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Query: UNIPROT:P61278 (
somatostatin
)
22,083
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Pancreatic hormone release is generally thought to be regulated through adrenergic as well as muscarinic receptors. We have previously observed possible nicotinic involvement in insulin release. In the present study, we incubated isolated rat islets for 60 min with various concentrations of atropine (a muscarinic receptor blocker), alpha-bungarotoxin (alpha-Btx, a nicotinic receptor blocker), and anti-acetylcholine receptor antibody (IgG) (anti-Ach.R.Ab) obtained from a patient with
myasthenia gravis
. Atropine suppressed insulin release, and alpha-Btx and anti-Ach.R.Ab potentiated it; atropine did not suppress glucagon release, while alpha-Btx and anti-Ach.R.Ab raised it. None of these agents influenced
somatostatin
release. These observations suggest that muscarinic as well as nicotinic receptors influence insulin release, as nicotinic receptors do glucagon release. Neither nicotinic nor muscarinic receptors seem to regulate
somatostatin
release.
...
PMID:Participation of nicotinic receptor in hormone release from isolated rat islets of Langerhans. 256 21
Somatostatin
receptor scintigraphy with 111In-[DTPA-D-Phe1]-octreotide has the potential for visualizing primary and recurrent thymomas in patients with
myasthenia gravis
, whereas thymic hyperplasias fail to accumulate
somatostatin
analog peptides. We demonstrate somatostatin receptor imaging findings in a patient with a mixed encapsulated thymoma which exhibited intense 111In-[DTPA-D-Phe1]-octreotide uptake in early and late scans. In another patient with a history of malignant thymoma 111In-[DTPA-D-Phe1]-octreotide accumulation was clearly seen in a mass suspected to be a recurrence. This paper describes the imaging protocol including Single Photon Emission Computed Tomography (SPECT) and discusses the clinical applications of this feasible functional imaging method in patients with thymomas.
...
PMID:Somatostatin receptor scintigraphy in thymoma imaging method and clinical application. 1048 89
Human thymomas are rare tumours which usually develop in the chest. The diagnosis via guided biopsy, the evaluation of the extent of the tumour and its boundaries with adjacent organs, the choice of the appropriate therapeutic option, and the assessment of response to treatment are usually made with computed tomography (CT) alone or in combination with magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). More recently, radiopharmaceuticals and nuclear medicine procedures have been used increasingly in the imaging and functional characterization of benign and malignant thymic disorders. Two groups of radiopharmaceuticals have been used. The first includes several oncotropic tracers, such as 201Tl-chloride, 99mTc-sestamibi and 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose, which are significantly concentrated in thymic tumours. Their uptake correlates with tumour grades and cellularity. The second class includes two radioligands: [(111)In-DTPA-D-Phe1]-octreotide (DTPA, diethylenetriamine penta-acetic acid) and [(111)In-DTPA-Arg1]-substance P, which bind to specific receptors. [(111)In-DTPA-Arg1]-substance P binds to its receptors that are largely expressed in the thymus of patients with autoimmune diseases. [(111)In-DTPA-D-Phe1]-octreotide recognizes the somatostatin receptor subtype 2. In patients with active disease investigated in our institution [(111)In-DTPA-D-Phe1]-octreotide has been shown to concentrate in the majority of thymoma deposits. Conversely, it is not concentrated in adult patients with benign lymphofollicular thymic hyperplasia. This finding has had a significant impact on the management of patients with
myasthenia gravis
as it differentiates early-stage thymoma from benign hyperplasia, unlike CT and MRI, which often fail to distinguish between the two. In addition to its role in diagnostic imaging, somatostatin receptor scintigraphy also enables us to select patients with advanced or metastatic thymoma unresponsive to conventional therapies, who might benefit from a
somatostatin
analogue-based treatment, serving thus as a link between diagnosis and therapy. In this article, we discuss and analyse the results of functional imaging with different radiopharmaceuticals, primarily those that we have obtained with [(111)In-DTPA-D-Phe1]-octreotide.
...
PMID:Functional imaging of thymic disorders. 1057 58
Somatostatin
(SS) and SS receptor (SSR) subtypes, code-named sst1-5, are heterogeneously expressed in the normal human thymus. This suggests their involvement in controlling the immune and/or neuroendocrine functions in this organ. Moreover, recently a high in vivo uptake of [111In-DTPA-D-Phe1]octreotide has been reported in patients bearing thymoma. The present study characterizes in vivo and in vitro, functional SS-binding sites in a human thymoma. A high uptake of [111In-DTPA-D-Phe1]octreotide was observed in the chest of a patient with
myasthenia gravis
due to a cortical thymoma. Specific binding of [125I-Tyr11] SS-14 was found on a membrane preparation of the surgically removed thymoma. Scatchard analysis showed high affinity binding sites (Kd, 47.5 +/- 2.5 pmol/L) with low maximum binding capacity (23.5 +/- 2.5 fmol/mg membrane protein). RT-PCR analysis showed the presence of sst1, sst2A, and a predominant sst3 messenger RNA (mRNA) expression in the tumor tissue. Primary cultured tumor cells expressed sst3 mRNA only. In contrast to the normal thymus, SS mRNA was not expressed. By immunohistochemistry, the tumor cells highly expressed sst3 receptors, weakly expressed sst1 receptors, and showed no immunostaining for sst2A receptors. sst2A immunoreactivity was found in the stromal compartment of the tumor, particularly on the endothelium of small intratumoral blood vessels. In primary cultured tumor cells, both SS and octreotide (10 nmol/L) significantly inhibited [3H]thymidine incorporation by 40.6% and 43.2%, respectively. The following conclusions were reached. 1) As this tumor displayed a high immunoreactivity for sst3 and the cultured tumor cells expressed the sst3 mRNA only, this SSR may be the subtype involved in the inhibition of epithelial tumor cell proliferation by octreotide in vitro. 2) A loss of endogenous SS production in this thymoma might be implicated in the uncontrolled cell growth. 3) In this case, the sst3 may play a role in determining the uptake of [111In-DTPA-D-Phe1]octreotide by in vivo SS receptor scintigraphy.
...
PMID:Somatostatin receptor subtypes in human thymoma and inhibition of cell proliferation by octreotide in vitro. 1077 Feb 20
Thymectomy has been shown to be effective in the treatment of
myasthenia gravis
patients. Rarely, bilateral chylothorax, was noted as a complication of thymectomy via median sternotomy. Probably unseen division of mediastinal lymphatics, remote from thoracic duct, can explain this phenomenon. We report the case of a patient, female, who developed bilateral chylothorax after the former surgical approach, and our initial conservative policy to treat it (unilateral chest tube, total parenteral nutrition and subcutaneous administration of octreotide, a long-acting
somatostatin
analog), with good results.
...
PMID:Bilateral chylothorax after thymectomy via median sternotomy and resolution through conservative treatment. 1296 26
A woman in her early 50s presented with recurrent severe chest infections. Investigations revealed a low white cell count and a diagnosis of autoimmune neutropenia was made. Subsequently, an infiltrating thymic tumour (mitoses only) in the absence of
myasthenia gravis
was found. She underwent radical surgery. When neutropenic, she complained of painful, swollen joints and soft tissues. She was started on steroids and immunosuppressants and her pain settled. The following year, she had local malignant recurrence confirmed on imaging. She declined chemotherapy or targeted
somatostatin
and opted for alternative therapies. She developed a microcytic anaemia and commenced erythropoietin. This coincided with the development of a painful expanded rib lesion, hypercalcaemia, and ascites. She remained unwell with periodical flares in disease affecting many different organs and continued to mount a significant immunological response to her thymic tumour, manifesting as biopsy proven graft-versus-host disease involving joints, skin and lungs. This has been a complex clinical case involving multiple specialities, including haematology, oncology, immunology, endocrinology and palliative medicine.
...
PMID:An unusual case of malignant thymoma associated graft-versus-host disease. 2185 7
Precise diagnostic work up of a suspected thymic pathology in patients with
myasthenia gravis
(MG) is very important for potential surgical implications and further disease course. In this study the diagnostic value of combined preoperative radiological (CAT scan) and nuclear based imaging (octreotide and thallium scintigraphy) in patients with MG was evaluated. Twenty four patients were included. Histopathology revealed thymoma in nine patients, thymic carcinoma (TC) in one patient, lymphofollicular hyperplasia in seven patients, and involuted thymus in another seven patients. Diagnostic sensitivity for detecting thymoma/TC was 80 % in CAT scan as well as in
somatostatin
scintigraphy; the combination of both procedures reached 90 %. However, the diagnostic specifity to exclude thymoma in CAT scan was 100 % and in octreotide scintigraphy 85.7 %. Semiquantitative octreotide uptake significantly correlated with histological grading of thymoma/TC (r = 0.764) and histological proliferation rate Ki67 (r = 0.894). Thallium scintigraphy was positive only in one out of four thymoma cases. In this study,
somatostatin
scintigraphy has been shown to be a useful additional diagnostic technique in detecting thymic malignancies in patients with MG. These results might be especially helpful in patients with late onset MG as these patients are in general no candidates for thymectomy.
...
PMID:Thymic pathologies in myasthenia gravis: a preoperative assessment of CAT scan and nuclear based imaging. 2681 Jul 25