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)

A dose of 50 mg of acarbose was administered with a standard breakfast to 13 subjects with dumping syndrome. Significant attenuation of hyperglycaemia (p less than 0.01) was observed, and rises in plasma gastric inhibitory polypeptide, insulin and enteroglycagon were reduced (p less than 0.05). Plasma levels of neurotensin, vasoactive intestinal polypeptide and somatostatin were not affected. Dumping score was reduced, but this did not achieve statistical significance. In a longer-term study, 9 patients took acarbose, 50 mg t.i.d., for 1 month. No significant reduction in the number or severity of dumping attacks was observed, but a majority expressed a preference for the drug and some individuals experienced a marked improvement of symptoms.
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PMID:Effect of acarbose on biochemical responses and clinical symptoms in dumping syndrome. 388 53

Evidence continues to accrue that proximal gastric vagotomy is a safe and effective elective operation for duodenal ulcer. Recurrent ulceration remains the major shortcoming of the procedure but reoperation is rarely required. Laparoscopic surgery for peptic ulcer disease is rapidly evolving with anterior seromyotomy and posterior truncal vagotomy emerging as the elective procedure of choice. Perforated ulcer can also be treated by laparoscopic techniques in some cases. Hemorrhage is often amenable to initial endoscopic control measures, but when surgery is required, a definitive acid-reducing operation should be employed. Ulcerogenic drug use appears to be responsible for an increasing number of emergency interventions for life-threatening peptic ulcer complications, although simple closure of perforation due to such drugs may be sufficient surgical treatment. Long-term follow-up data suggest that there is a real risk increase for gastric remnant cancer development 20 years after partial gastrectomy for peptic ulcer but the value of regular endoscopic screening of patients at risk has not been demonstrated. The long-acting somatostatin analogue, octreotide acetate, has been shown to ameliorate the symptoms of the postoperative dumping syndrome markedly, although the mechanism of action remains largely unknown.
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PMID:Surgical treatment of peptic ulceration. 758 70

The secretion of hormones stimulating and inhibiting gastric secretory activity was studied in 85 patients with postvagotomy syndromes. The somatropin level was found to increase significantly in gastrostasis. The lower values of the blood insulin and C-peptide content in patients with recurrent ulcers was evidently associated either with insufficiency of the pancreatic insular apparatus or with partial vagal denervation, increased STH level, and plausible inhibiting effect of glucagon. Increased somatostatin secretion in the dumping syndrome, gastrostasis, and peptic ulcers may be due to the encountered hypergastrinemia.
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PMID:[Neurohumoral regulation of gastric secretion in postvagotomy syndromes]. 793 83

The effect of somatostatin on early and late dumping syndrome was studied in 12 patients with gastric resection. Each patient underwent two glucose challenges with 75 gram of glucose administered orally. In the control study isotonic sodium chloride was given, while in the other study cyclic somatostatin in a dose of 80 ng/kg/min was given for a period of 270 minutes. In the control study all patients showed subjective symptoms of the early dumping syndrome with significant (p < 0.001) increases in pulse rate, hematocrit, and vasoactive intestinal polypeptide. Ten patients showed asymptomatic hypoglycemia, as a sign of the late dumping syndrome associated with a significant (p < 0.001) increase of insulin, gastric inhibitory peptide and glucagon levels. During the administration of somatostatin these changes failed to develop. The difference between the results of the two challenges are significant. These results indicate that somatostatin alleviates the symptoms both of early and late dumping syndrome partly by inhibiting the vasoactive intestinal polypeptide, gastric inhibitory peptide and insulin release, which are increased in dumping syndrome and may, therefore, be implicated as to have an etiological role.
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PMID:The effect of somatostatin in dumping syndrome after gastric surgery. 810 15

In summary, although gastric emptying disorders are relatively uncommon, they are potentially devastating conditions resulting from pathophysiologic motor disturbances. Rapid gastric emptying of liquids is the hallmark of the dumping syndrome and occurs after operations, including vagotomy. Vagal denervation abolishes receptive relaxation and accommodation in the proximal stomach (the storage site for ingested liquids) resulting in increased intragastric pressure which forces liquids through an ablated or bypassed pylorus. Dumping symptoms may occur in up to 50% of postgastrectomy patients, but most patients are treated satisfactorily by dietary manipulation or, in the rare incapacitated patient, by the long-acting somatostatin analogue octreotide. Reconstructive gastric surgery may rarely be indicated to slow gastric emptying and alleviate the dumping syndrome. Reoperative procedures include pyloric reconstruction after pyloroplasty, small intestinal pouches, interposed isoperistaltic and antiperistaltic jejunal segments, and a Roux-en-Y gastrojejunostomy. Interposed jejunal loops and the Roux-en-Y gastrojejunostomy provide the most satisfactory results. Delayed gastric emptying may occur in the acute postoperative period or be a late complication of gastric surgery. Loss of vagal input to the gastric antrum and resection of the antrum with vagotomy may produce an atonic stomach or atonic gastric remnant, respectively, which fails to grind and propel solids into the small intestine. Scintigraphic imaging of both the liquid and solid components of the meal is a valuable diagnostic adjunct. Gastric ileus occurring in the early postoperative period generally resolves within 6 weeks of operation, and the temptation to reoperate on a nonobstructed stomach should be avoided. Pharmacologic therapy of chronic gastric stasis with the benzamide prokinetic agents (metoclopramide, cisapride, renzapride), domperidone, and the motilin agonist erythromycin, may be effective initially, but long-term results are still undefined, and postvagotomy and postgastrectomy patients have not been studied adequately. Persistent postoperative gastric atony and the Roux stasis syndrome should be managed surgically by near-total gastrectomy which should result in symptomatic improvement in two thirds of patients.
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PMID:Diagnosis and management of gastric emptying disorders. 814 Sep 75

Somatostatin and the long acting somatostatin analogue Sandostatin have been shown to be effective in the management of dumping syndrome. We describe a patient with early dumping in whom this management provided total symptomatic relief. The doses was reduced from 50 micrograms to 12.5 micrograms s.c., t.i.d. At this dose clinical and biochemical parameters (blood pressure, pulse rate, packed cell volume, hematocrit, and blood glucose) were found to be within normal levels.
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PMID:[Postgastrectomy dumping treated with octreotide (Sandostatin)]. 831 33

The potential therapeutic applications of somatostatin and octreotide in gastroenterology involve gut neuro-endocrine tumours, bleeding varices, bleeding peptic ulcers, gastro-intestinal fistulae, pancreatic fistulae, dumping syndrome, pancreatic pseudocysts, short bowel syndrome, acute pancreatitis, AIDS-related diarrhoea, intestinal subacute obstruction, idiopathic 'diarrhoea', irritable bowel syndrome and GIT tumours. Octreotide has a longer duration of action than somatostatin and can be administered by subcutaneous injection, thus making it suitable for long-term administration. Many of the potential gastro-intestinal indications require long-term administration and thus octreotide would be the agent of choice.
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PMID:Potential indications for octreotide in gastroenterology: summary of workshop. 835 70

Severe long-term complaints of dumping occur in a small number of patients after gastric surgery. Dietary modification, fiber preparations, and medical therapy are often ineffective. In these severely affected patients administration of the somatostatin analog octreotide before meals appears to be a promising new strategy. The effects of octreotide on both gastrointestinal transit time and hormonal changes appear to contribute to the benefits seen in dumping syndrome. However, as the majority of studies conducted have employed only a single dose of octreotide, careful long-term assessment of the nutritional and metabolic effects will be required. Recent results suggest that octreotide may be administered up to 2 hr before a meal and therefore has a sufficiently long duration of action to be of practical long-term use. Moreover, general improvements in life-style, as well as beneficial effects on symptoms, have been reported with long-term treatment, although the potential development of diarrhea will require careful monitoring. The development of an oral or nasal formulation should further improve the practical application of octreotide as a treatment for dumping syndrome.
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PMID:Octreotide, a long-acting somatostatin analog, in the management of postoperative dumping syndrome. An update. 842 49

The incidence of surgical treatment of peptic ulcer decreased in the last two decades. The majority of procedures for surgical management of peptic disease impairs the ability of the stomach to receive and to store food. The intake of high protein-caloric content diets can improve some nutritional deficits expressed by loss of body weight and anemia. The mechanism responsible for diarrhea is unknown, but truncal vagotomy has the highest incidence. It is usually episodic, lessens over the first year after operation and rarely remains a severe problem. The decreasing levels of colecistokinin response after meal in gastrectomy and the division of hepatic branch of anterior vagus can cause gallbladder sludge and stone formation. Alkaline reflux explains gastritis and esophagitis after partial gastric resection. Surgical duodenal diversion, like a Roux-en-Y limb, have been successful in its control. The mechanism that leads to the dumping syndrome are loss of gastric reservoir function and rapid emptying of hyperosmolar meals into small intestine. Somatostatin analogues improve the symptoms caused by abnormal release of neurohormonal agents responsible of the behaviour of the gastrointestinal tract after meals. Cancer of gastric remanent may be due to increased bacterial overgrowth and nitrosation formation. The endoscopic follow-up is essential for early diagnosis of the stump cancer. In spite of all complications, the surgeon cannot have hesitations by carrying out radical approach meanly during catastrophic emergencies of peptic disease i.e. in elderly aged patients. Nowadays, the control of chronic sequelas is easy with conservative therapeutic.
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PMID:[Peptic ulcer: late complications of the surgical treatment]. 858 Apr 56

Dumping syndrome commonly occurs after gastrectomy. The late dumping, which is one of the dumping syndromes, is due to postprandial hypoglycaemia caused by an excessive insulin secretion after a sharp rise in plasma glucose. Several treatments, including operation, dietary fibre and somatostatin, have been attempted to relieve dumping symptoms. These treatments take effect through modulation of plasma insulin and glucose levels, but their efficacy is still under consideration. Alpha-glucosidase inhibitor attenuates the postprandial increase of plasma glucose levels and is widely used for treatment of non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM). The acute effect of alpha-glucosidase inhibitor on late dumping syndrome has been reported by some studies with test meals. The purpose of this study was to evaluate a long-term effect of alpha-glucosidase inhibitor treatment with ordinary meals in late dumping patients with NIDDM because administration of alpha-glucosidase inhibitor is only ethically allowed for diabetic patients in Japan. Six late dumping patients with NIDDM were orally administered alpha-glucosidase inhibitor, acarbose (50 or 100 mg), three times a day before each meal for 1 month. Diurnal changes of plasma glucose, insulin and pancreatic glucagon levels were compared before and after the alpha-glucosidase inhibitor treatment. All patients had late dumping-related symptoms, such as weakness, palpitation and dizziness before the induction of alpha-glucosidase inhibitor treatment. Patients suffered from a rapid fall in plasma glucose levels from hyperglycaemia at the same time as dumping symptoms. These late dumping-related symptoms disappeared and a rapid change of plasma glucose and insulin levels were attenuated after the alpha-glucosidase inhibitor treatment. These data suggest a long-term therapeutic efficacy of alpha-glucosidase inhibitor for late dumping patients.
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PMID:Long-term effect of alpha-glucosidase inhibitor on late dumping syndrome. 991 26


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