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Query: UNIPROT:P01350 (
gastrin
)
9,683
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
This paper presents the results of examinations of 19 cosmonauts, 12 of whom made 7-day flights and 7 took part in space flights of 150, 211 or 237 days. In plasma,
parathyrin
, calcitonin and
gastrin
concentrations were measured. A complex mosaic of hormonal regulation of bone metabolism reflects multifactorial and flexible patterns of calcium homeostasis, with individual variations included. It is probable that the specific weight of different components of the system maintaining calcium homeostasis varies depending on the exposure time and activity of related regulatory systems.
...
PMID:[Hormonal regulation of calcium metabolism after space flights of different duration]. 221 59
Multiple endocrine neoplastic diseases are genetically determined conditions with particular organ patterns for endocrine tumors. In Type I or Wermer's syndrome the endocrine pancreas, anterior pituitary and parathyroids are involved, insulinoma being the most frequent pancreatic tumor. To facilitate diagnosis, a prolonged oral glucose tolerance test, a fasting test and determination of the glucose-insulin ratio are recommended. Localisation is sought by computer tomography and angiography. A gastrinoma is excluded on the basis of normal
gastrin
levels in serum and by means of the secretin-provocation-test. Pituitary tumors can be classified more closely with prolactin levels and releasing-hormone tests (LH-RH and TRH). Prolactinoma is the most frequent pituitary tumor and amenable to bromocryptin treatment. If Wermer's syndrome is suspected, primary hyperparathyroidism has to be excluded on the basis of calcium and
parathormone
levels. Chief cell hyperplasia or multiple adenomas are frequent. Surgical resection is necessary.
...
PMID:[Type I multiple endocrine neoplasia--Wermer syndrome]. 257 44
The prevalence of peptic ulcer disease was retrospectively analysed in 35 patients affected by primary hyperparathyroidism consecutively observed from 1977 through 1987. Eight of the examined patients (22.8%) had peptic ulcer (7 duodenal and 1 gastric ulcer), that in five cases (14%) represented the first clinical manifestation of the endocrine disease. A Zollinger-Ellison syndrome was demonstrated in three cases (8.5% of the total series, 37% of the patients with ulcer). There was no difference in calcium,
gastrin
and
parathormone
serum level between patients with and without ulcer, excluding patients with Zollinger-Ellison syndrome. These data confirm the high prevalence of peptic ulcer disease in hyperparathyroidism, but the mechanism causing this association remains to be elucidated.
...
PMID:[Primary hyperparathyroidism and peptic ulcer]. 262 74
Nine healthy male volunteers were exposed to head-down tilt (-4.5 degrees) for 120 days. The concentrations of
parathormone
, calcitonin,
gastrin
, growth hormone, total and ionized calcium were measured in plasma. Prolonged exposure to antiorthostatic hypokinesia led to significant changes in the hormonal regulation of calcium-phosphorus metabolism, the most important of which was an enhanced secretion of the parathyroid hormone. The increased concentration of calcitonin and
gastrin
was a secondary response to the higher content of ionized calcium. The phase-like changes in the somatotrophic hormone secretion were induced by variations in the
parathormone
concentration in blood, on the one hand, and by a reduction of plastic processes, on the other.
...
PMID:[Blood levels of hormones regulating calcium-phosphorus metabolism in men exposed to a 120-day period of hypokinesia]. 271 65
The authors studied the clinical aspects, indices of gastric secretion and basal level blood serum insulin,
gastrin
and
parathormone
in 83 patients with ulcer disease recurrence after vagotomy. All patients showed an active acidopeptic factor--sequel of ineffective and incomplete (in some patients) vagotomy as well as inadequate pyloroplasty. Provoking factors of ulcer disease recurrence may be stress, drugs, duodenogastric reflux, presence of ligatures after pyloroplasty. Surgical treatment is indicated in patients with surgical complications, repeatedly relapsing ulcers. Recurrences with moderate course are successfully treated by traditional means and the patients retain working capacity due to seasonal or all-year prophylaxis.
...
PMID:[Peptic ulcer recurrence after vagotomy]. 275 73
A case of pituitary adenoma associated with pancreatic islet cell tumor is presented. A 29-year-old man with symptoms of confusion and abnormal behaviour was admitted to the neurosurgical department. He was diagnosed as suffering from multiple endocrine adenomatosis (MEA) type 1. Screening of his family members revealed that his mother had high levels of
gastrin
, glucagon and
parathormone
and his father had a high level of
gastrin
. The pituitary adenoma and pancreatic tumor were removed satisfactorily. Family members as well as the patient should be checked periodically.
...
PMID:A case of multiple endocrine adenomatosis type 1. 288 Apr 38
A total of 48 haemodialysed patients were studied by radioimmunoassay for the serum concentrations of
parathormone
, calcitonin,
gastrin
, insulin, prolactin, T3, T4, rT3, TSH and cortisol. Residual urines were measured for cAMP and ultrafiltrates for iPTH and
gastrin
. The duration of the dialysis programme, the number of haemodialysis sessions per week, sex distribution, the dialysis alternatives (including haemofiltration, haemoperfusion) and successful kidney transplantations were correlated with the serum hormone levels. Significant increases in PTH,
gastrin
and prolactin values were demonstrated in the dialysed patients. However, their calcitonin and insulin concentrations decreased, parallel with the time elapsed since the start of the haemodialysis programme (HDP). The number of dialysis sessions per week was found to affect the hormone concentrations diversely. In the course of haemofiltration and haemoperfusion some of the hormone levels (e.g. PTH,
gastrin
) decreased significantly. The patients were in general euthyroid. One of them, on HDP for several years, developed clinical and laboratory signs indicative of hyperthyroidism. In a considerable proportion of the cases the results of the hormone studies (increased PTH, CT, cAMP) were consistent with secondary hyperparathyroidism. Kidney transplantation was followed by a decline of the serum prolactin,
parathormone
, calcitonin and aldosterone levels.
...
PMID:Hormonal changes in haemodialysed and in kidney-transplanted patients. 331 62
Management of patients with multiple endocrine neoplasia type I (Wermer's syndrome) who have concurrent hypercalcemia and hypergastrinemia is controversial. The usual therapeutic approach has been to perform parathyroidectomy first before surgery for ulcer disease in an effort to decrease serum calcium concentration and presumably remove one of the stimuli for both
gastrin
and gastric acid secretion. We present the history of a 48-year-old man with primary hyperparathyroidism and Zollinger-Ellison syndrome who underwent acid secretory studies and secretin stimulation tests before and after parathyroidectomy. We also studied the effect of calcium channel blockade on
gastrin
and gastric acid secretion, since calcium influx into endocrine cells, such as the gastrinoma cell, is thought to be critical in hormone secretion. Although parathyroidectomy reduced serum calcium and
parathormone
levels to normal, basal serum
gastrin
concentration and basal acid output remained unchanged. The peak rise in serum
gastrin
concentration after secretin injection was less after parathyroidectomy than before parathyroidectomy but was still abnormal. During administration of verapamil, a calcium channel antagonist, no change was seen in the serum
gastrin
concentration, secretin test response, or acid secretion. Basal acid output was 45.4 mmol/hr before parathyroidectomy or verapamil and 54.0 and 50.4 mmol/hr after parathyroidectomy or verapamil, respectively. In contrast, a small but significant decrease (p less than 0.05) in serum
parathormone
concentration occurred during treatment with verapamil, an observation that to the best of our knowledge has not been previously reported in humans.
...
PMID:Lack of effect of parathyroidectomy or calcium channel blockade on serum gastrin concentration and gastric acid secretion in a patient with hyperparathyroidism and Zollinger-Ellison syndrome. 379 19
Prospective screening was carried out in 12 members of three families with multiple endocrine adenopathies, type I (MEA,I) and in 14 patients with no multiple endocrine adenopathies with and without other endorcinopathies. Elevated basal and responsive (after a meal) plasma concentrations of a relatively new candidate-hormone, human pancreatic polypeptide (hPP), were associated with pancreatic apudoma tumors in three asymptomatic patients with multiple endocrine adenopathies, type I. Two of these patients had excision of the tumors that resulted in normal plasma hPP concentrations postoperatively. Both tumors contained hPP predominantly by immunocytochemistry; one, a pure pancreatic polypeptide apudoma, was studied extensively demonstrating also by radioimmunoassay a high content of hPP and negligible amounts of insulin, glucagon, somatostatin, vasoactive intestinal polypeptide and
gastrin
. In this patient plasma concentrations of other polypeptides including insulin, glucagon, somatostatin, vasoactive intestinal polypeptide,
gastrin
,
parathyrin
, thyrocalcitonin, prolactin, corticotropin, growth hormone, thyrtropin and amine, serotonin, were within normal limits. The other patient, after excision of an hPP-detected pancreatic mixed hPP-gastrinoma, also became eugastrinemic postoperatively. Normal basal plasma hPP concentrations, but with exaggerated hPP responses to a meal in 11 patients, were associated with various combinations of islet cell hyperplasia, antral G cell hyperplasia with moderate hypergastrinemia and parathyroid hyperplasia. The patients with multiple endocrine adenopathies who have demonstrated this type of increased hPP response to a meal have not been operated on but are at risk for islet hyperplasia. Four of the 12 patients with multiple endocrine adenopathies, type I, with both normal basal and normally responsive hPP concentrations have no evidence as yet of pancreatic involvement.
...
PMID:Pancreatic polypeptide as screening marker for pancreatic polypeptide apudomas in multiple endocrinopathies. 624 7
The hypocalcaemic action of ethanol (3 g/kg body weight) was investigated in intact, thyroparathyroidectomized and antrectomized rats. It was found that ethanol administered either intraperitoneally or orally reduced plasma calcium concentrations within 30 min and that this response lasted for 8 h. Additional studies performed in antrectomized and thyroparathyroidectomized rats indicated that neither
gastrin
nor the hormones
parathormone
and calcitonin had any effect on the hypocalcaemic effect of ethanol. Investigation of the mechanism of action of ethanol-induced hypocalcaemia involved measurements of calcium efflux from and influx into the plasma pool. Ethanol did not have any effect on the disappearance from plasma of 45Ca administered intravenously at 0 min. In contrast, ethanol was found to enhance the disappearance of 45Ca administered intraperitoneally 17 h prior to the experiment. The interpretation of 45Ca studies was discussed and it was concluded that ethanol-induced hypocalcaemia resulted from a decrease in calcium influx into the plasma. Additional in vitro studies did not indicate the suppressive action of ethanol on the release of calcium from tibias. In conclusion, our results show that the mechanism of hypocalcaemia caused by ethanol is the suppression of calcium release from some tissue(s) into the plasma.
...
PMID:The acute hypocalcaemic effect of ethanol and its mechanism of action in the rat. 686 Oct
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