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)

Out of 57 women with previous histories of gestational diabetes (GD), 23 were of normal weight postpartum and willing to participate in three studies characterizing oral glucose tolerance (OGTT), insulin responsiveness to intravenous glucose (glucose infusion test, GIT), and insulin sensitivity (somatostatin, insulin, and glucose infusion test, SIGIT). The experiments were performed 6-36 mo after cessation of breast-feeding. The control group comprised 10 healthy women with normal OGTT matched for age and weight. Among subjects with previous histories of GD, 9 had normal, 8 borderline, and 6 decreased OGTT. As a group, women with previous histories of GD have significantly decreased insulin response and insulin sensitivity. Furthermore, all 14 with borderline and decreased OGTT demonstrated a low early insulin response during GIT (5-min value below the upper border of the lower quartile of normals), whereas insulin sensitivity was normal in 6 and low in 8 (glucose values attained during SIGIT were lower or higher, respectively, than the lower border of the upper quartile of controls). The women with previous histories of GD and normal OGTT exhibited normal (n = 4) and low (n = 5) insulin responses. Three of the former subjects had low and the remaining 6 had normal insulin sensitivity. In conclusion, as many as 60% of normal-weight women with previous histories of GD had borderline or decreased OGTT 6-36 mo postpartum. This derangement could be due to impaired early insulin response, which in some subjects was combined with low insulin sensitivity. Follow-up of women with previous histories of GD might enlighten the pathogenesis of non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus.
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PMID:Glucose tolerance, insulin release, and insulin sensitivity in normal-weight women with previous gestational diabetes mellitus. 354 44

Insulin, proinsulin and C-peptide responses to intravenous glucose (glucose infusion test, GIT) and insulin sensitivity were measured in women who previously and for unexplained reasons gave birth to small-for-gestational-age infants (SGA, n = 10) or appropriate-for-gestational-age infants (AGA, n = 11). Insulin sensitivity was evaluated by two different methods, somatostatin-, insulin- and glucose infusion test (SIGIT) and Bergman's minimal model method applied to the frequently samples intravenous glucose tolerance test. The two groups were comparable with regard to age, parity and body mass index. The SGA group exhibited significantly (p < 0.01) lower early (0-10 min) and late (10-60 min) insulin, C-peptide and proinsulin responses during GIT than were seen in the control AGA group. Insulin sensitivity evaluated by the two techniques was increased in the SGA group, significantly so only with the minimal model method. The insulin sensitivity index (Si) according to Bergman was 10.98 +/- 2.10 in the SGA as compared to 4.36 +/- 1.18 x 10(-4)min-1 x uU-1 in the AGA group (antilogged values +/- 95% confidence intervals). Early insulin response (GIT) and Si values were inversely correlated (r = -0.48, p < 0.05).
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PMID:Decreased beta-cell function in women with previous small for gestational age infants. 809 83

The potential therapeutic applications of somatostatin and octreotide in gastroenterology involve gut neuro-endocrine tumours, bleeding varices, bleeding peptic ulcers, gastro-intestinal fistulae, pancreatic fistulae, dumping syndrome, pancreatic pseudocysts, short bowel syndrome, acute pancreatitis, AIDS-related diarrhoea, intestinal subacute obstruction, idiopathic 'diarrhoea', irritable bowel syndrome and GIT tumours. Octreotide has a longer duration of action than somatostatin and can be administered by subcutaneous injection, thus making it suitable for long-term administration. Many of the potential gastro-intestinal indications require long-term administration and thus octreotide would be the agent of choice.
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PMID:Potential indications for octreotide in gastroenterology: summary of workshop. 835 70

To elucidate the short-term effects of octreotide, a somatostatin analogue, on glucose tolerance in acromegaly, the plasma glucose and insulin responses to a 75-g oral glucose tolerance test (75-g OGTT) were examined in 6 patients. The glucose disposal rate (GDR) was also measured by the hyperinsulinemic euglycemic clamp method before and after the administration of octreotide. Before octreotide therapy, 2 patients had normal responses of plasma glucose and insulin to 75-g OGTT (normal glucose tolerance: NGT) and 4 showed hyperinsulinemia or glucose intolerance (glucose intolerance: GIT). GDR-insulin dose-response curves showed a normal pattern in patients with NGT and pattern of insulin resistance in patients with GIT. After 2-3 weeks of octreotide administration, plasma growth hormone (GH) levels decreased in all of the patients. The plasma glucose response to 75-g OGTT was not changed in any patient. In contrast, the plasma insulin response to 75-g OGTT was enhanced in patients with NGT but lessened in patients with GIT. Patients with NGT showed no significant change in GDR-insulin dose-response curves. Patients with GIT showed improvement in GDR at low levels of plasma insulin, but did not show complete improvement at high levels. These results indicate that octreotide improves insulin resistance at the insulin receptor site by lowering plasma levels of GH and insulin in acromegalic patients with glucose intolerance.
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PMID:Short-term effects of octreotide on glucose tolerance in patients with acromegaly. 882 14