gastric pH has been identified as the most important factor regulating the density of fundic ECL cells. Adaptation of gastric endocrine cells to gastric pH and to the presence, abundance or absence of humoral and neural regulators are well known phenomena though only partially understood. Antral G cells increase and antral D cells decrease during long-term achlorhydria which as a consequence leads to hypergastrinaemia. Examples are pernicious anaemia in man and drug-induced acid suppression under experimental conditions. Interestingly, achlorhydria-induced G cell hyperplasia never progresses to gastrinomas. Fundic ECL cell density increases markedly in the presence of long-lasting hypergastrinaemia independently of gastric pH. In contrast to G cells ECL cell hyperplasia may progress to rarely occurring ECLomas. However, this depends on additional conditioning factors as the presence of severe atrophic gastritis as in pernicious anaemia or a specific genetic trait present in patients with gastrinomas associated with the MEN I syndrome.
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PMID:Adaptation and renewal of the endocrine stomach. 129 54

APUDomas are rare tumours originating from a variety of endocrine cells localized in different organs. Acute complications from APUDomas usually result from the increased biosynthesis and release of bioactive amines or polypeptide hormones by the tumour. Less frequently, bleeding or compression by the tumour can occur requiring emergency surgery. Increased gastrin production by gastrinomas is the cause of ZES (peptic ulceration and diarrhoea) by gastrin effects on gastric acid secretion. Volume depletion, hypokalaemia, severe bleeding, duodenal perforation, oesophageal stricture and pyloric stenosis are the most dramatic complications. Treatment of these complications and their prevention has been facilitated by the availability of antagonists to H2 receptors and H(+)-K+ proton pump. These medications should control acid output in every patient with ZES. Frequent manifestations of carcinoid tumours, VIPomas and medullary thyroid carcinomas are flushing and diarrhoea. Octreotide, a long-acting somatostatin analogue, has markedly changed the management of these patients, their symptoms decreasing in severity or disappearing in most cases. Octreotide has also been used with success in the prevention and treatment of the carcinoid crisis, a dreaded complication of carcinoid tumours. A better understanding of the pathophysiology of APUDomas has enabled new treatment designs which have considerably ameliorated the quality of life of patients affected by these tumours; efforts must be continued to affect their life expectancy.
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PMID:APUDomas: acute complications and their medical management. 131 Aug 47

Total gastrectomy used to be considered as a standard operation in the surgical treatment for gastrinoma syndrome. Although this end organ resection is a good palliation, to cure this ulcerogenic disease, gastrinoma resection is preferred. It remains a question if a total gastrectomy is necessary when a gastrinoma is found and resected. In a period of 12 years, nine out of 17 patients with gastrinoma syndrome were surgically treated. Fifteen gastrinomas were removed without histologic evidence of malignancy. Total gastrectomy was added in three, Whipple's operation was done in one and tumor resection alone in five. Serial examination of the resected stomach didn't find any gastrinoma. Eight gastrinomas of seven patients were found located in the pancreas, duodenum and lymph nodes within the gastrinoma triangle. These patients except one were followed up for six months to five years (mean 32 months). One died of post-operative hepatic failure, and one died of hypophysectomy for a co-existent huge prolactinoma (MEN I) four years later. Cure of the disease in terms of normal fasting serum gastrin levels, symptom free without medication, endoscopic evidence of healed ulcer, and a negative conversion of secretin provocative test was found in 2/3 of the patients with additional total gastrectomy, and 4/6 of the others. All cured patients had their gastrinomas located in the gastrinoma triangle, and six of the seven (85.7%) patients with gastrinomas in the triangle were cured. It is our conclusion that total gastrectomy was retrospectively unnecessary in most of the patients with gastrinomas in the gastrinoma triangle. Staged operations should be planned.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[The role of total gastrectomy in the management of gastrinoma syndrome]. 131 9

Achlorhydria has been discussed as a possibly dangerous consequence of therapeutic inhibition of gastric acid secretion since the introduction of H2-receptor antagonists. The risk of long-term hypergastrinaemia has only been considered for about 5 years. The reason for this was the demonstration that gastric carcinoids (ECLomas) observed after life-long treatment of rats with the proton pump inhibitor omeprazole could also be produced in rats by other methods leading to long-lasting profound hypergastrinaemia. Such methods were the 80% resection of the oxyntic mucosa or feeding of ranitidine (2000 mg/day) for 2 years. The endocrine tumours corresponded to the gastric carcinoids found in patients with long-lasting hypergastrinaemia due to pernicious anaemia or with a gastrinoma as part of the MEN I syndrome. Neither in animals nor in man could other endocrine tumours or adenocarcinomas of the gastrointestinal tract be related to hypergastrinaemia. Epidemiologic data do not support gastrin dependence of adenocarcinoma of the stomach or the colon. Experimental findings of gastrin effects on tumour growth in vivo and in vitro have been contradictory and may be explained by the presence of gastrin receptors on tumour cells and the role of gastrin as an autocrine growth factor in some of these tumours. Since acid blockade by proton pump inhibitors or H2-receptor blockers dose-dependently increase serum gastrin levels, patients with ranitidine-resistant peptic ulceration receiving long-term treatment with high-dose omeprazole have been followed up with serial gastric biopsy specimens for up to 5 years. Complete healing, moderate hypergastrinaemia, and a slight hyperplasia but no dysplasia of the ECL cells in the oxyntic mucosa have been observed, which seemed to be correlated to chronic gastritis progressing over the years. Despite these negative findings excessive hypergastrinaemia by overdosage of potent drugs for inhibition of gastric secretion should be avoided and monitoring of plasma gastrin levels is recommended in case of long-term treatment.
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PMID:Is hypergastrinaemia dangerous to man? 167 24

A diagnostic and therapeutic strategy for ZES is proposed based on the vast experience (180 cases) of this rare disease gained at hospital Bichat (Paris, France). The first step is diagnostic and relies essentially a) upon measurements of gastric acid and serum gastrin in the basal state and b) upon the results of secretin test because of the overlap between ZES and duodenal ulcer disease in a large proportion of cases. In sporadic ZES cases, after adequate control of acid overproduction and attempt to localize the tumoral process(es), surgery is indicated (at the exception of patients with advanced metastatic disease). Surgery aims essentially at eradicating gastrinoma(s) as often as possible and whenever it is feasible without endangering patient's life. An apparently definite cure is attained in 60 to 80% in extrapancreatic gastrinoma(s) and 20 to 30% when gastrinomas are located within the pancreas. Liver involvement (25% of ZES cases) remains the major concern and death cause in these patients. Although liver metastases frequently stabilize and sometimes regress upon chemotherapy and chemoembolization, liver transplantation may, in the future, represent the major chance for these patients; but in this frequently slowly evolving condition, the time for liver transplantation is exceptionally difficult to settle.
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PMID:[Which diagnostic and therapeutic approach to the Zollinger-Ellison syndrome should be adopted in 1990?]. 167 64

The presence of gastrin in pituitary tissue as well as gastrin hypersecretion by some pituitary adenomas have been documented using different methodological approaches. In the present study, serum gastrin levels were measured in 93 patients with nonfunctioning pituitary adenoma, i.e. a condition lacking a reliable marker of the disease. Elevated gastrin levels (85-2, 180 ng/l; normal range: 15-80 ng/l) were found in 14/93 patients (15%), the highest values being observed in one patient with MEN I syndrome. In all but MEN I hypergastrinemic patient, a severe gastric hypochlorhydria (Basal Acid Output: 0.04 +/- 0.1 mmol H+/h) unresponsive to pentagastrin (Maximum Acid Output: 0.1 +/- 0.2 mmol H+/h) was seen. Secretin injection caused gastrin to increase in the patient with MEN I and in another hypergastrinemic patient. Antiparietal cells autoantibodies were positive in 3/11 patients. No changes in gastrin concentrations were found after administration of several agents usually employed in the evaluation of pituitary function, except a significant gastrin reduction after octreotide injection. In two hypergastrinemic patients who underwent pituitary adenomectomy, the high gastrin levels did not change after surgery. Finally, gastrin was undetectable in the culture media of 15 pituitary adenomas surgically removed from both normo- and hypergastrinemic patients and immunocytological studies of tumor cells did not show any gastrin staining. In conclusion, although in patients with pituitary adenomas serum gastrin evaluation is indicated in order to document the presence of a MEN I syndrome, the present data show that high gastrin levels cannot be taken as a specific marker of nonfunctioning pituitary adenomas unless the peripheral origin of hypergastrinemia is excluded.
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PMID:Patterns of gastrin secretion in patients with nonfunctioning pituitary adenomas. 180 24

We review here the 10-year experience at the University of Michigan with 35 patients with gastrin hypersecretion who underwent transhepatic venous sampling (THVS) for tumor localization. Since 1978 THVS has been done routinely in all patients with gastrinoma syndrome considered for operation. Thirty-one patients had proved gastrinomas--21 benign sporadic tumors and 10 tumors associated with multiple endocrine neoplasia type-I (MEN I) syndrome. The correlation between the site of the maximal gradient and location of a sporadic tumor was poor. Overall sensitivity was only 35%, specificity 89%, and negative predictive value 89%. If gradients were regionalized to three areas--body and tail, gastrinoma triangle, and hepatic lobes--then sensitivity was 94%, positive predictive value 94%, and specificity 97%, with a negative predictive value of 97%. The maximal gastrin gradient above the mean for other values gave the greatest sensitivity and specificity. In MEN I syndrome, only four of eight patients with macroadenomas had their tumors correctly localized, a sensitivity of 50% and specificity and negative predictive value of 75%. In 19 patients who had operative localization of sporadic gastrinoma, computed tomography had a sensitivity of 31%, specificity of 66%, positive predictive value of 83%, and negative predictive value of 15%. Selective angiography was better, with a sensitivity of 29%, specificity of 100%, positive predictive value of 100%, and negative predictive value of 100%. Regionalization to the triangle proved valuable for detection of microgastrinomas, as was measurement of hepatic vein gastrins for identification of intrahepatic tumors. In MEN I syndrome, if regionalization was achieved (50%), tumor resection appeared to offer hope of "cure." We conclude that THVS is the best tool for tumor regionalization to the pancreatic tail and body, gastrinoma triangle, and hepatic lobes. It has allowed us to achieve surgical cure in 19 of 21 patients with sporadic gastrinomas and improvement in four of eight patients with MEN I syndrome.
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PMID:Transhepatic portal vein catheterization for localization of sporadic and MEN gastrinomas: a ten-year experience. 196 82

As clinical experience with patients with ZES has grown, increasing recognition has been made of the broad spectrum of symptoms associated with gastrinomas. Diarrhea and acid-induced esophageal injury have taken their place alongside chronic peptic ulcer disease as indications for screening for gastrinoma. Diagnostic testing should begin with fasting serum gastrin levels and should include intravenous secretin infusion if fasting serum levels of gastrin are nondiagnostic and the patient is not found to be hypochlorhydric. Tumor localization is critical to aid in the identification of patients with potentially curable localized disease. Preoperative evaluation utilizing CT scanning with intravenous contrast should be done early and should be supplemented by other imaging modalities as necessary. Exploratory laparotomy, including a thorough examination of the duodenum and perhaps intraoperative ultrasound, should be performed in all patients with sporadic gastrinoma who lack evidence of extensive metastatic disease on preoperative evaluation. By utilizing this approach, it is likely that at least 20% of patients with ZES can be cured. With the availability of the highly effective H(+)-K(+)-ATPase inhibitor omeprazole, excellent control of symptoms related to gastric acid hypersecretion can be expected. Patients with unresectable gastrinoma may thus avoid potentially morbid antisecretory surgery and be managed with a fairly simple medical regimen. Further developments in the chemotherapeutic management of these patients with unresectable disease should be forthcoming in the future.
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PMID:Zollinger-Ellison syndrome. 207 95


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