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Query: UNIPROT:P61278 (
somatostatin
)
22,083
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Somatostatin
analog SMS 201-995 causes a dose-related suppression of the release and/or action of several gastrointestinal hormones and impairs several anterior pituitary functions. Some patients with illness involving abnormal hormonal activity have responded to treatment with SMS 201-995, including resolution of severe secretory diarrhea. This study examined SMS 201-995 inhibition of Escherichia coli heat-stable enterotoxin STa (STa) effects and effects of the analog in the rabbit RITARD model with enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli. SMS 201-995 did not alter STa binding to its receptor on piglet brush border membranes. The analog, at concentrations of 0.1 micrograms/ml (0.1 microM) and 1 microgram/ml (1 microM) did not significantly alter STa activation of intestinal epithelial cell particulate guanylate cyclase. At maximal dosing the analog significantly reduced intestinal fluid secretion in suckling mice that was induced by either 8-bromo cyclic GMP or STa. In piglets, the analog reduced by 37-44% the amount of diarrhea induced by STa. However, even with maximal dosing, the piglets still had significant diarrhea, although of a lesser amount. In the rabbit RITARD model the drug failed to alter the severe diarrheal response seen when dosing the animals with enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli. Overall, SMS 201-995 had a significant but incomplete effect in reducing the STa effects seen in the various assays. Additionally, in the RITARD model the analog did not alter the clinical responses to various enterotoxigenic bacteria. SMS 201-995 should be useful as a probe into the mechanisms involved in intestinal fluid secretion, but a clinical role in enterotoxigenic
gastrointestinal disease
was not supported by this study.
...
PMID:Effects of somatostatin analog SMS 201-995 on enterotoxigenic diarrhea. 168 50
Idiopathic diarrhea is a common complication of diabetes mellitus. It occurs frequently, but not exclusively, in patients with poorly controlled insulin-dependent diabetes who also have evidence of diabetic peripheral and autonomic neuropathy. Associated steatorrhea is common and does not necessarily imply a concomitant
gastrointestinal disease
. The diarrhea is often intermittent; it may alternate with periods of normal bowel movements, or with constipation. It is typically painless, and occurs during the day as well as at night and may be associated with fecal incontinence. Multiple pathogenic mechanisms have been implicated, autonomic neuropathy, bacterial overgrowth, and pancreatic exocrine insufficiency being the most important underlying aberrations. However, diabetic diarrhea does not have a uniform and unequivocal pathogenesis. The diagnosis depends on a judicious clinical assessment accompanied by a stepwise laboratory evaluation, which allows the differentiation idiopathic diabetic diarrhea from the many other causes of diarrhea that can occur in diabetic and nondiabetic patients. The management can be difficult but many therapies, including antibiotics to eradicate bacterial overgrowth, as well as antidiarrheal agents, oral and topical clonidine, and
somatostatin
analogues may be effective in controlling diabetic diarrhea.
...
PMID:Diabetic diarrhea. Pathophysiology, diagnosis, and management. 180 18
To further elucidate the pathophysiological role of peptide hormones in duodenal ulcer (DU) disease, several endocrine, paracrine and neurocrine peptides were determined radioimmunologically in biopsies of gastroduodenal mucosa obtained endoscopically in 8 subjects without upper
gastrointestinal disease
, and in 8 duodenal ulcer patients. The DU patients had a BAO of 6.6 +/- 1.9 and a PAO of 41.8 +/- 6.1 mEq/h. In DU patients, a lack of the acid and gastrin-release inhibiting agent
somatostatin
was found neither in antral nor in fundic mucosa (185 +/- 60 vs 83 +/- 19 pmol/g tissue wet weight in controls). Basal and peak acid outputs of DU patients were positively correlated with fundic
somatostatin
concentrations (p less than 0.01). While gastrin levels were not significantly elevated in the antrum of DU patients, the mucosal content of potentially releasable gastrin of the duodenal bulb and the descending duodenum was higher than in controls (p less than 0.01). In the whole duodenum, CCK-like immunoreactivity was also more abundant in DU patients than in controls, whereas GIP and motilin did not exhibit characteristic profiles. Presumably as a reactive phenomenon, the mucosal levels of the peptidergic neurotransmitters VIP and substance P were markedly increased in the proximal duodenum of DU patients.
...
PMID:Gastroduodenal mucosal hormone content in duodenal ulcer disease. 241 97
The oxyntic mucosa of the human stomach harbors at least five different endocrine cell types (ECL cells, A-like or X cells,
somatostatin
cells (D), enterochromaffin (EC) cells, and D1 or P cells). Little is known about their functional roles, and of the hormones they produce only
somatostatin
has been identified. The relative frequency and regional distribution of the different endocrine cell populations were studied in 13 adults with no manifest
gastrointestinal disease
. From each of them at least three biopsy specimens were taken at seven fixed locations within the oxyntic mucosa. The specimens were examined for the different endocrine cell types by means of immunocytochemistry (staining with antisera against chromogranin A,5-hydroxytryptamine, and
somatostatin
) and silver staining techniques (demonstration of argyrophil cells by the methods of Grimelius or Sevier-Munger). Chromogranin-positive cells included all endocrine cells identified by the other staining techniques. Grimelius-positive cells included all endocrine cells except the
somatostatin
cells. Sevier-Munger-positive cells, finally, included the ECL cells and the EC cells. The frequency of ECL cells could be calculated by subtracting the number of EC cells from the number of Sevier-Munger-positive cells. The ECL cells represented 35% of the total endocrine number,
somatostatin
cells 26%, and EC cells 25%. The remaining 14% consisted of A-like cells, D1 cells, and P cells. Generally, the endocrine cells predominated in the basal portion of the glands, but the various populations of endocrine cells were not uniformly distributed in the various regions of the oxyntic mucosa. However, representative specimens could be obtained from the main body of the stomach, and the results indicate that the examination of a fairly small number of specimens from the main body of the stomach may be sufficient for assessing the frequency of endocrine cells in the oxyntic mucosa of individual patients.
...
PMID:Endocrine cells in the human oxyntic mucosa. A histochemical study. 247 Jan 31
To further characterize coeliac sprue, the hormonal content of routine endoscopic biopsies of gastroduodenal mucosa was estimated in 5 coeliac sprue patients and in 8 volunteers without upper
gastrointestinal disease
. Levels of cholecystokinin-like immunoreactivity tended to be lower in duodenal mucosa of coeliac sprue patients, while the mucosal map of GIP and
somatostatin
exhibited no peculiar profile. Gastrin was markedly elevated in the antral mucosa of coeliac sprue patients (3013 +/- 760 versus 1048 +/- 392 pmol/g), while basal plasma gastrin was normal. The mucosal VIP content of the descending duodenum was significantly higher in coeliacs than in controls (409 +/- 161 versus 81 +/- 16 pmol/g) and tended to be increased also in the remaining upper small intestine. This rise may be a reaction to mucosal irritation and a reason for enhanced fluid secretion. Even in antral mucosa of coeliac sprue patients, VIP levels were elevated when compared to controls (82 +/- 14 versus 40 +/- 8 pmol/g) and may have some impact, e.g. on local mucosal blood flow or mucus secretion. The mucosal concentration of another putative neurotransmitter, substance P, also showed a tendency to be raised in the mucosa of upper small intestine of coeliac sprue patients.
...
PMID:Coeliac sprue: abnormalities of the hormone profile of gastroduodenal mucosa. 248 34
Selected portions of the prevertebral and paravertebral sympathetic and vagal parasympathetic nervous systems have been examined in the genetically diabetic Chinese hamster, an experimental animal model of diabetic
gastrointestinal disease
. The prevertebral sympathetic superior mesenteric/celiac ganglia, which provide much of the sympathetic innervation of the alimentary tract, developed large numbers of markedly dilated axons, many of which had the ultrastructural features of neuroaxonal dystrophy. Dystrophic axons, many involving presynaptic axonal elements, were increased in frequency in the prevertebral superior mesenteric/celiac ganglia, but not in the paravertebral superior cervical sympathetic ganglia, of chronically diabetic hamsters in comparison with age-matched controls. Dystrophic axons contained substance P- and gastrin-releasing peptide (gastrin-releasing peptide/bombesin)-like staining but were not labeled by antisera directed against vasoactive intestinal peptide, dynorphin-B,
somatostatin
, leu- and met-enkephalin and neuropeptide tyrosine. Substance P and gastrin-releasing peptide/bombesin containing subpopulations of presynaptic elements in prevertebral sympathetic ganglia are thought to participate in local reflex control of bowel motility and lesions preferentially involving these elements may contribute to bowel dysfunction. Immunohistologic techniques failed to demonstrate dystrophic axons in the superior cervical ganglia. Although morphometric studies failed to show significant axon loss in the abdominal vagus of chronically diabetic Chinese hamsters, evidence of markedly diminished numbers of axons comprising each Schwann cell unit and regenerative collections of Schwann cell processes devoid of axons are consistent with the participation of parasympathetic elements in the pathogenesis of alimentary dysfunction in this model system. These results suggest that selective subpopulations of neuropeptide containing axons are vulnerable to the diabetic condition and that these abnormalities may lead to physiologic dysfunction.
...
PMID:Ultrastructural and immunohistochemical characterization of autonomic neuropathy in genetically diabetic Chinese hamsters. 274 19
The mucosal concentrations of seven regulatory peptides and the density properties and integrity of their storage granules have been studied in mucosal biopsies from the human jejunum in eight
gastrointestinal disease
states and compared with normal controls. In diseases with associated mucosal inflammation (coeliac disease, Crohn's disease with jejunal involvement, postinfective tropical malabsorption, and common variable immunodeficiency) there was a selective increase in fragility of the gastric inhibitory polypeptide (GIP) and
somatostatin
storage granules. The gastrin, motilin, enteroglucagon, secretin, and vasoactive intestinal polypeptide granules had normal properties in these conditions. In diseases in which diarrhoea occurred in the absence of changes in jejunal mucosal histology (irritable bowel syndrome, pancreatic insufficiency, jejuno-ileal bypass for morbid obesity, and purgative abuse) there were no abnormalities of the storage granules. Increased mucosal concentrations of all peptides except vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP) were found in coeliac disease and selective increases of VIP found in Crohn's disease, motilin in the irritable bowel syndrome and gastrin and GIP in pancreatic insufficiency. It is suggested that the storage granule abnormalities in the diseases with abnormal mucosal histology are secondary to the inflammatory changes.
...
PMID:Gastrointestinal regulatory peptide storage granule abnormalities in jejunal mucosal diseases. 614 62
The application of radioimmunoassay of insulin, C-peptide, gastrin, glucagon, vasoactive intestinal polypeptides (VIP),
somatostatin
, human pancreatic polypeptides (hPP), substance P and neurotensin to detect endocrine tumors of the pancreas and other organ systems is undoubtedly important in the clinical management of patients suspected of having tumors that secrete these hormones. Radioimmunoassays of the above gut peptides have certain degrees of specificity and sensitivity; however, there are several factors that need to be considered in the interpretation of results since heterogeneity of molecular forms does occur and the varied radioimmunoassay techniques use different antibodies that may yield different results. It is, therefore, important that each laboratory establish its own normal values, determine the molecular species that each assay is detecting, and also determine the false positivity of the methodology. The same endocrine tumor may contain and secrete several detectable peptides, but the syndrome may relate to only one peptide. Although the simultaneous measurement of multiple peptides in patients with benign
gastrointestinal disease
has yielded information that contributes to our understanding of the complexities of gut neuroendocrine interaction, the pathophysiological role of gut peptides and their clinical relevance need further evaluation.
...
PMID:Clinical relevance of regulatory gastrointestinal peptides. 632 49
Irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) is a common
gastrointestinal disorder
. In a previous study the total number of endocrine cells in the rectum of IBS patients, as detected by chromogranin A, did not differ from that of healthy controls. While the total endocrine cell content of the rectum appears to be unchanged in IBS patients, changes in particular endocrine cells cannot be excluded. This study was undertaken, therefore, to investigate the cell density of different rectal endocrine cell types in (IBS) patients. Fifty patients with IBS (41 females and 9 males) were included in the study. Thirty patients had diarrhoea (IBS-D) and 20 had constipation (IBS-C) as the predominant symptom. Twenty-seven subjects were included as controls (19 females and 8 males). Rectal biopsy specimens were immunostained using the avidin-biotin-complex method for serotonin, peptide YY (PYY), pancreatic polypeptide (PP), and oxyntomodulin and
somatostatin
cells. The cell densities were quantified by computerised image analysis. The serotonin cell density did not differ significantly, although a type II statistical error cannot be excluded, due to the small size of the sample. The densities of PYY and Oxyntomodulin cells were significantly lower and that of
somatostatin
were significantly higher in IBS patients than controls. These abnormalities were observed in both IBS-D and IBS-C patients. The abnormalities in the endocrine cells observed in this study in the rectum differed considerably from those seen in the colon of IBS patients. This indicates that caution in using the rectum to represent the large intestine in these patients. These abnormalities could be primary (genetic) or secondary to changes in the gut hormones found in other segments of the gut and/or other pathological processes. Although the-cause-and effect relationship of the abnormalities found in rectal endocrine cells is difficult to elucidate, they might contribute to the symptoms associated with IBS. The densities of PYY and
somatostatin
cells are potential biomarkers with good sensitivity and specificity for the diagnosis of IBS.
...
PMID:Abnormal rectal endocrine cells in patients with irritable bowel syndrome. 2431 98