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)

Gastric secretion was evaluated in 9 male patients with chronic renal failure on maintenance hemodialysis. Five secreted low or normal quantities of acid and 4 exhibited hypersecretion, 2 of whom had associated peptic ulcer disease. Serum gastrin responses to a protein meal were comparable to control subjects. Calcium infusion in two basal hypersecretors depressed acid secretion. The only statistically significant correlation observed was between basal acid output ans serum levels of parathormone. These studies suggest that while acid secretory abnormalities vary in patients with chronic renal failure on hemodialysis, there is no apparent sensitivity of the gastrin-secreting cells to protein or calcium ion which might account for acid hypersecretion. Secondary hyperparathyroidism may influence the occurrence of acid secretory abnormalities.
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PMID:Gastric secretory function in patients with chronic renal failure undergoing maintenance hemodialysis. 101 5

Fasting serum gastrin concentrations and both basal and maximum-stimulated gastric acid secretory rates have been studied in 225 patients with various degrees of impairment of renal function and 42 healthy subjects. Basal gastrin concentrations in the chronic renal failure (CRF) patients were significantly higher (p < 0.05) than in control subjects. When the glomerular filtration rate (GFR) was used as an index of the degree of renal impairment serum gastrin rose proportionately with the degree of renal failure. Basal (BAO), maximal (MAO) and peak acid output (PAO) in the CRF patients were significantly lower (p < 0.05) than in the control group. Both in the basal condition and during pentagastrin stimulation the CRF patients had low volume of gastric secretion. There was significant positive correlation between basal serum gastrin concentrations and the severity of renal damage. The basal serum gastrin concentration was inversely related to BAO, MAO and PAO in the CRF patients with severe impairment of renal functions. The results indicate that hypergastrinemia in CRF patients might be due to a combined effect of impaired renal catabolism of gastrin and overproduction of gastrin associated with hypochlorhydria. The present findings suggest that in CRF there are some unknown mechanisms that inhibit gastric secretion.
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PMID:[The effect of degree of renal function damage on the levels of serum gastrin and gastric acid secretion]. 134 59

Endocrine abnormalities in patients with chronic renal failure are well documented. The present study aimed to assess the influence of long-term erythropoietin (EPO) therapy on endocrine abnormalities in haemodialyzed patients. Two groups of haemodialyzed patients, each of which comprised 17 subjects, were examined. The first one treated by EPO (EPO group) while the second one did not receive this hormone (NO-EPO group). A complete biochemical and hormonal check-up was performed before and at the 3, 6, 9 and 12 months of the study period. Normal values for the estimated parameters were obtained in appropriately selected sex and age-matched healthy subjects. After EPO therapy an increase of the haematocrit value from 21.8 +/- 0.9% to 32.6 +/- 0.9% was observed which was accompanied by a significant decline of plasma ferritin and saturation of transferrin. In patients of the NO-EPO group a significant although less marked rise of the haematocrit value (21.4 +/- 0.4% to 24.2 +/- 0.6%) was also noticed. EPO therapy did not change electrolytes (Na, K, Ca, inorganic phosphate), osteocalcin, creatinine, glucose and alkaline phosphatase plasma levels as well as plasma concentrations of calcium related hormones (PTH, calcitonin, 1.25(OH)2D3) and vasopressin (AVP). EPO treatment induced a significant decline of somatotropin (HGH), prolactin (PRO), follitropin (FSH), lutropin (LH), ACTH, cortisol, plasma renin activity, aldosterone, insulin (IRI), glucagon (IR-G), pancreatic polypeptide (PP) and gastrin plasma levels and an increase of plasma estradiol, testosterone and atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP). These EPO induced endocrine alterations were restricted mostly to the first 6 months of EPO administration.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Influence of long-term erythropoietin therapy on endocrine abnormalities in haemodialyzed patients. 145 6

In children with chronic renal failure (CRF) anorexia, nausea, and vomiting are common yet poorly understood symptoms. We studied oesophageal and gastric motor function in 12 children (age 7 months-6.8 years) with severe CRF not undergoing dialysis who had persistent anorexia and vomiting. Eight of 12 patients had significant gastro-oesophageal reflux (reflux index 5.2% to 21.9%, mean 11.3%; controls < 5%), 7/10 had altered gastric half emptying times (T1/2) for 5% glucose or milk (glucose meal--controls: 8-14 min, two CRF patients: 18-25 min; milk meal--controls: 48-72 min, five CRF patients 27, 28, 82, 83, and 110 min). Gastric antral electrical control activity was abnormal in 6/11 patients, with different types of gastric dysrhythmias whereas the remainder and controls showed a regular dominant frequency of 0.05 Hz. In 7/9 patients fasting serum gastrin concentration was raised (53 to > 400, mean 168 pmol/l, controls < 40 pmol/l). All CRF patients with anorexia and vomiting had one or more disorder of foregut motility. The nature and variety of the motor disorders and the raised concentrations of circulating gastrin suggest that the normal environment generated by CRF affects the function of the smooth muscle of the foregut.
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PMID:Foregut motor function in chronic renal failure. 147 84

The fasting plasma levels of 9 gastrointestinal regulatory peptides were measured by radioimmunoassay in 13 stable patients with chronic renal failure receiving hemodialysis treatment regularly and compared with those of 10 healthy controls. The plasma concentrations of gastrin-releasing peptide, motilin, neurotensin, pancreatic polypeptide, peptide YY, somatostatin, substance P, and vasoactive intestinal peptide were increased. The plasma level of gastrin was not statistically different from that of the controls (p = 0.077). We conclude that patients with chronic renal failure receiving hemodialysis treatment regularly have increased concentrations of eight of nine measured gastrointestinal regulatory peptides. The elevated levels of gastrointestinal peptides in patients with chronic renal failure may contribute to uremic gastrointestinal symptoms and dysfunctions. It is necessary to make a renal function evaluation before interpreting measured plasma levels of gastrointestinal regulatory peptides.
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PMID:Plasma levels of gastrointestinal regulatory peptides in patients receiving maintenance hemodialysis. 171 7

We calculated morphometrically the amount of antral gastrin-producing (G) cells and body parietal and chief cells in gastric biopsy specimens from 30 undialysed patients with chronic renal failure (CRF) and from sex- and age-matched controls. The CRF patients had raised fasting serum gastrin levels, whereas these were normal in the controls (mean, 290 +/- 283 (+/- SD) ng/l (n = 27) versus 33 +/- 36 (n = 30)). Serum gastrin values of the patients and controls correlated positively with G-cell density (r = 0.501, n = 36, p = 0.002), as did the maximal acid output of the CRF patients with parietal cell density (r = 0.617, n = 14, p = 0.019). In CRF patients the densities of G, parietal, and chief cells were higher than those in the controls (G cells, 351 +/- 151 (+/- SD) cells/mm2, n = 21 versus 211 +/- 90, n = 16, p = 0.002; parietal cells, 299 +/- 94, n = 15 versus 224 +/- 72, n = 14, p = 0.025; chief cells, 886 +/- 346, n = 15 versus 743 +/- 182, n = 14, p = 0.181). The results agree with previous findings indicating that hyposecretion of gastric acid in CRF does not derive from decreased capacity for acid secretion but rather from the inhibition of acid output. Increased parietal cell density in CRF patients gives cause to suspect that the maximum acid output might even in raised, possibly depending on the permanent hypergastrinaemic state with its trophic influence on the gastric body mucosa.
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PMID:Gastric parietal, chief, and G-cell densities in chronic renal failure. 189 10

We studied histologically antral biopsies from 89 consecutive patients with chronic renal failure for Helicobacter pylori (previously Campylobacter pylori). A dose-response gastric secretion test was also performed. The frequency of Helicobacter-positive subjects was low (15/89, 17%), corresponding to figures reported in the literature for young symptomless volunteers. Helicobacter-positive patients had significantly more frequently upper gastrointestinal symptoms than Helicobacter-negative individuals (P less than 0.05). Antral gastritis was more common in the Helicobacter-positive than in the Helicobacter-negative renal patients (P less than 0.01), but the incidence of body gastritis did not differ between them. The Helicobacter-positive patients had lower serum urea levels (P less than 0.01) and higher acid outputs (P less than 0.001) than Helicobacter-negative subjects. All patients had raised fasting serum gastrin levels, which possibly obscured the difference between Helicobacter-positive (283 pg/ml) and -negative (331 pg/ml) patients. We conclude that in chronic renal failure gastric colonization of Helicobacter pylori is not more frequent than usual. It correlates positively with antral gastritis, gastric acid output and upper gastrointestinal symptoms, but negatively with serum urea levels.
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PMID:Gastric Helicobacter and upper gastrointestinal symptoms in chronic renal failure. 193 Sep 36

The physiological release mechanism for gastrin is complex, including both mechanical and chemical stimuli. Distention of the antrum is the main mechanical stimulus, and proteins and their degradation products constitute the most potent chemical stimuli. The aim of the present study was to examine the little gastrin (G-17) response to a test meal and to study the relationship between the G-17 concentration and gastric acid secretion in patients with various degrees of chronic renal failure (CRF). In 14 CRF patients under conservative treatment and 12 healthy control subjects, fasting and stimulated G-17 concentrations, as well as basal (BAO), maximal (MAO) and peak acid secretion (PAO) were measured. Mean fasting serum G-17 in CRF patients was 7.8 +/- 0.8 pmol/L, significantly higher (p less than 0.001) than in control subjects (5.9 +/- 1 pmol/L). However, the range of basal G-17 concentrations in both groups of subjects was not different from the normal values (4.2 +/- 11.3 pmol/L). The serum G-17 response to the food stimulation was significantly higher (p less than 0.001) in the control subjects than in the CRF patients. In normal subjects, the increment in the serum G-17 concentration rose to a peak at 30 min, but in the CRF patients the peak increment occurred at 60 min, and the response was more prolonged. There was a little difference in meal-stimulated serum G-17 concentrations in patients with various degrees of renal functional impairment. Basal acid output (BAO) was significantly higher (p less than 0.001) in the control subjects (2.62 +/- 0.51 mmol/h) than in the CRF patients (1.68 +/- 0.4 mmol/h). No significant difference in both the maximal acid output (MAO) and peak acid output (PAO) was found between the groups of CRF patients and control subjects. There was no relationship between G-17 concentrations and the gastric acid output in the CRF patients. From the results of the present study it is concluded that the human kidney is unimportant in the catabolism of G-17 but that the renal failure seems to decrease the rate of the peripheral extraction of gastrin by other tissues. The raised basal and meal-stimulated G-17 concentrations sometimes seen in CRF patients are associated with decreased rather than increased gastric acid secretions.
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PMID:[Small gastrin (G-17) serum levels after stimulation with food during conservative treatment of patients with chronic renal insufficiency]. 207 20

Several factors are involved in the persistence of endocrine alterations after renal transplantation, among which the following are to be mentioned: (1) duration of chronic uraemia before renal transplantation; (2) residual function of the patients' native kidneys; (3) quality of function of the renal graft; (4) modulation of secretion, transport, and degradation of hormones, and/or (5) altered target organ responsiveness to hormones induced by immunosuppressive drugs (glucocorticoids, azathioprine, cyclosporin A) or altered internal environment. In kidney transplant patients the following endocrine abnormalities are to be mentioned: dissociation of the physiological relationship between aldosterone synthesis and function of the renin-angiotensin system, abnormal volumetric regulation of arginine vasopressin secretion, suppressed responsiveness of cortisol secretion to stimulatory manoeuvres, persistent secondary hyperparathyroidism, relative deficiency of insulin (induced by glucocorticoid therapy), with consequent carbohydrate intolerance or even diabetes mellitus, suppressed response of gastrin and pancreatic hormone secretion to a test meal, and reduced responsiveness of atrial natriuretic peptide secretion to central hypervolaemia. Episodes of acute graft rejection are characterized by endocrine alterations similar to those seen in patients with acute or chronic renal failure.
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PMID:Endocrine alterations in kidney transplant patients. 219 17

The interrelations among fasting serum gastrin, serum creatinine, gastric acid secretion variables, and G-cell densities were analyzed in 47 patients with chronic renal failure (CRF). The patients also underwent gastroscopy and radiologic upper gastrointestinal barium examination. It is suggested that the hypergastrinemia seen in CRF is related to several factors: gastric acidity, grade of renal failure, G-cell density, and basal gastrin secretion rate. With regard to serum gastrin two different populations can be found, the cutting-off point being 300 ng/l. Although the group with high gastrin levels included significantly more patients with gastric body atrophy than the other group (4 of 11 versus of 1 of 36), most of them had no atrophy, which indicates that (an)other mechanism(s) is responsible for the hypergastrinemia. In the relation between serum gastrin and gastric acidity also, two differently behaving subgroups emerged. In the first, strong acidity change corresponded to minor gastrin change, whereas in the other, minor acidity change corresponded to marked gastrin change. The correlation coefficients between gastrin and acidity were high within both subgroups. During regular dialysis patients preserve the characteristics delineated from non-dialyzed values. Patients with signs of duodenal ulcer disease had high maximal acid output and low serum gastrin. Otherwise no associations were found between GI findings and the variables studied.
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PMID:Serum gastrin in chronic renal failure: its relation to acid secretion, G-cell density, and upper gastrointestinal findings. 259 56


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