Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
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Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
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Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UNIPROT:P61278 (
somatostatin
)
22,083
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Recent studies have suggested that
somatostatin
could reduce calcitonin plasma levels (CT) in normal subjects and in medullary thyroid carcinoma (MTC). The aim of this study was to examine the usefulness of the
somatostatin
analog, sandostatine (SMS 201.995) in MTC with elevated residual CT levels post-thyroidectomy with or without metastases. 18 patients (17-64 years, 12 men and 8 women) with CT greater than 850 pg/ml (N less than 150 pg/ml) and with metastases in 12 cases, were studied. MTC was sporadic in 11 cases, familial in 4 cases and of undefined form in 3. Initial posology was 300 micrograms/d of sandostatin (3 injections/day). It was then increased by 300 micrograms/d every 9 day till a maximum of 1500 micrograms/d. Treatment duration was 37 days in 11 cases and 60 days in 7 cases. Plasma CT and
carcinoembryonic antigen
levels (CEA) were measured before treatment and at the end of each dosage plateau. Morphologic evaluation of metastases was done at 0, 30, 60 days. 7/18 patients were reevaluated 2 to 8 months after with drawal of sandostatine. Treatment was well tolerated. Flushes improved in 4 out of 5 cases but diarrhea in only 2 out of 9 patients. Sandostatine was without any effect on plasma CEA. Heterogenous responses were observed for plasma CT levels (CT decreases greater than 20% in 8/18 patients when 900 to 1500 micrograms/day were administered). Patients were subdivised into 3 groups according to CEA levels and presence or absence of metastases. Group A (n = 9) had elevated CEA levels (greater than 10 mg/ml) and metastases.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Effects of subcutaneous administration of sandostatine (SMS 201.995) in 18 cases of thyroid medullary cancer]. 263 43
A rare case is reported of melanin-producing medullary thyroid carcinoma in a 62-year-old man. Intraoperative imprints of the thyroid tumor revealed numerous detached tumor cells containing large amounts of brown pigment. The Fontana-Masson argentaffin reaction with bleach confirmed that those granules were melanin. Histologically, the tumor was composed of two different components--a medullary area with hyalinized stroma and a follicular area. Melanin was scattered in both areas. The tumor cells in both areas were immunoreactive to
carcinoembryonic antigen
, calcitonin, gastrin-releasing peptide,
somatostatin
, met.-enkephalin, neuron-specific enolase, chromogranin and neurofilaments, and negative for thyroglobulin and S-100 protein. The histologic diagnosis was melanin-producing medullary thyroid carcinoma with glandular differentiation. Although various kinds of peptides and amines have been reported to be produced in medullary thyroid carcinoma, melanin production is quite rare; this appears to be only the third reported case.
...
PMID:Melanin-producing medullary thyroid carcinoma with glandular differentiation. 264 44
High circulating levels of
somatostatin
(SRIF) were detected in a patient with a metastatic tumour after development of diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA). Fasting insulin and C-peptide levels were markedly suppressed, but plasma glucagon was not suppressed below normal. Progressive cachexia ensued; at autopsy a poorly differentiated non-small cell neuroendocrine carcinoma metastatic to liver was found. Small gallstones were noted. Electron microscopy of tumour tissue showed neurosecretory granules and tonofilament bundles. Immunohistochemical staining of tumour cells was diffusely positive for
carcinoembryonic antigen
, bombesin-like immunoreactivity, and calcitonin with focal immunoreactivity for SRIF, serotonin, neuron-specific enolase, chromogranin, and epithelial membrane antigen. Column chromatography of plasma and tumour extract revealed five or more peaks of material with SRIF-like immunoreactivity (SRIF-LI): predominantly SRIF-28 and intermediates in tumour extract, and SRIF-14 and an intermediate between SRIF-28 and SRIF-14 in plasma, DKA in this case of somatostatinoma syndrome may reflect differential effects of tumour production of larger molecular weight SRIF forms on insulin and glucagon secretion.
...
PMID:Malignant somatostatinoma presenting with diabetic ketoacidosis. 282 97
We studied 13 neuroendocrine carcinomas of the larynx. They constituted 59% of the 22 nonepidermoid carcinomas of the larynx seen at Memorial Hospital during a 45-year period, and for which adequate material was available for review. Four tumors were histologically identical to small cell carcinomas of the lung and were classified as small cell neuroendocrine carcinomas (SCNC). One case represents one of the original descriptions of the laryngeal SCNC. No SCNC was argyrophil, and of the three studied immunohistochemically, all contained neuron-specific enolase, one
carcinoembryonic antigen
(
CEA
) and one serotonin. Nine tumors were large cell carcinomas (LCNC). Eight LCNC were argyrophil, and all nine contained neuron-specific enolase, six calcitonin, four
CEA
, one HCG, two serotonin, and two
somatostatin
. The laryngeal neuroendocrine carcinomas commonly presented in chronic cigarette smokers with mean ages of 63 (SCNC) and 60 (LCNC), were not associated with other endocrine tumors, and proved highly fatal in spite of radical surgery and radiation therapy. At last follow-up only one patient was alive (after 13 months). Patients dying with SCNC survived a mean of 11 months, and those with LCNC, 36 months. To determine whether the laryngeal LCNC most closely resembles pulmonary neuroendocrine tumors, head and neck paragangliomas, or thyroid medullary carcinoma (TMC), they were histologically, histochemically, and immunohistochemically compared with control cases of each group. Overall, LCNC most closely resembles TMC, and given the frequency with which each presents as a neck mass, misinterpretation of one for the other is very possible. Evidence is provided suggesting that some LCNC have also been mistaken for the laryngeal paraganglioma.
...
PMID:Neuroendocrine carcinomas of the larynx. A study of two types, one of which mimics thyroid medullary carcinoma. 286 24
Whilst investigating 26 members of the same family, we discovered 5 cases of multiple endocrine neoplasia type II a. The present report demonstrates the diagnostic value of basal plasma thyrocalcitonin (TCT) assays, before and after stimulation with pentagastrin, and of plasma
carcinoembryonic antigen
(
CEA
) assays. Some of the clinical features encountered were novel--e.g. in one patient the phaeochromocytoma was revealed by a haemothorax with cardiovascular collapse--and others were peculiar; thus, in 4 cases the medullary thyroid carcinoma (MTC) was less than 2 cm in diameter and without lymph node or visceral metastases, even in patients aged 87, 59 and 56. More classically, MTC, always multifocal, was clinically silent, as were the two cases of phaeochromocytoma and hyperparathyroidism. Phaeochromocytomas were difficult to diagnose. Ultrasonic tomography did not prove very helpful and the disease was transmitted as an autosomal dominant trait. Finally, MTC secreted a variety of substances (TCT,
CEA
, beta-endorphin,
somatostatin
), and HLA A2-B15 antigens were found in 3 patients.
...
PMID:[Hemothorax disclosing hemorrhagic necrosis of a pheochromocytoma: circumstance for detection of multiple endocrine neoplasia type IIa. Detection of 5 familial cases]. 287 8
The presence of calcitonin,
somatostatin
-like immunoreactivity and
carcinoembryonic antigen
in tumor tissues (surgically obtained) and identified by the peroxidase-antiperoxidase technique, is reported in two sisters suffering from familial thyroid medullary carcinoma. C-cell hyperplasia occurred in both individuals. Preoperatively, both patients had elevated calcitonin serum levels (290 pM, 991.8 ng/l), and
carcinoembryonic antigen
(60 micrograms/l). No ACTH or thyroglobulin immunoreactivity could be found in the tumor tissue. After thyroidectomy, 131I-treatment and percutaneous radiation,
somatostatin
-like immunoreactivity and
carcinoembryonic antigen
plasma levels were in the normal range, whereas calcitonin was still elevated. It is proposed that calcitonin,
somatostatin
, and
carcinoembryonic antigen
are produced by the thyroid medullary carcinoma.
...
PMID:Occurrence of calcitonin, somatostatin-like immunoreactivity, and carcinoembryonic antigen in two sisters suffering from familial thyroid medullary carcinoma. 288 97
We have studied the clinical and thyroid immunohistological features of 19 patients with sporadic medullary thyroid carcinoma and 16 patients with the hereditary syndrome multiple endocrine neoplasia 2a (MEN 2a). Both groups were identified by family screening using serum calcitonin determinations before and after pentagastrin stimulation. Pheochromocytoma and hyperparathyroidism were associated both with multiple endocrine neoplasia 2a and some cases of sporadic medullary thyroid carcinoma. Hereditary medullary thyroid carcinoma was invariably associated with C-cell hyperplasia, but C-cell hyperplasia was also associated with some sporadic tumours. All tumours were positive for calcitonin and
carcinoembryonic antigen
(by immunohistological staining) (CEA) and most tumours stained for
somatostatin
. C-cell hyperplasia also stained for calcitonin, CEA and
somatostatin
. We conclude that sporadic and familial medullary thyroid carcinoma cannot always be discriminated by clinical or immunohistological methods. Family screening is essential in the diagnosis of hereditary medullary thyroid carcinoma.
...
PMID:Familial and sporadic medullary thyroid carcinoma: clinical and immunohistological findings. 290 73
Immunoreactivity for endocrine peptides (serotonin, gastrin,
somatostatin
, insulin, corticotropin, calcitonin, neurotensin, vasoactive intestinal peptide, and bombesin), cytoskeletal proteins (high and low molecular weight keratins), and tumor differentiation markers (chromogranin, neuron-specific enolase,
carcinoembryonic antigen
, S100 protein, and Grimelius stain) was sought on nine cervical and one vaginal poorly differentiated small-cell carcinoids. Dense-core secretory granules were ultrastructurally identified in all cases (seven of ten) in which tissue was available for electron microscopy. Immunoreactivity for endocrine secretory products was rarely noted, and only in a minority cell population (serotonin in two of ten). The majority of the tumors exhibited immunoreactivity for low molecular weight keratin (AE1/AE3 in eight of ten; CAM 5.2 in seven of nine), and three of ten tumors focally expressed high molecular weight keratin. Among the markers of neuroendocrine differentiation, neurospecific enolase was more frequently expressed (ten of ten) than chromogranin (five of ten) or argyrophilia (three of ten). Carcinoembryonic antigen was present in eight of ten tumors. S100 protein was absent in all cases. In summary, poorly differentiated small-cell carcinoids of the lower female genital tract, similarly to other small-cell endocrine tumors, occasionally exhibit focal glandular and squamoid differentiation, and only relatively infrequently or focally express immunohistochemically detectable endocrine secretory products, chromogranin, and argyrophilia.
...
PMID:Endocrine and tumor differentiation markers in poorly differentiated small-cell carcinoids of the cervix and vagina. 302 70
Although the benign counterpart of medullary carcinoma of the thyroid has never been indicated in textbooks, we propose that C cell adenoma is a rare but distinct clinical entity. Two patients, a 43-year-old man and a 53-year-old woman, had similar thyroid tumors, both about 4 cm in diameter. The cut surfaces of the resected tumors were indistinguishable from a common microfollicular adenoma of the thyroid. Microscopically, the tumors were uniformly composed of fusiform cells without any follicle formation. Neither amyloid deposition nor calcification was found. Although some kind of C cell tumors were suggested, the exact nature was debatable. However, extremely high levels of calcitonin (1330 and 2065 pg/ml, respectively; normal level, less than 170 pg/ml) were found in the stored sera taken preoperatively. Serum levels of
carcinoembryonic antigen
(
CEA
) were normal in both patients. Immunohistochemically, the tumor tissues were positive for calcitonin and neuron-specific enolase but negative for
CEA
with a monoclonal anti-
CEA
antibody. No
somatostatin
, glucagon, or adrenocorticotropic hormone activity was found. It is highly probable that such tumors have not been closely studied and have been regarded as eccentric adenomas of the thyroid or simply as the so-called medullary carcinomas of the thyroid.
...
PMID:C cell adenoma of the thyroid: a rare but distinct clinical entity. 319 51
Microcystic adenoma (serous cystadenoma) of the pancreas (MA) is an unusual benign tumor of uncertain histogenesis. We have studied 14 cases of MA from 11 women and three men. The average age at diagnosis was 64 years. Six tumors were discovered incidentally. Tumors varied from 2.5 to 12 cm in greatest dimension and all were multicystic; eight tumors were located in the pancreatic head, two in the body, and three in the tail. Each tumor was composed of variably sized cysts lined by simple cuboidal or flattened, focally glycogen-rich epithelium. The stroma was variably collagenized and showed highly vascularized, delicate to broad fibrous septae, which focally contained dystrophic calcification, cholesterol clefts, and hemosiderin. Immunohistochemical studies were performed on eight cases to determine the cell of origin. Epithelial membrane antigen and a low-molecular-weight keratin, detected by monoclonal antibodies PKK1 or AE1/AE3, were diffusely seen in tumor cells of all cases. Tumor cells were uniformly negative for
carcinoembryonic antigen
, chromogranin, insulin, glucagon,
somatostatin
, vasoactive intestinal peptide, pancreatic polypeptide, and a low-molecular-weight keratin detected by monoclonal antibody PKK2. Tumor cell antigen reactivity most resembled that seen in normal centroacinar and ductal cells. Electron microscopy of seven cases showed primitive tumor cells with irregularly spaced, short, blunt microvilli, luminal occluding junctions and belt desmosomes, bundles of filaments including dense bodies in both apical and basal cell cytoplasm, sparse organelles, and variable but often pronounced amounts of glycogen. These ultrastructural features most closely resembled the normal pancreatic centroacinar cell. Based on both immunohistochemical and ultrastructural features described above, we conclude that the centroacinar cell is the cell of origin of MA.
...
PMID:Microcystic adenoma (serous cystadenoma) of the pancreas. A study of 14 cases with immunohistochemical and electron-microscopic correlation. 335 51
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