Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UNIPROT:P61278 (somatostatin)
22,083 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The neural and hormonal peptide content of rectal biopsy specimens from 10 patients with chronic autonomic failure, 10 patients with chronic gastrointestinal Chagas' disease, and 13 controls was studied with radioimmunoassay and immunocytochemistry. In the patients with Chagas' disease the mean concentrations of rectal vasoactive intestinal polypeptide, enteroglucagon, substance P, and somatostatin were all less than half of those in controls and in patients with chronic autonomic failure. Immunocytochemistry revealed a considerable reduction in the number and immunostaining of the peptide-containing cells and nerves. Concentrations of regulatory peptides in the rectum are thus reduced in association with intrinsic but not extrinsic autonomic neuropathy.
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PMID:Neural and hormonal peptides in rectal biopsy specimens from patients with Chagas' disease and chronic autonomic failure. 615 42

Insulin-induced hypoglycemias are a sign of non-sufficient counterregulation, in which different contra-insulinary hormones participate. The aim of the study was to investigate, whether there exists a difference between IDD and non-diabetics regarding secretion of glucagon, cortisol, and growth hormone during an insulin-induced hypoglycemia and further on pointing out, expecially, the importance of glucagon. Insulin-induced hypoglycemias are counterregulated in non-diabetics, not in IDD. The missing glucagon secretion during insulin-induced hypoglycemia in IDD seems to be independent from an autonomic neuropathy. Only after high doses of exogenous glucagon can one see a counterregulating increase of glucose. The STH secretion is similar in non-diabetics and IDD during an insulin-induced hypoglycemia and has evidently only a secondary effect in hypoglycemic counterregulation. The STH secretion may be the expression of a diencephal-triggered stress situation. The cortisol secretion is the same in both groups. The gluconeogenetic effect of cortisol is not sufficient to accomplish a fast compensation of hypoglycemia. This does not exclude long-term effects. When inhibiting the secretion of insulin and different contra-insulinary hormones with somatostatin, one is able to demonstrate that glucagon alone is a sufficiently counterregulatory hormone in insulin-induced hypoglycemias.
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PMID:[Glucagon, growth hormone, and cortisol response to insulin-induced hypoglycemia in insulin-dependent diabetics (IDD) without autonomic neuropathy (author's transl)]. 700 32

Prolonged and severe diarrhoea after alcohol celiac plexus block is a rare, but life-threatening, complication if not recognized. This type of diarrhoea may be considered an autonomic neuropathy due to sympathetic denervation. A 65-year-old pancreatic cancer patient developed serious diarrhoea after celiac plexus block which was unresponsive to traditional treatment such as loperamide, dyphenoxylate and opioids. Subcutaneous octreotide, 0.1 mg twice a day, achieved a complete resolution of the symptom. This drug was maintained at the same dosage and was well tolerated for 4 months until death. Octreotide, an analogue of somatostatin, reduces diarrhoea by suppression of intestinal motility and secretion and offers a useful option in the treatment of this complication of celiac plexus block.
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PMID:Octreotide in the treatment of diarrhoea induced by coeliac plexus block. 765 45

Basal and postprandial levels of gastrin, somatostatin, vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP) and pancreatic polypeptide (PP) were followed up in 105 patients with non insulin dependent diabetes mellitus (20 with autonomic neuropathy only, 35 with peripheric neuropathy only, 30 with autonomic and peripheric neuropathy simultaneously and 20 without any sign of neuropathy) and in the control group of 40 individuals. Serum levels of gastrin, somatostatin, VIP and PP are determined by a RIA (used kits of Prof. SR Bloom, Hammersmith Hospital, London). The results of investigation showed significantly higher basal and postprandial levels of gastrin and VIP in patients with autonomic neuropathy in comparison with the group without neuropathy and with the control group (p < 0.001). The serum levels of somatostatin did not differ significantly between the groups of diabetics with and without neuropathy. Basal level of PP was significantly lower and postprandial PP levels remained low in patients with autonomic neuropathy in comparison with the group without neuropathy (p < 0.001). We postulate that basal and postprandial gastrin and VIP levels raised secondary to partial vagotomy in diabetics with autonomic neuropathy. Measuring PP serum levels in diabetics after a protein rich meal can be useful to check vagus nerve function in the gastrointestinal tract in order to detect autonomic neuropathy.
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PMID:[Association of autonomic neuropathies and gastrointestinal peptides in non-insulin dependent diabetics]. 773 57

Somatostatin and its long-acting analogue octreotide have been used in various diarrheal disorders, including neoplastic and nonneoplastic diseases of the gastrointestinal tract. In two insulin-dependent diabetic patients with autonomic neuropathy and chronic steatorrheic diarrhea refractory to conventional medications, subcutaneous administration of octreotide markedly improved the volume and frequency of stools in both patients. This change was accompanied by a clear improvement in their rapid gastrointestinal tract transit times. The treatment also greatly improved their orthostatic hypotension. No adverse effects of octreotide were observed after treatment for 7 months in one patient and 2 months in the other.
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PMID:Marked improvement of diabetic diarrhea with the somatostatin analogue octreotide. 805 56

A 26-yr-old woman with type 1 diabetes and severe symptomatic autonomic neuropathy was treated with the long-acting somatostatin analogue Sandostatin LAR for intractable diarrhea. Her diarrhea had previously been successfully managed with three daily injections of octreotide without adverse consequences. She was given a single dose of Sandostatin LAR and within 2 weeks reported the development of increasingly frequent and severe headaches. Three weeks after the injection, she was admitted to hospital with severe hypertension, which eventually resolved with the administration of antihypertensive agents. No other underlying cause of the hypertension was discovered. Rechallenge of the patient with octreotide resulted in a transient hypertensive episode, which lasted 3 h. Severe hypertension, therefore, seems to be a possible adverse effect of treatment of diabetic diarrhea with somatostatin analogues, which should be used with great caution in subjects with severe autonomic dysfunction.
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PMID:Severe hypertension induced by the long-acting somatostatin analogue sandostatin LAR in a patient with diabetic autonomic neuropathy. 1072 19

We reviewed data on gallbladder motility in obesity, diabetes and coeliac disease. In obesity, a condition characterised by increased risk of gallstone(s), decreased gallbladder motility has heterogeneously been reported as a consequence of the different type of meals used to induce gallbladder contraction, characteristics of the population studied, technique used, and proportion of patients with hyperinsulinaemia. Moreover, recent studies have evaluated the effect of dietary restriction on gallbladder motility in obese patients. A two- to three-fold increase in the risk of cholesterol gallstone(s) has been reported in diabetic patients, mainly in relation to obesity and hypertriglyceridaemia. Furthermore, decreased gallbladder motility has been described and attributed to other factors, including underlying autonomic neuropathy, reduced gallbladder sensitivity to cholecystokinin and/or reduced number of cholecystokinin receptors on the gallbladder wall. Impaired gallbladder motility has been reported also in patients with coeliac disease in relation to reduced secretion of enteric hormones and/or decreased gallbladder sensitivity to them. In particular, untreated coeliacs, when compared to controls, showed low postprandial cholecystokinin and increased fasting somatostatin levels. Interestingly, the correlation between fasting somatostatin levels and gallbladder size has clearly been confirmed in patients affected by somatostatinoma or treated with somatostatin or its analogues. Gallbladder motility can be affected by various clinical conditions, such as obesity, diabetes mellitus and coeliac disease.
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PMID:Gallbladder motility in obesity, diabetes mellitus and coeliac disease. 1297 3

Erythromycin (EM) is a common antibiotic known to be a specific agonist of motilin receptors. We have previously reported that administration of EM improves glycemic control in type 2 diabetes patients. In the present study, we tested the effect of EM on growth hormone (GH) secretion in normal and type 2 diabetic subjects. Erythromycin (300 mg) was administered orally in fasted type 2 diabetic (n=12) and normal (n=10) subjects. Blood samples were obtained before and 2 h after the administration. Blood glucose, plasma insulin, somatostatin (SS), and GH levels were determined. The same fasted groups received intravenous erythromycin infusion (10 mg/kg per hour) for 60 min. Blood samples were collected just prior to the infusion and at 15, 30, 45 and 60 min, and plasma GH and somatostatin levels during the infusion were determined. Oral EM administration increased insulin levels and decreased blood glucose levels. GH levels were significantly decreased, while SS levels did not change in normal subjects. In diabetic subjects, there was an increase in insulin levels, but no change in blood glucose, SS, and GH levels. Intravenous EM infusion resulted in a marked decrease in GH levels, while no change in SS levels occurred in normal subjects. There were no changes in SS and GH levels in diabetic subjects during the infusion. When diabetic subjects were divided into two groups with and without autonomic neuropathy, no changes in GH levels were seen in either group. We conclude that EM decreases GH levels in normal subjects while not changing SS levels. This effect was not observed in type 2 diabetic subjects.
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PMID:A motilin agonist, erythromycin, decreases circulating growth hormone levels in normal subjects but not in diabetic subjects. 1707 Apr 43


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