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)

A number of human diseases with intestinal adaptation have been investigated, including acute infective diarrhoea, intestinal resection, jejuno-ileal bypass, coeliac disease, tropical sprue, chronic pancreatitis and cystic fibrosis. In all, the newly isolated hormone enteroglucagon appeared to be elevated in proportion to the degree of adaptation. In rats after gut resection and cold adaptation, enteroglucagon was also elevated and the degree of elevation correlated closely with the crypt cell production rate (CCPR). Chronic administration of somatostatin suppressed both enteroglucagon and CCPR, while bombesin stimulated both. A crude preparation of enteroglucagon was found to directly stimulate DNA synthesis in enterocyte cultures. It is thus concluded that, at present, the most likely candidate for the humoral component of intestinal adaptation is the hormonal peptide enteroglucagon.
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PMID:The hormonal pattern of intestinal adaptation. A major role for enteroglucagon. 695 45

The prophylactic effect of perioperative use of somatostatin on postoperative increase of pancreatic enzymes was investigated in this double blind, randomized study. Thirty tree patients undergoing pancreatic surgery because of chronic pancreatitis or its complications were divided randomly into two groups. Fifteen patients received somatostatin (dose 125 micrograms/hour), 18 placebo-infusion pre-, and postoperatively for a total time of 48 hours. The level of serum amylase, lipase, gammaGT, calcium, creatinine and blood glucose was determined every 12 hours. In the placebo treated group the serum lipase and amylase increased significantly (p < 0.001), while the calcium decreased. In the somatostatin treated patients only the lipase level increased significantly (p < 0.01), while the amylase and calcium showed no significant changes compared to their initial values. The postoperative increase in serum enzyme levels is interpreted as being an indicator of pancreatic injury. These results suggest that the perioperative use of somatostatin has beneficial effect for the prevention of pancreatic enzymes increases and of pancreatic injuries, associated with pancreatic surgery in patients with chronic pancreatitis. The clinical experiences suggest that the asymptomatic increase in pancreatic amylase following abdominal surgery is the result of various types of injuries of the pancreas (1-3). Included in these injuries is the direct mechanical damage of the parenchyma and ducts but it can develop secondary, as a result of vascular lesion, ischaemia, oedema as well as mechanical injury to the Oddi sphincter of the sphincter's drug induced spasm (1, 2). The asymptomatic increase in serum amylase and lipase can thus be interpreted as being an indicator of surgical pancreatic injury (3).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Perioperative use of somatostatin in pancreatic surgery. 752 8

During the last 15 years, a total of 26 patients were treated for pancreatic pseudocysts, at the 2nd Department of Propaedeutic Surgery, University of Athens. There were 16 (61.5%) men and 10 (38.5%) women aged between 19 and 82 years old (mean age 61 years). Dominating symptoms in most patients were epigastric mass and pain, nausea, vomiting, mild fever and leucocytosis, and persistent elevation of serum amylase. Imaging studies, such as ultrasound, CT scan, and ERCP, were mostly helpful in establishing diagnosis. In most cases, attack of acute pancreatitis preceded with the exception of two cases where there was chronic pancreatitis and another which was post-traumatic. Rapid progression of underlying pancreatitis led to urgent laparotomy in two patients (7.7%). Elective surgery was performed in 22 patients (84.6%), 1-7 months after onset of pancreatitis (median 2 months). Selection of operative procedure depended on the patient and cyst condition. Cystogastrostomy was performed in 18 patients (69.2%), cystojejunostomy in three patients (11.5%), and external drainage in three patients (11.5%). There were three postoperative deaths (11.5%). Haemorrhage and infection were the main complications. Percutaneous drainage was performed in two cases (7.7%) (one for a cyst remnant after an operative procedure), and medical treatment with somatostatin in another case (3.8%) with excellent clinical results. In conclusion, conservative treatment of pancreatic pseudocysts has good clinical results, but it is not always indicated. Surgical drainage remains the preferred method of treatment.
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PMID:Therapeutic strategies for pancreatic pseudocysts. 761 75

Pancreatic ascites is a rare complication of chronic pancreatitis, whose treatment continues to represent a difficult clinical problem. In this report we describe a case of a patient with chronic pancreatitis and pancreatic ascites who was successfully treated with somatostatin given by continuous intravenous infusion of 1.5 micrograms/kg/h for 2 weeks.
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PMID:Treatment of pancreatic ascites with somatostatin. 767 23

Chronic pancreatitis should be considered in all patients with unexplained abdominal pain. The importance of small duct disease without obvious radiographic abnormalities is an important new concept. Diagnostic evaluation should begin with simple, non-invasive, inexpensive tests (serum trypsinogen) to be followed by more complicated testing (hormone stimulation test) if needed. Enteric-coated pancreatic enzymes are the drugs of choice for treating steatorrhea, while conventional non-enteric coated enzymes are preferred for managing pain. The somatostatin analogue octreotide may become an important therapy for treating abdominal pain unresponsive to pancreatic enzyme therapy. Endoscopic approaches to the treatment of chronic pancreatitis are experimental and may cause damage to the pancreas. Surgical ductal decompression is appropriate in selected patients.
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PMID:Medical management of chronic pancreatitis. 777 9

We present the case of a patient with alcoholic chronic pancreatitis who developed pancreatic ascites. The analysis of ascitic fluid was diagnostic; and ERCP showed one fistula in the pancreatic head to the peritoneal cavity. The patient was treated by continuous somatostatin infusion (250 micrograms/h) for 15 days resulting in the disappearance of the ascites and avoiding the risky surgical therapy.
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PMID:[Somatostatin in the treatment of pancreatic ascites]. 790 25

Acute pancreatitis is caused by the activation of digestive enzymes in the pancreas and a possible treatment, therefore, is the inhibition of enzyme secretion. This approach is somewhat controversial, however, as it is not clear whether pancreatic secretion continues to occur during the course of acute pancreatitis. Animal studies show an appreciable reduction of secretion in the inflamed pancreas, but studies in humans are not conclusive. The use of somatostatin or its analogue, octreotide, has been investigated in several clinical studies. A meta analysis of six individual studies in which somatostatin was given for acute pancreatitis showed that somatostatin significantly reduces mortality. A trial in patients with moderate to severe acute pancreatitis showed a lower rate (although not statistically significant) of complications in patients treated with 3 x 200 and 3 x 500 micrograms/day octreotide, compared with controls and patients receiving a lower dose of octreotide. A further study showed a significant reduction in patient controlled analgesics in patients treated with octreotide compared with controls. Pain is the important clinical symptom of chronic pancreatitis, possibly resulting from an increased intraductal pressure during secretion. The effect on pain of the inhibition of pancreatic secretion by octreotide has been investigated in two studies. One showed no significant reduction in pain after treatment with octreotide for three days. In the other, in which octreotide was used for three weeks, significantly less pain and analgesic use was recorded during octreotide treatment than during placebo. The most common complication of chronic pancreatitis is the formation of pseudocysts. There is some evidence that octreotide may be useful in their treatment.
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PMID:Role of somatostatin and its analogues in the treatment of acute and chronic pancreatitis. 791 42

In 30 patients a reconstructive technique was used after pylorus-preserving pancreaticoduodenectomy in which the anastomoses were constructed in the sequence: duodenojejunal, hepaticojejunal (8-10 cm distal) and finally duct-to-mucosa pancreaticojejunal to a separate Roux loop. Indications for surgery included periampullary tumours, (n = 13), carcinoma of the head of the pancreas (n = 10) and chronic pancreatitis (n = 4). No patient required prolonged (> 7 days) nasogastric intubation for primary gastroparesis in the early postoperative period. Postoperative morbidity (17% overall) delayed recovery and return of gastrointestinal function in one patient with a minor biliary leak (closed with 5 days' somatostatin treatment). Other morbidity included gastrointestinal haemorrhage (n = 1), wound infection (n = 2) and respiratory infection (n = 2). There were no pancreatic leaks. One patient died from a subhepatic abscess (mortality 3%). Retrospective investigations, at 3-18 months postoperatively, included endoscopy (normal in 20 patients, none taking anti-ulcer therapy), gastric emptying studies in the first 10 patients (no delay) and bentiromide test in 12 patients considered to have normal pancreatic remnants (all patients > 24% PABA excretion index). All patients who underwent resection for tumour returned to their preoperative weight.
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PMID:A novel reconstructive technique for pylorus-preserving pancreaticoduodenectomy: avoidance of early postoperative gastric stasis. 809 56

An Italian prospective multicentre study evaluated the efficacy of octreotide, a synthetic somatostatin analogue, in preventing the complications of elective pancreatic surgery. 303 patients with tumours of the pancreas or the ampullary region, in whom ultrasonography and computed tomography scan had shown a resectable lesion, or with chronic pancreatitis, were randomized in a double-blind fashion to treatment with octreotide 100 micrograms t.i.d. s.c. starting at least 1 h before surgery and continued till the 7th postsurgical day, or with matching placebo. Unresectable lesions were found at laparatomy in 31 patients (15% of those with tumours). In 14 others, procedures not anticipated in the study protocol had to be performed, and in 6 additional cases there were other protocol violations so that these 20 patients were excluded from the study analysis. Considering the 252 evaluable patients, the complication rate was significantly higher in the 130 placebo-treated patients than in the 122 who received octreotide (29.2 vs. 15.6%; p = 0.01). We therefore suggest that octreotide may substantially reduce the risk of complications after elective pancreatic surgery.
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PMID:Prophylaxis of complications after pancreatic surgery: results of a multicenter trial in Italy. Italian Study Group. 813 36

The clinical investigations carried out in a 58 years woman complaining of malaise led to the discovery of an hypoglycaemia resulting from a secreting pancreatic insulinoma. In addition, a chronic pancreatitis, an endocrine hyperplasia (possible nesidioblastosis) and a villous adenomatosis of the pancreatic duct were diagnosed on two biopsies. The immunohistological tests performed on the insulinoma showed insulin, calcitonin and gastrin labelled cells. Electron microscopy displayed numerous neurosecretory granules. The peritumoral endocrine hyperplasia contained intermingled B, A and D cells respectively labelled by insulin, glucagon and somatostatin. Following the operation, the patient recovered without recurrence of the hypoglycaemia (three year follow-up). Factors which may explain such a rare pathological association are discussed.
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PMID:[Pancreatic insulinoma, adenomatosis of the Wirsung's duct and chronic pancreatitis. Apropos of a case]. 813 87


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