Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P61278 (somatostatin)
22,083 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Pituitary tumours result in hypersecretion of different hormones which can be used in diagnosis. Prolactinomas can be diagnosed by measurement of prolactin serum concentration. Prolactin concentrations of > 150 to 200 micrograms/l are invariably due to macroprolactinoma. Lower levels may indicate microprolactinoma or a peripituitary tumour. Computed tomography scans visualize (micro)prolactinomas of 3 mm. Diagnosis of acromegaly is now based on measurement of serum IGF-I concentration. IGF-I levels correlate with the old test which measured insufficient suppression of GH levels to < 2 micrograms/l in response to oral glucose load. Most endocrine tumours have somatostatin receptors, allowing visualization with radiolabelled somatostatin analogues. 111In-diethylenetriaminopentaacetic acid-octreotide allows normal pituitary and somatostatin positive tumours to be visualized. A positive scan is predictive of good response to octreotide therapy. Cushing's syndrome is diagnosed by ecchymoses, myopathy, hypertension, and by measurement of the overnight 1 mg dexamethasone suppression test, urine cortisol levels and the diurnal cortisol rhythm. Clinically nonfunctioning macroadenomas in post-menopausal women often do not immunostain for gonadotropins. Serum gonadotropin levels are not elevated, although they do release gonadotropins or subunits in vitro. Diagnosis is assisted by TRH administration which increases serum gonadotropins or subunits, especially LH-beta.
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PMID:Current tools in the diagnosis of pituitary tumours. 837 8

Gut tumor syndromes are rare, occurring in less than two cases per million population per year: Insulinomas are most common and gastrinomas are less common; all the others are extremely rare. Conventional treatment of the symptoms caused by these tumors has included surgery, hepatic arterial embolization, and chemotherapy; some patients with Zollinger-Ellison syndrome (ZES) have been treated with specific agents such as gastric antisecretory drugs. The development of octreotide, a synthetic, long-acting analogue of the natural peptide somatostatin, has offered an alternative to such therapies. Octreotide has a half life of > 100 minutes and inhibits both physiological- and tumor release of many peptides. It also has direct effects on the gut that modify secretion and motility. Octreotide has been shown to be particularly useful for the symptoms of tumors producing vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP), and of the carcinoid syndrome. It is also useful in patients with glucagonomas, with growth hormone-releasing hormone producing tumors, and in some patients with Cushing's syndrome and unresectable insulinomas. Octreotide is effective in patients with ZES, but alternative therapies such as omeprazole are more effective, safer, and more convenient for those patients. Side effects of octreotide have not been troublesome in these patients, but the incidence of long term effects is still not entirely clear. Octreotide has proved to be a significant advance in the treatment of patients with islet cell tumors.
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PMID:Use of octreotide acetate for control of symptoms in patients with islet cell tumors. 839 51

Bronchial carcinoid is the most frequent cause of Cushing's syndrome due to ectopic ACTH production. The authors report a case of bronchial carcinoid which diagnosis was difficult because of the presence of pulmonary mycosis, that determined a hypercorticosuprarenalism. Medical treatment with octreotide, ketoconazolo and mitotane was useless, and bilateral suprarenalectomy was performed. A scintigraphy with raced somatostatin revealed a left lung area capting radiation. A CT scan of the thorax revealed a lesion of the lingula and the patient underwent an atypical lung resection with complete solution of the symptom. The problems of diagnosis and treatment of neuroendocrine tumors of the lung are discussed and the importance of SSA in the diagnostic procedure is pointed out.
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PMID:Bronchial carcinoid associated with Cushing's syndrome. 852 74

The effects of somatostatin and its analogs have been studied in different subclasses of patients with Cushing's syndrome (due to Cushing's disease, ectopic corticotropin [ACTH]- and/or corticotropin-releasing hormone [CRH]-secreting tumors, or ACTH-independent Cushing's syndrome) and in patients with Nelson's syndrome. In most patients with untreated Cushing's disease, octreotide does not suppress ACTH release, a finding that is supported by in vitro studies. However, octreotide or somatostatin inhibits pathological ACTH secretion in Nelson's syndrome. Short-term octreotide treatment has caused a significant initial response (decreased serum cortisol, ACTH, and cortisoluria) in 24 of 38 (64%) patients with ectopic ACTH/CRH Cushing's syndrome, and long-term treatment caused a persistent response in 10 of 14 (71%) cases. Pentetreotide scintigraphy may help to identify those patients with ectopic ACTH/CRH tumors who will have an initial response to octreotide, and is useful for locating ectopic ACTH/CRH-secreting tumors and their metastases. To date, octreotide has been shown to temporarily suppress gastric inhibitory peptide (GIP)-induced cortisol secretion in GIP-dependent (ACTH-independent) Cushing's syndrome, but has not shown any therapeutic benefit in other forms of ACTH-independent Cushing's syndrome.
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PMID:Is there a role for somatostatin and its analogs in Cushing's syndrome? 876 91

The long-acting analogues of somatostatin have an established place in the medical treatment of patients with neuroendocrine tumours. They act through binding with specific, high-affinity membrane receptors. Somatostatin analogue therapy is an effective and safe treatment for most growth hormone and thyrothropin-secreting pituitary adenomas. The potential therapeutic consequences of the presence of somatostatin receptors on clinically 'nonfunctioning' pituitary tumours are still uncertain. Somatostatin analogues are not useful in the treatment of patients with prolactinomas, or adrenocorticotropin (ACTH)-secreting adenomas. However, the somatostatin analogue octreotide suppressed pathological ACTH release in some patients with Nelson's syndrome and ACTH and cortisol secretion in several patients with Cushing's syndrome caused by ectopic ACTH secretion. Somatostatin analogues are effective in the sympatomatic treatment of most (metastatic) pancreatic islet cell tumours and most (metastatic) carcinoids. In some of these patients, they also induce tumour stabilisation or reduction. In some patients with (metastatic) medullary thyroid carcinomas, continuous treatment with very high doses of octreotide can be of temporary relief. The clinical effectiveness of somatostatin analogues in patients with small cell lung cancer is currently under investigation. Long-term therapy with somatostatin analogues of catecholamine-secreting (malignant) paragangliomas and phaeochromocytomas has not shown clinical benefits.
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PMID:Somatostatin analogue treatment of neuroendocrine tumours. 893 99

Cushing's syndromes caused by ectopic corticotropin secretion represent 10 to 15% in the causes of Cushing's syndrome. Somatostatin receptor scientigraphy can be successful in the localization of ACTH-secreting neuroendocrine tumors. We report a case of Cushing's syndrome caused by ectopic corticotropin secretion from a thymic carcinoid tumor. Conventional localization techniques failed but the tumor was detected by a double binding thoracic scintigraphy using 111Indium-octreotide and 99mTechnetium-albumine macroagregates.
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PMID:[Thymic carcinoid tumor causing paraneoplastic Cushing syndrome. Diagnostic value of double-labelled tomoscintigraphy]. 894 24

A large number of endocrine tumors express somatostatin receptors, and the use of radiolabeled somatostatin analogs has been recently introduced for their localization. Using in vivo scintigraphy with 111In-pentetreotide, primary tumor localizations were demonstrated in 3/3 carcinoids (2 intestinal carcinoids and 1 lung ACTH-secreting carcinoid; in 2 patients liver metastases larger than 1 cm were visualized), in 1/1 GH-secreting pituitary macroadenoma, and in 1/1 thyroid localization of MTC. Bone and/or lymph node metastases were imaged in 2/4 patients previously treated for MTC, with persistently high CT and CEA levels; in the other 2 patients the other scintigraphic techniques were also negative. Octreotide scintigraphy was negative in 2/2 insulinomas and in 2/2 ACT-producing pituitary adenomas. In 2 patients with carcinoid syndrome and 1 patient with Cushing syndrome due to ectopic ACTH, octreotide therapy induced a significant decrease in tumoral markers. Our preliminary data are in agreement with the results of larger series reported in literature: octreotide scintigraphy is a useful noninvasive tool to detect endocrine tumors expressing somatostatin receptors, particularly for carcinoids. It is of great use in the differential diagnosis of Cushing syndrome due to ectopic ACTH. Moreover, 111In-pentetreotide scintigraphy may be useful in selecting patients who may benefit from octreotide therapy to control hormonal hypersecretion effects.
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PMID:111In-octreotide scintigraphy in endocrine tumors. Preliminary data. 900 67

Since December 1993, in the 1st Nuclear Medicine Service of the University of Padua, eleven somatostatin-receptor scintigraphic studies with 111In-labelled pentetreotide have been performed. The patients (6 men and 5 women, age 28-68, mean 45 years) were affected by a variety of tumors which supposedly express somatostatin receptors: 2 meningotheliomatous meningiomas post-surgery; 2 glucagonomas with liver metastases observed on CT; 2 patients with suspicion of insulinoma; 2 carcinoids, one after surgery; 1 ectopic-ACTH Cushing's syndrome; 1 intracranial germinoma, post-surgery, in whom the study was requested to evaluate a doubtful finding of pulmonary metastatic lesion on CT; and 1 acromegaly showing, on MRI, and empty sella turcica occupied by and extraflexion of the lower portion of the chiasmatic cisterna without signs of adenoma and the sphenoidal sinus occupied by tissue wit inflammmatory characteristics. Somatostatin-receptor whole body scintigraphy was performed 4 and 24 hours after intravenous injection of 110 MBq 111In-pentetreotide (Octreoscan 111); spot images were acquired when judged necessary. In one case of glucagonoma, a tomographic scan (SPECT) was also performed to better evaluate the spatial relationship between the primitive pancreatic tumor and surrounding tissues. Focal accumulation of 111In-pentetreotide was scintigraphically detected in 5 of the 11 cases. Intense uptake of the radiopharmaceutical was observed in the meningiomas, in the glucagonomas with liver metastases, and in the case of acromegaly, corresponding to a GH-secreting adenoma. The negative scans seem to be true negative scans with the possible exception of one patient with a still unconfirmed suspicion of insulinoma, still not confirmed.
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PMID:Whole body and tomographic scan with 111In-pentetreotide: preliminary data. 900 69

The clinico-pathological features of 53 Chinese patients (27 males; 26 females) with pancreatic endocrine tumours were studied. The age range was from 14 to 78 years old (mean: 48 years) with the modal peak in the sixth decade for both sexes. Pancreatic endocrine tumours accounted for 14% of the primary pancreatic tumours operated on in Queen Mary Hospital. The autopsy incidence was 0.11%. Seventy-two per cent (38 cases) of the tumours were clinically functioning, comprising 33 insulinomas, three gastrinomas and two glucagonomas. A rare case of malignant gastrinoma associated with Cushing's syndrome was also documented. The functional tumours were seen in the younger patients. The calculated annual incidence of clinically significant tumours was approximately 0.2 per 100,000 population. There was no correlation between the site, functional status and histological patterns of the tumours. Seventy-two per cent of the tumours showed a trabecular pattern. Calcification was present in 5.7% (three cases); two such cases being gastrinomas. Amyloid was found in 25% of tumours, chiefly (92%) in the insulinomas. The main difficulty encountered in diagnosis was distinguishing between solid and cystic tumours of the pancreas. The incidence of malignancy was 15% and the histological features were poor predicative indicators of malignant potential. The metastatic pancreatic endocrine tumours were often detected in the liver and lymph nodes. Immunohistochemical stains showed evidence of multi-hormone production in 18% of cases and all tumours showed a positive reaction to at least one of the six markers, namely, neuron-specific enolase (NSE), chromogrannin (CG), synaptophysin (SYN), insulin (INS), glucagon (GLU) or somatostatin (SOM). The three panendocrine markers (NSE, SYN, CG) were satisfactory for initial screening of the endocrine nature of the tumours if used in combination, as 92% of tumours were positive for at least one of these three markers.
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PMID:Pancreatic endocrine tumour: a 22-year clinico-pathological experience with morphological, immunohistochemical observation and a review of the literature. 906 45

Growth hormone-releasing peptides (GHRPs) are synthetic, non-natural peptides endowed with potent stimulatory effects on somatotrope secretion in animals and humans. They have no structural homology with GHRH and act via specific receptors present either at the pituitary or the hypothalamic level both in animals and in humans. The GHRP receptor has recently been cloned and, interestingly, it does not show sequence homology with other G-protein-coupled receptors known so far. This evidence strongly suggests the existence of a natural GHRP-like ligand which, however, has not yet been found. The mechanisms underlying the GHRP effect are still unclear. At present, several data favor the hypothesis that GHRPs could act by counteracting somatostatinergic activity both at the pituitary and the hypothalamic level and/or, at least partially, via a GHRH-mediated mechanism. However, the possibility that GHRPs act via an unknown hypothalamic factor (U factor) is still open. GHRP-6 was the first hexapeptide to be extensively studied in humans. More recently, a heptapeptide, GHRP-1, and two other hexapeptides, GHRP-2 and Hexarelin, have been synthesized and are now available for human studies. Moreover, non-peptidyl GHRP mimetics have been developed which act via GHRP receptors and their effects have been clearly demonstrated in animals and in humans in vivo. Among non-peptidyl GHRPs, MK-0677 seems the most interesting molecule. The GH-releasing activity of GHRPs is marked and dose-related after intravenous, subcutaneous, intranasal and even oral administration. The effect of GHRPs is reproducible and undergoes partial desensitization, more during continuous infusion, less during intermittent administration: in fact, prolonged administration of GHRPs increases IGF-1 levels both in animals and in humans. The GH-releasing effect of GHRPs does not depend on sex but undergoes age-related variations. It increases from birth to puberty, persists at a similar level in adulthood and decreases thereafter. By the sixth decade of life, the activity of GHRPs is reduced but it is still marked and higher than that of GHRH. The GH-releasing activity of GHRPs is synergistic with that of GHRH, is not affected by opioid receptor antagonists, such as naloxone, and is only blunted by inhibitory influences, including neurotransmitters, glucose, free fatty acids, gluco corticoids, recombinant human GH and even exogenous somatostatin, which are known to almost abolish the effect of GHRH. GHRPs maintain their GH-releasing effect in somatotrope hypersecretory states such as in acromegaly, anorexia nervosa and hyperthyroidism. On the other hand, their good GH-releasing activity has been shown in some but not in other somatotrope hyposecretory states. In fact, reduced GH responses after GHRP administration have been reported in idiopathic GH deficiency as well as in idiopathic short stature, in obesity and in hypothyroidism, while in patients with pituitary stalk disconnection or Cushing's syndrome the somatotrope responsiveness to GHRPs is almost absent. In short children an increase in height velocity has also been reported during chronic GHRP treatment. Thus, based on their marked GH-releasing effect even after oral administration, GHRPs offer their own clinical usefulness for treatment of some GH hyposecretory states.
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PMID:Growth hormone-releasing peptides. 918 61


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