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Query: UNIPROT:P61278 (
somatostatin
)
22,083
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Growth hormone (GH) secretion has been studied in two patients with the carcinoid syndrome during glucose loading and growth hormone-release inhibiting hormone (GHRIH,
somatostatin
) infusion. Both patients had elevated fasting GH levels which were not suppressed by glucose; GH levels fell rapidly during GHRIH infusion. One patient also had hyperprolactinaemia with galactorrhoea and the prolactin (PRL) levels were unaltered by GHRIH. The association between
carcinoid
tumours and abnormalities of GH and PRL secretion is discussed.
...
PMID:Effect of somatostatin on abnormal growth hormone and prolactin secretion in patients with the carcinoid syndrome. 47 84
As the long-acting
somatostatin
analog octreotide attenuates polypeptide hormone hypersecretion, it has recently been used to effectively treat acromegaly and gastrointestinal
carcinoid
tumors. Most growth-promoting actions of GH are mediated by insulin-like growth factor-I (IGF-I), which circulates complexed with multiple binding proteins (IGFBPs). IGFBP-1, a nonglycosylated peptide, competes with the IGF-I receptor for ligand binding and also regulates IGF action. To examine GH-independent mechanisms for octreotide regulation of the GH axis, circulating levels of IGFBP-1 were measured hourly after sc octreotide or saline administration in normal and GH-deficient adults. As IGFBP-1 is inhibited by insulin and GH, the dynamic pattern of alterations in GH and insulin levels was also assessed. After octreotide (100 micrograms) administration to 10 normal subjects, mean IGFBP-1 concentrations were stimulated from 23 +/- 4 to 72 +/- 18 micrograms/L (P < 0.007 vs. saline) after 2 h. Maximal induction of IGFBP-1 levels occurred after 3 h (325 +/- 115 micrograms/L; P < 0.02 vs. saline) and remained elevated (P < 0.005) for 6 h. IGFBP-1 was induced by octreotide in all subjects and was confirmed by Western ligand blotting. Insulin and GH levels preceding the rise in IGFBP-1 were unaltered by octreotide. Octreotide stimulated IGFBP-1 5-fold during a sustained fast in 4 normal subjects, despite equally suppressed insulin levels in both saline- and octreotide-treated groups. In 4 GH-deficient adults, IGFBP-1 levels were stimulated by octreotide from 16 +/- 3 to 146 +/- 36 and 154 +/- 28 micrograms/L after 3 and 4 h, respectively. In conclusion, the
somatostatin
analog octreotide induces IGFBP-1 independently of GH and insulin. As IGFBP-1 regulates the action of IGF-I, octreotide stimulation of IGFBPs may represent an additional pharmacological mechanism for attenuating the GH-IGF-I axis.
...
PMID:Octreotide stimulates insulin-like growth factor-binding protein-1: a potential pituitary-independent mechanism for drug action. 128 85
Carcinoid tumours
arise from the neuroendocrine system and present a characteristic morphological picture. They occur in almost every organ, predilected sites are the appendix and the small intestine. Prognosis depends on the primary localization and tumour size.
Carcinoids
of the appendix and rectum are mostly small and thus have a good prognosis. Growth of bronchial, stomach and small intestinal carcinoids is aggressive and implicates a high percentage of metastatic disease. First choice therapy is the surgical removal of the tumour. Depending on tumour size surgical treatment includes fulguration, local excision and oncologic radical resection up to extended organ extirpation. Reoperation and repeated surgery have good chances to be successful concerning tumour remission and improvement of the carcinoid syndrome. Additive treatment comprises in particular
somatostatin
therapy and, in some cases, chemotherapy.
...
PMID:[Surgical treatment of carcinoid tumors of the intestine]. 129 89
The authors report a case of primary renal
carcinoid
in a 57-year-old woman in whom the diagnosis, established by histological findings, was confirmed by argyrophilia and immunohistochemical studies using anti-neuron-specific enolase, chromogranin A, serotonin and
somatostatin
antibodies. The clinical and pathological features of this rare renal tumor are discussed.
...
PMID:[Primary carcinoid tumor of the kidney. Apropos of a case with immunohistochemical study]. 130 16
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.
...
PMID:APUDomas: acute complications and their medical management. 131 Aug 47
Endocrine-paracrine (APUD, neuroendocrine) cells are located in the prostatic ductal and acinar epithelium. These cells are of the open and closed type and have dendritic processes. There is a wide range of secretory granule morphology presumably indicating a variety of different cell "types." Secretory immunoreactive peptides include serotonin, calcitonin (and related peptides),
somatostatin
, bombesin-like, thyroid-stimulating hormone-like (beta chain), and alpha-glycoprotein chain-like. These cells may function by endocrine, paracrine, neurocrine, and lumencrine mechanisms and play an important regulatory role both during growth and differentiation of the prostate as well as in the secretory process of the mature gland. Neuroendocrine differentiation in prostatic carcinoma is a frequent occurrence and manifests itself in several forms, including (1) small cell carcinoma, (2)
carcinoid
and
carcinoid
-like tumors, and (3) conventional adenocarcinoma with focal neuroendocrine differentiation. This latter pattern is the most common, and there is evidence that all or nearly all prostatic adenocarcinomas show at least some focal neuroendocrine differentiation. A review of the world's literature on this topic is included. Neuroendocrine differentiation generally portends a poorer prognosis but may also correlate directly with the grade. There is some evidence to suggest that neoplastic cells with neuroendocrine differentiation are resistant to hormonal therapy. Eutopic and ectopic hormone production may allow screening for prostatic carcinoma and/or monitoring for recurrence of prostatic carcinomas. Finally, the more basic implications of endocrine-paracrine cells and neuroendocrine differentiation are speculated on in reference to prostatic carcinogenesis and autocrine/paracrine tumor growth factor activity.
...
PMID:Neuroendocrine differentiation in human prostatic carcinoma. 131 90
The presence of IGF-I and IGF-I receptors in human midgut
carcinoid
tumours has been investigated. Using immunocytochemistry, IGF-I-positive tumour cells were demonstrated in 11/11 tumour cases studied. Labelling of consecutive sections with antibodies against IGF-I and proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA)/cyclin demonstrated a co-distribution of the 2 antigens in
carcinoid
tumours. Extracts of tumour tissues were subjected to radioimmunoassay and shown to contain significant amounts of IGF-I. Reverse-phase HPLC of tumour extracts demonstrated a major IGF-I-immunoreactive component eluting in the position of rhIGF-I, but also 2 other more hydrophobic forms. Conditioned serum-free media from primary cultures of
carcinoid
tumors contained detectable amounts of IGF-I, indicating a spontaneous release of IGF-I from tumour cells into the culture medium. Levels of IGF-I in media were reduced (19%) after incubation of cultures with a
somatostatin
analogue for 4 days. IGF-I receptors were observed on tumour cells in 4/10 tumours by immunocytochemistry. Tumour cells with immunoreactive IGF-I receptors could be stimulated to enhanced growth, measured as an increase in DNA contents, by exogenous administration of IGF-I every 3-4 days for 2 weeks. The results show that cultured human midgut
carcinoid
tumours secrete IGF-I and that some of the tumours also have IGF-I receptors. We therefore suggest that IGF-I may act as an autocrine or paracrine regulator of
carcinoid
tumour-cell growth.
...
PMID:Presence of IGF-I in human midgut carcinoid tumours--an autocrine regulator of carcinoid tumour growth? 131 81
A case of the
carcinoid
tumour of ileum causing hormone producing multiple hepatic metastases was described. Sometimes after feeding and drinking of beer the "flush" and the diarrhoea appeared. Multiple hepatic metastases were established by ultrasound. Two and a half years ago the patient already was examined and treated by another hospital. In this time the origin of the primaer
carcinoid
tumour was not found and the superselective embolisation of the right lobe of the liver was made which caused a
carcinoid
crisis. Later the complaints were renewed and once more the patient was examined. The origin of the illness was proved in the lower ileum by CT (computer tomography), angiography and I131 MIBG (metajod-benzyl-guanidin) scintigraphy. Another embolisation of the liver caused a newer
carcinoid
crisis. The operation of primaer
carcinoid
tumour was decided because of the danger of
carcinoid
crisis and ileus. In the perioperative period the patient was protected against
carcinoid
crisis by Sandostatin (made in SANDOZ, Basel), because the preoperative therapy, the anaesthetics and the surgical manipulation could have caused a
carcinoid
crisis. In Hungary the authors used for the first time
somatostatin
in perioperative period to protect the patient against
carcinoid
crisis.
...
PMID:[Prevention of carcinoid tumor crisis]. 134 72
We report the case of a 42 year old man in whom orthotopic liver transplantation was performed successfully for unresectable hepatic metastases of a bronchial
carcinoid
tumor. Prior to transplantation,
somatostatin
therapy, pulmonary lobectomy, and systemic chemotherapy (streptozotocin and fluorouracil) were performed. After 9 months there were no signs of clinical or biological recurrence. Orthotopic liver transplantation might be indicated for unresectable and limited liver metastases of neuroendocrine tumor.
...
PMID:[Orthotopic liver transplantation for metastases of bronchial carcinoid tumor]. 134 69
Therapeutic efficacy of a synthetic
somatostatin
analogue for the treatment of
carcinoid
tumors is still controversial. In vivo studies performed in our laboratory showed that a
somatostatin
analogue, SMS 201-995, significantly inhibited growth of human pancreatic
carcinoid
(BON) tumors xenotransplanted into athymic nude mice. In the present study, however, SMS 201-995 did not inhibit in vitro growth of BON cells, but rather SMS 201-995 stimulated growth in a dose-dependent fashion. The growth-stimulatory effect was likely mediated through the reduction of cyclic AMP production. Unsuccessful treatment of certain types of
carcinoid
tumor with SMS 201-995 may be partly due to the direct growth-stimulatory effect of SMS 201-995 on
carcinoid
cells.
...
PMID:Unexpected growth-stimulatory effect of somatostatin analogue on cultured human pancreatic carcinoid cells. 135 20
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