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)

The significance of the enterochromaffin-like (ECL) cell as a critical endocrine regulator of gastric fundic mucosal function has only recently been recognized. Although the percentage of these cells present in the human fundic mucosa is less than that in rodents, the observation that they secrete histamine and are probably important modulators of parietal cell function has resulted in their attaining some considerable biological significance. The further identification of gastrin and somatostatin receptors on the surface of the ECL cells has suggested that other neurohormonal influences may be significant in the regulation of parietal cell function, utilizing the ECL cell as an intermediate modifier. While abnormalities of ECL cells in the human stomach (hyperplasia/neoplasia) have been mostly confined to observations in patients with pernicious anemia and atrophic gastritis, the recent recognition of hyperplasia in pharmacotherapeutically induced achlorhydric or hypochlorhydric states has excited considerable interest. It has been proposed that the generation of luminal hypo- or achlorhydria by powerful acid inhibitory pharmacotherapy may result in hypergastrinemia. This condition is responsible initially for the development of hyperplasia and, subsequently, possibly even neoplasia of the ECL system of the fundic mucosa. This phenomenon seems to be prevalent in rodents but has so far been only rarely observed in humans, e.g., pernicious anemia, atrophic gastritis. In particular, patients with the gastrinoma component of the multiple endocrine neoplasia type I syndrome exhibit ECL-cell hyperplasia and neoplasia after exposure to acid inhibitory pharmacotherapy. It is therefore likely that an underlying genomic phenomenon is necessary prior to the induction of hyperplasia and subsequent neoplastic transformation. The scientific evaluation of the relationship between gastrin, ECL-cell function, and the development of hyperplasia and neoplasia may provide some important information in regard to the molecular evolution of gastrointestinal neuroendocrine disease states. It is possible that the future pharmacotherapy of acid secretory disease may require regulation not only of parietal cell but of ECL-cell function.
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PMID:The pathobiology of the human enterochromaffin-like cell. 134 Oct 78

A variety of vasoactive substances including biogenic amines, neuropeptide Y, somatostatin, enkephalin, ACTH, corticotropin-releasing hormone, growth hormone releasing hormone, vasoactive intestinal peptide, calcitonin, and atrial natriuretic factor have been extracted from intra-adrenal and extra-adrenal pheochromocytomas in men. Some of them appear to play an important role for the development of hypertension or clinical serious symptoms. However, informations on the molecular forms of other substances in pheochromocytomas are still limited, and precise amount of the peptides or hormones in the tumors has not yet been quantitated. Numerous in vitro or in vivo studies of this documented neoplasm over the years have been reviewed in this manuscript. Clinical analyses of early diagnosis, localization diagnosis, treatment of multiple endocrine neoplasia, preoperative and operative treatments are also evaluated in this paper. These informations will probably provide additional evidence for the multi-secretory APUD cells of neural crest origin and will contribute the therapy in patients with pheochromocytoma.
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PMID:[Pheochromocytoma--basic and clinical analyses]. 134 92

Although carcinoid tumors in association with multiple endocrine neoplasia syndrome (MEN) has been well described, thymic carcinoid in association with MEN is extremely rare (only 23 cases in the world literature). A patient with thymic carcinoid and MEN-I was treated with surgical resection and postoperative radiation therapy, which was later followed by subtotal parathyroidectomy for hyperparathyroidism. Four years later, a symptomatic recurrence of his thymic carcinoid was resected from below his right clavicle. Six years after his original operation, the patient came to the hospital with pancreatitis, and a 5 cm, distal, pancreatic metastasis was resected. He now has symptomatic paraspinal and pleural metastases and is receiving somatostatin. Review of the world's literature shows that the majority of patients with thymic carcinoid and MEN-I are men with an average age of 37 years. Their clinical course is indolent, and surgery represents the only means of cure. Adjuvant chemotherapy and radiation therapy confer no survival advantage. The surgical decision making involved in treating a patient with thymic carcinoid and hyperparathyroidism associated with MEN is also discussed.
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PMID:Thymic carcinoid in association with MEN syndromes. 135 92

A 42-year-old woman with a family history of multiple endocrine neoplasia type 1 (MEN 1) presented with symptomatic hypoglycaemia and peptic ulceration. Investigation revealed an insulinoma, hyperparathyroidism, hypercalcitoninaemia with a positive pentagastrin stimulation test, acromegaly due to a GRF-oma, hyperprolactinaemia and normal serum gastrin levels. Five pancreatic tumours were removed at laparotomy and immunostaining was positive for insulin, calcitonin, somatostatin and glucagon. Post-operatively she developed elevated serum gastrin levels and gross peptic ulceration, despite H2-blockers, and died of gastro-intestinal haemorrhage suggesting that removal of the somatostatinoma may have allowed increased gastrin secretion from a gastrinoma. This case emphasizes the importance of measuring a wide variety of tumour marker peptides in MEN 1 and suggests that caution is required in interpretation of the pentagastrin stimulation test in such cases. Patients with MEN 1 and known peptic ulceration may require perioperative omeprazole treatment even if serum gastrin levels are normal.
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PMID:A case of multiple endocrine neoplasia: hyperparathyroidism, insulinoma, GRF-oma, hypercalcitoninaemia and intractable peptic ulceration. 135 65

Among 33 patients with endocrine pancreatic tumors due to multiple endocrine neoplasia type 1 (MEN-1), 19 (58%) patients had hypergastrinemia, 7 (21%) patients had hyperinsulinism, and 7 (21%) patients had clinically non-functioning lesions. At least one gross tumor was found in all patients undergoing pancreatic surgery, including those with negative localization studies prior to operation. The patients also had additional macroscopic tumors as well as numerous microadenomas, and the lesions frequently were positive for immunostaining with multiple hormones, mainly pancreatic polypeptide, insulin, glucagon, and somatostatin. Duodenal endocrine lesions were found in 4 of 5 investigated patients and stained with gastrin and somatostatin antibodies. Distal, mainly subtotal pancreatic resection, was performed in 18 patients, eventually combined with caput tumor enucleation or duodenotomy, while a few patients underwent only tumor enucleation or a Whipple procedure. The long-term outcome of operation was most favorable in patients with hyperinsulinism; only 1 patient had clinical recurrence. Patients with hypergastrinemia experienced only transitory lowering of serum gastrin values after pancreatic surgery and 47% of them had or developed metastases. Such tumor spread was seen in 57% of the patients with non-functioning lesions. Nine patients died from progressive tumor disease during follow-up. Consistent with previous studies, we found that surgery is indicated in MEN-1 patients with hyperinsulinism even if a lesion is not visualized by radiology. In addition, these indications should be extended to also include patients with only biochemical markers of disease, including elevations of gastrin, as these indicate the presence of gross tumors.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Pancreatic tumors in multiple endocrine neoplasia type 1: clinical presentation and surgical treatment. 135 27

During examination before surgical correction of pes valgus a 20-year-old man reported having 3-5 pasty, foul smelling diarrhoeic motions per day for the past 3 years. He was noted to have rather thick lips and Marfan-like body build. Erythrocyte sedimentation rate was 18/34 mm, serum activity of GOT 22.5 U/l, GPT 35.7 U/l. Faecal weight was increased to 640 g/d, fat content to 12 g/d. Serum levels of the carcinoembryonic antigen (2494 ng/ml; normal: < 2.5) and of calcitonin (1,619,760 pg/ml; normal < 100) were elevated. Gastroscopy, partial coloscopy, colon-contrast imaging, ultrasonography and computed tomography of the neck and abdomen, as well as magnetic nuclear imaging of the neck were all normal. But laparoscopy revealed the liver to be infiltrated by small whitish nodules which immunohistologically proved to be metastases of a C-cell carcinoma. Total thyroidectomy was performed and the diagnosis of a C-cell carcinoma of the thyroid confirmed intra-operatively. After the operation the diarrhoea was stopped with codeine (9 mg/d). In case of tumour progression, therapy with octreotide, a somatostatin analogue, will be carried out. The concomitant occurrence of C-cell carcinoma, Marfan-like body build, thick lips and skeletal changes is typical of multiple endocrine neoplasia type 2B, which is caused by a chromosomal defect.
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PMID:[Type-2B multiple endocrine neoplasms with diffuse liver metastases as the cause of chronic diarrhea]. 135 89

The influences of multiple endocrine neoplasia type 1 (MEN 1), hypergastrinaemia, age, and sex on gastric endocrine cell densities were studied in 48 patients with the Zollinger-Ellison syndrome of either the sporadic type (n = 31) or associated with MEN 1 (n = 17). The mean fundic argyrophil cell density was higher in women (p < 0.05). It showed no appreciable difference between young and old women but it declined with age in men. The mean argyrophil cell density, when adjusted for sex, was higher (+48.5%, p = 0.06) in patients with Zollinger-Ellison syndrome associated with MEN 1 than in those with sporadic type disease. This measurement was not significantly different between the two groups of patients when antisecretory treatments were considered. In patients with sporadic type disease, fundic argyrophil cells showed a normal pattern (16%) or diffuse (71%) or linear (13%) hyperplasia. In patients with MEN 1 diffuse and linear hyperplasia were of the same order (53% and 47%). Furthermore, fundic argyrophil endocrine tumours developed in five of 17-that is, 29.5% of patients with associated MEN 1 while none was seen in patients with sporadic type disease. These tumours showed an exclusive or prominent enterochromaffin like cell population. Antral gastrin and somatostatin cell densities and fasting serum gastrin concentrations were similar in the two groups of patients with Zollinger-Ellison syndrome. Whatever the underlying mechanism for carcinoidosis, the risk of developing fundic enterochromaffin like cell tumours in Zollinger-Ellison syndrome patients who present with MEN 1 is probably higher than was initially estimated and suggests that regular follow up of these patients is necessary.
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PMID:Influence of multiple endocrine neoplasia type 1 on gastric endocrine cells in patients with the Zollinger-Ellison syndrome. 135 67

The multiple endocrine neoplasia (MEN) syndromes are well-defined disorders characterized by familial inheritance of specific endocrine tumors. The parathyroid, endocrine, pancreas, and pituitary tumors of MEN-1 are described by frequency and symptomatology. The effectiveness of surgery, symptomatic therapy, and panendocrine suppression by the somatostatin congener octreotide are discussed. Evidence indicates that the MEN-1 gene is located on chromosome 11 and tightly linked markers can help identify family members at risk for inheriting the gene. In MEN-2, the effectiveness of biochemical screening for thyroidal C-cell neoplasms and early thyroidectomy are described. New imaging techniques have been developed to identify medullary thyroid carcinoma and pheochromocytoma in MEN-2. Genetic analysis has identified markers on chromosome 10 closely linked to the MEN-2a gene, allowing better identification of family members likely to develop the syndrome.
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PMID:Multiple endocrine neoplasia. 167 23

Important recent contributions to the literature on parathyroid neoplasia have dealt with advances in the understanding of the molecular genetics, diagnosis, and treatment of these neoplasms. Specific gene loci for multiple endocrine neoplasia type 1 and multiple endocrine neoplasia type 2a have been defined. The specificity and sensitivity of various imaging techniques for patients with these neoplasms have been quantified. Effective nonsurgical therapy with ultrasound-directed transcutaneous ablation of parathyroid neoplasms has been demonstrated. The long-acting somatostatin analogue has been documented to be effective treatment for hyperparathyroidism resulting from neuroendocrine tumors.
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PMID:Parathyroid neoplasia. 167 25

This report describes the concomitant occurrence of a somatostatin-rich duodenal carcinoid, a medullary thyroid carcinoma and a diffuse adrenal medullary hyperplasia in a patient with von Recklinghausen's disease. A 50-year-old Japanese man died from lung metastasis of a malignant schwannoma. In addition to extensive viscero-cutaneous neurofibromatosis, two different types of neuroendocrine tumors were found in the duodenum and thyroid gland at autopsy. The duodenal tumor, which was located in the second portion, showed the histologic appearance of a carcinoid tumor with glandular differentiation and psammoma-bodies. Immunohistochemically the tumor cells were intensely positive for somatostatin. The thyroid tumor was composed of nests of tumor cells arranged in an endocrine pattern, and showed immunoreactivity for calcitonin. A review of the literature revealed no previously reported case of concomitant occurrence of duodenal somatostatinoma and medullary thyroid carcinoma in a single patient with von Recklinghausen's disease. Morphometric analysis of adrenal glands disclosed the presence of diffuse medullary hyperplasia. Thus, the present case exhibited a similarity in some respects with multiple endocrine neoplasia (MEN) syndrome, Type IIa or IIb.
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PMID:von Recklinghausen's disease associated with somatostatin-rich duodenal carcinoid (somatostatinoma), medullary thyroid carcinoma and diffuse adrenal medullary hyperplasia. 168 37


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