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)

Described is the case of a 73-yr-old woman with metastatic pancreatic islet carcinoma that manifested initially as Zollinger-Ellison syndrome followed by onset of endogenous Cushing's syndrome, who developed Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia while on therapy with a long-acting somatostatin analog. Although P. carinii pneumonia has been observed in patients with Cushing's syndrome associated with other conditions, this is the first reported case in a patient with Zollinger-Ellison syndrome. Heightened awareness of the possibility of opportunistic infections in patients receiving somatostatin therapy for Cushing's syndrome of any cause, particularly Zollinger-Ellison syndrome, may be warranted.
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PMID:Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia complicating somatostatin therapy of Cushing's syndrome in a patient with metastatic pancreatic islet cell carcinoma and Zollinger-Ellison syndrome. 167 88

Ninety-nine carcinoid tumors of the duodenum were studied. Seventy-seven patients were followed up for a mean period of 65 months, 20 tumors were autopsy findings, and two patients were unavailable for follow-up. Sixteen tumors (21%) produced metastases, all discovered initially; 3 patients (4%) died from metastatic disease (mean survival, 37 months postoperatively). Features associated with metastatic risk were involvement of muscularis propria, size greater than 2 cm, and the presence of mitotic figures. For 51 tumors, there was no correlation between immunohistochemical somatostatin and history of diarrhea, cholelithiasis, or diabetes mellitus (somatostatin syndrome). Five tumors were associated with Zollinger-Ellison syndrome and had immunohistochemical gastrin, but in the others there was no correlation between ulcer disease and gastrin positivity. Duodenal carcinoids are indolent, especially when small and localized to the submucosa. Immunohistochemical identification of somatostatin and gastrin has little clinical relevance.
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PMID:Carcinoid tumors of the duodenum. A clinicopathologic study of 99 cases. 169 55

This review considers the pathologic features of epithelial tumors and tumor-like lesions of the duodenum and highlights potential pitfalls in their histological diagnosis. The tumor-like lesions include Brunner's gland hamartoma, myoepithelial hamartoma, and the mucosal polyps of the Peutz-Jeghers and juvenile polyposis syndromes. The true neoplasms are of two broad groups. The first includes duodenal adenomas and carcinomas, whose microscopic features, histogenetic relationships, and clinical significance closely mimic their commoner counterparts in the large intestine and which, when multiple, are closely associated with familial adenomatous polyposis coli. The second includes a number of uncommon endocrine cell tumors showing a great diversity of histological pattern, and which may be single or multiple. Among these are typical argyrophil carcinoids, which may secrete gastrin to give rise to the Zollinger-Ellison syndrome, and which may occur as part of the inherited multiple endocrine neoplasia syndrome type 1 (MEN-1); glandular somatostatin-rich, apparently nonargyrophil, carcinoids containing psammoma bodies that can be easily confused histologically with adenocarcinomas, and which are linked to type 1 neurofibromatosis (von Recklinghausen's disease) and phaeochromocytoma; and the gangliocytic paraganglioma, a rare tumor composed of neural elements, ganglion cells, and endocrine cells. Accurate histologic diagnosis of mucosal tumors and tumor-like lesions of the duodenum is important not only for immediate patient management, but also because it may provide the first clue to the existence of an inherited tumor syndrome, with its broader implications for the patient's family and potentially important consequences for genetic counseling.
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PMID:Epithelial and neuroendocrine tumors of the duodenum. 192 22

Thirty duodenal and three upper-jejunal endocrine tumors are reported. Clinical manifestations included: a) the Zollinger-Ellison syndrome (10 cases); b) peptic ulcer disease in which hypergastrinemia was not documented (3 cases); c) cholestasis or cholelithiasis (4 cases); d) abdominal pain (4 cases); e) gastro-intestinal bleeding (1 case); f) celiac sprue (1 case). Ten further tumors were discovered incidentally, at autopsy or in pathological specimens after gastrectomy or duodenopan-createctomy. Histological pattern was trabecular in 19 cases, insular in 2 and mixed in ten cases. Two cases were typical ganglioneuromatous paragangliomas. All tumors were examined immunohistochemically. Twelve tumors contained gastrin, four somatostatin, six both of these peptides, one serotonin, two both gastrin and serotonin, and two tumors contained gastrin, serotonin and somatostatin. Ganglioneuromatous paragangliomas combined somatostatin and/or pancreatic polypeptide containing endocrine cells with protein-S100-positive Schwann cells. In four tumors no peptide or amine was demonstrated. Gastrin cell tumors (63.6% of our cases), both functionally active (gastrinomas) and clinically silent, predominated in the proximal duodenum, while somatostatin cell tumors (15.1%) and paragangliomas were mostly found in the periampullary region. Two tumors were classified as malignant on the basis of lymph node metastases, and both were jejunal gastrinomas associated with Zollinger-Ellison syndrome. Two somatostatin cell tumors had manifestations of von Recklinghausen's disease.
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PMID:Endocrine tumors of the duodenum and upper jejunum. A study of 33 cases with clinico-pathological characteristics and hormone content. 216 Apr 22

In the present study of 45 patients with Zollinger-Ellison syndrome, the frequency and clinical importance of the release of multiple gastrointestinal peptides were assessed prospectively. During an initial evaluation, extent of gastrinoma, clinical symptoms, disease duration, and presence or absence of multiple endocrine neoplasia, type I (MEN-I) were assessed. All patients had determinations of fasting plasma gastrin, human pancreatic polypeptide, motilin, neurotensin, and somatostatin; 35 had determinations of insulin and gastrin-releasing peptide and 21 had determinations of glucagon. A plasma elevation of additional peptides besides gastrin was detected in 62%, with 44% having one, 18% having two, and 0% having three additional peptides elevated. Motilin was elevated in 29%, human pancreatic polypeptide in 27%, neurotensin in 20%, and gastrin-releasing peptide in 10%, whereas insulin, glucagon, and somatostatin were not elevated in any patient. The presence or absence of elevation of any peptide did not differ in patients with or without MEN-I, with gastrinoma size, with the presence or absence of metastatic disease, or with various clinical symptoms. Patients were assessed yearly for clinical evidence of a secondary symptomatic pancreatic endocrine tumor syndrome with a median follow-up of 146 and 84 months from onset or diagnosis, respectively. Only one patient (2% of patients) developed a second syndrome (rate, 2 patients per 100 patients observed for 10 years). These results demonstrate that the plasma elevation of multiple gastrointestinal peptides is common in patients with Zollinger-Ellison syndrome; however, the rate of developing a second symptomatic pancreatic endocrine tumor syndrome is much lower than generally believed. Furthermore, no evidence is found to support the conclusions that the detection of the plasma elevation of these peptides is clinically important in assessing MEN-I status, disease extent, or presence of metastatic disease or that elevated levels of motilin, neurotensin, gastrin-releasing peptide, or human pancreatic peptide are associated with any distinct clinical symptoms. Therefore, we recommend that plasma concentrations of these additional gastrointestinal peptides should not be assessed routinely but rather only if new symptoms develop.
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PMID:Multiple hormone elevations in Zollinger-Ellison syndrome. Prospective study of clinical significance and of the development of a second symptomatic pancreatic endocrine tumor syndrome. 222 72

We report a case of multiple duodenal ulcers with gastric hypersecretion due to a nongastrin secretagogue produced by a malignant tumor of the pancreas in a 78-year-old man. The case resembled a Zollinger-Ellison syndrome (ZES) with high acid output (basal acid output 27, sham meal-stimulated 37, maximum acid output 47 mEq/h), but with fasting gastrin 43 pg/ml, nonresponsive to secretin. As in ZES, pepsin output was comparatively low, and secretion was inhibitable by atropine (50% inhibited by 1 microM). The tumor removed at surgery contained less than 1 ng gastrin per gram, but was many times more potent than pentagastrin in stimulating acid from a lumen-perfused rat stomach. The tumor also contained cholecystokinin (CCK-8 and CCK-33), motilin, insulin, and somatostatin, which were also present in adjacent normal pancreas; in addition, the tumor contained pancreatic polypeptide and pancreatic cancer-associated antigen. This case represents a rare syndrome due to an as yet undefined peptide secreted by a (frequently malignant) pancreatic endocrine tumor and masquerading as ZES. This is the first report of studies of pepsin secretion and of the effect of atropine, suggesting that the physiologic effects of the secretagogue resemble that of gastrin.
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PMID:A nongastrin malignant ampullary tumor causing gastric acid and pepsin hypersecretion. A case report. 223 2

7 gastrinomes and 1 gastrin-producer complex carcinoma-carcinoid tumor were examined by light and electron microscopical-method and by immunohistochemical method. In six cases, the tumor was in the pancreas or in the wall of duodenum; in two cases its localisation was of extra-gastroenteropancreatic (liver, lymph node). All patients developed Zollinger-Ellison syndrome, three patients bled and one had diarrhea. One patient had other tumors, besides gastrinome, which were characteristic of MEN-I syndrome. By immunohistochemical methods all tumors proved to be gastrin and neuron-specific-enolase positive. In four cases somatostatin positivity, in some cases glucagon, pancreatic polypeptide, S-100 protein, keratin and carcinoembryonal antigen positivity were detected. Relation could not be detected between other polypeptide hormones, produced besides gastrin, and biological behaviour of tumor and clinical symptoms.
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PMID:[Gastrinoma and carcinoma-carcinoid tumor causing Zollinger-Ellison syndrome]. 238 29

Somatostatin is known to inhibit hormone release and gastrointestinal secretion and hence may be useful in the treatment of amine precursor uptake, decarboxylase tumors. Clinical application has been limited by the short half-life, potency, and specificity of the natural hormone. Our study evaluated the effect of a synthetic analog of somatostatin, SMS 201-995 (Sandoz, Inc., E. Hanover, N.J.) on basal and stimulated gastrin release and gastric acid secretion in 10 patients with the Zollinger-Ellison syndrome. In experiment 1, H2-receptor antagonists were discontinued for 48 hours; SMS 201-995, 1 microgram/kg, was given subcutaneously; gastrin and SMS levels in plasma were determined by radioimmunoassay; and gastric secretion was measured and titrated at 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 8, 10, 12, 14, 16, and 18 hours. The mean +/- SEM baseline gastrin level (1526 +/- 733 pg/ml) was significantly inhibited for 16 hours (p less than 0.05, paired t test). Gastric secretion was neutralized for as long as 18 hours (p 0.05). In experiment 2, three patients received either a secretin (2 U/kg) or a calcium stimulation test (2 mg/kg) with or without pretreatment with SMS 201-995, 1 microgram/kg, subcutaneously. The mean +/- SEM interpreted change in gastrin (ng X 60 min/ml) without SMS 201-995, 36.8 +/- 11 (secretin), and 129 +/- 30 (calcium) were reduced with SMS 201-995 to -1.1 +/- 0.76 (secretin) and -29 +/- 28 (calcium) (p less than 0.05). In the Zollinger-Ellison syndrome, SMS 201-995 caused significant and long-lasting inhibition of both tumor gastrin release and gastric acid secretion, probably by direct action on both the gastrinoma and the stomach. SMS 201-995 blocks acid secretion and secretin- and calcium-stimulated gastrin release, indicating that SMS 201-995 inhibits peptide secretion by postreceptor mechanisms. SMS 201-995 will be useful in the palliative treatment of apudomas.
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PMID:Observations on the effect of a somatostatin analog in the Zollinger-Ellison syndrome: implications for the treatment of apudomas. 242 19

The clinical, microscopic, immunohistochemical and ultrastructural features of 7 gastrinomas and 1 combined carcinoma-carcinoid tumor were evaluated. The tumors were located in the pancreas or duodenal wall in 6 cases, and on extragastro-enteropancreatic sites in 2 (liver or peripancreatic lymph node). All patients had the Zollinger-Ellison syndrome, 3 of them with additional bleeding and 1 with diarrhea. One patient with gastrinoma had additional tumors characteristic of the MEN-I syndrome. Immunohistochemistry showed gastrin and neuron-specific enolase-positivity in all of the tumors. Somatostatin was found in 4 cases, and single cell glucagon, pancreatic polypeptide. S-100 protein, keratin as well as carcino-embryonic antigen positivity in another few. Additional hormone production did not appear to be connected with biological behaviour of the tumors or with the clinical symptoms.
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PMID:Studies into gastrinomas and combined carcinomatous carcinoid tumors. Optical light- and electron microscopy and immunohistochemistry. 248 34

In patients with Zollinger-Ellison syndrome, serum gastrin level is increased by secretin and is decreased by somatostatin. To elucidate the cellular mechanism for these actions, we investigated the direct effects of secretin and somatostatin on dispersed gastrinoma cells from a patient with Zollinger-Ellison syndrome. In the presence of 3-isobutyl-1-methylxanthine, secretin significantly stimulated gastrin release from dispersed gastrinoma cells, which was inhibited by somatostatin. In the presence of guanosine 5'-triphosphate, furthermore, secretin enhanced adenylate cyclase activation in the membranes from these cells, and this activation was reduced by somatostatin, whereas neither secretin nor somatostatin affected inositol phospholipid turnover. On the other hand, removal of guanosine 5'-triphosphate from incubation medium abolished both the stimulatory effect of secretin and the inhibitory effect of somatostatin on adenylate cyclase activation. Furthermore, pertussis toxin pretreatment reversed the ability of somatostatin to inhibit secretin-induced increase in gastrin release and activation of adenylate cyclase. Thus, in this gastrinoma patient, secretin and somatostatin appeared to act directly on gastrinoma cells to stimulate and inhibit gastrin secretion, respectively, by modulating adenylate cyclase activation, probably via guanine nucleotide-binding proteins.
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PMID:Mechanism for increase of gastrin release by secretin in Zollinger-Ellison syndrome. 261 6


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