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)

We report on a patient with a carcinoid tumour of the ampulla of Vater and review the 33 known cases of the literature with regard to clinical presentation, morphology and therapy. As it is apparent from the location of the tumour, obstructive jaundice, pancreatitis and nonspecific upper abdominal complaints are the most frequent symptoms. The ampullary carcinoid belongs histogenetically to the APUD cell system with the ability of multiple endocrine activity. The expression of somatostatin peptide and neuron-specific enolase are the most common histopathological findings. A systemic function of these hormones, however, has not yet been shown. For diagnostic purposes in surgical pathology we found synaptophysin and chromogranin A to be important markers. For surgical treatment, partial duodenopancreatectomy remains the current therapy of choise, if the tumour exceeds two centimeters in diameter.
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PMID:[Carcinoid tumor of the ampulla of Vater. Morphology, diagnosis and therapy of a rare papilla tumor]. 305 8

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.
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PMID:C cell adenoma of the thyroid: a rare but distinct clinical entity. 319 51

Evident progress has been made in the treatment of pheochromocytoma. The results of hormone analysis became very accurate, the method for tumor localisation are non invasive and safe: with 131-I-MIBG, ultrasonography and CT-scan an exact preoperative localisation is possible without serious risks. Patients are prepared for the operation with alpha- and beta-blocking agents. Modern methods of anaesthesia with continuous monitoring of blood pressure, pulmonary pressure and cardiac output and a standardized operative procedure are essential. From 1965 to 1987 71 patients with a total of 87 catecholamine producing tumors have been operated. In all cases a transabdominal access was chosen. Biadrenal tumors were removed in 8 patients, multiple (7) tumors in 2 patients. The comparison of the 2 time intervals 1965 to 1976 and 1977 to 1987 showed a significant decrease of serious intra- and postoperative complications. Surgical specimens of 36 patients with pheochromocytoma were used for immunohistologic evaluation. Marked positivity was found in 44% of cases for calcitonin. The reaction for vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP) was positive in 28% of cases. Somatostatin was not detected in any case, neuron-specific enolase (NSE) in all cases. 6 patients with malignant pheochromocytoma were treated with high doses of 131-I-MIBG, 4 other patients received a combined chemotherapy.
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PMID:[Treatment of pheochromocytoma: changes in diagnosis and therapy]. 321 83

Using specific antisera, calcitonin, calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP), somatostatin as well as neuron-specific enolase, chromogranin, secretory peptide I and calbindin (vitamin D-dependent calcium-binding protein) were looked for in parafollicular cells of rats, Syrian hamsters, Mongolian gerbils, mice, guinea pigs, rabbits and pigs. Calcitonin and CGRP were most invariably present in various species. Somatostatin was absent in mice and Mongolian gerbils and present in variable amounts in the remaining species. Neuron-specific enolase could not be detected in rabbits, while in the pigs and the Mongolian gerbils it could be demonstrated only in some parafollicular cells. Calbindin was present exclusively in parafollicular cells of guinea pigs. Chromogranin and secretory protein-I were present only in some animal species.
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PMID:Immunocytochemical studies on parafollicular cells of various mammals. 325 83

Neoplastic proliferations of neuroendocrine cells (NE) may occur throughout the entire GI tract but affect particularly appendix and ileum ("midgut carcinoids"), rectum ("hindgut carcinoids"), as well as stomach and the duodenum ("foregut carcinoids"). Only more exceptionally, they arise in the esophagus, jejunum and colon. The NE tumors encompass a heterogeneous gross and microscopic structural spectrum, ranging from inconspicuous microproliferations ("mucous membrane nevi") to bulky tumor masses. Their growth patterns are usually characteristic and easily recognized. In doubtful cases their NE differentiation becomes established by a characteristic silver affinity, by the ultrastructurally observed presence of characteristic "endocrine" secretion granules, and by immunohistochemically detectable occurrence of "pan-NE markers" (neuron-specific enolase, chromogranins, and synaptophysin), biogenic amines (mainly serotonin), and neurohormonal peptides. Foregut carcinoids usually contain serotonin, gastrin, and somatostatin, midgut carcinoids often only serotonin and tachykinins, whereas the hindgut carcinoids as a rule are multihormonal with a wide spectrum of hormonal peptides, including even insulin. Most GI NE tumors are found in the appendix (50%) and the ileum (30%). Practically all (98%) of the appendiceal NE tumors are benign. They have recently been proposed as arising from apparently Schwann-cell-related NE cells in the submucosa, whereas the ileal--and probably also all the other non-appendiceal NE tumors--are derived from the totipotential cells in epithelial crypts of the mucosa. Among the ileal NE neoplasms a large number can metastasize and result in a fatal outcome. The ability to metastasize is related to the size and to the multiplicity of the primary tumors at the time of initial diagnosis and, to some extent, to their histopathologic growth pattern. Now, some relationship between the prognosis and the cytochemically assessed nuclear DNA content of the NE tumor cells has also been established; not less than about 1/4 to 1/3 seem to be aneuploid. Almost 90% of the rectal carcinoids are benign. Exceptionally, a highly malignant NE neoplasms can arise from the colon/rectum--as well as from the esophagus--composed of NE cells of small and intermediate size. The NE tumors of the stomach are often composed of ECL (enterochromaffin-cell-like) cells; such ECL cell carcinoids are related to atrophic gastritis with pernicious anemia; experimentally, they can be induced by hypergastrinemia in rats. Duodenal carcinoids often contain psammoma bodies and can be associated with neurofibromatosis.
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PMID:Neuroendocrine tumors of the gastrointestinal tract. 329 Aug 66

Ten cases of duodenal paraganglioma were studied by conventional histologic and immunocytochemical techniques at both light and electron microscopic levels. Histologically, mixtures of epithelial, ganglion, and spindle cells were seen. In all of the cases immunoreactivity for neuron-specific enolase (NSE) and protein gene product (PGP) 9.5 was seen in each component. Pancreatic polypeptide immunoreactivity was detected in eight cases, mainly in epithelial cells. Somatostatin immunoreactivity was present in epithelial and ganglion cells in nine cases. In seven cases immunoreactivity for neurofilaments, a marker for neurons, was seen in ganglion and spindle cells. However, immunoreactivity for chromogranin, a protein found in endocrine storage granules, was found in only two cases, and the staining was confined to well-granulated epithelial cells. The spindle cells were immunostained only for neuronal markers, NSE and neurofilaments, and the glial marker S-100 protein.
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PMID:Duodenal gangliocytic paragangliomas: a study of 10 cases with immunocytochemical neuroendocrine markers. 353 54

Five carcinoid tumors of the thymus were screened immunohistochemically for the occurrence of neuropeptides (ACTH, calcitonin, calcitonin gene-related peptide, cholecystokinin, gastrin, neurotensin, somatostatin, substance P), as well as of serotonin, chromogranin A, and neuron-specific enolase. Most of the patients exhibited local symptoms evoked by growing tumor masses in the upper mediastinum without any clinical evidence of endocrine activity. Light and electron microscopic examination showed characteristic uniform large epithelial cells in polar or palisade arrangement, containing variable amounts of electron-dense secretory granules. Only a few of the tested neuropeptide antisera reacted with the investigated tumors. Cholecystokinin-immunoreactive cell populations were seen in all tumors. Expression of neurotensin could be observed in three neoplasms, two of which also exhibited ACTH immunoreactivity. Chromogranin A-immunoreactive cells were found in two neoplasms. Neuron-specific enolase showed strong staining in three tumors, one of the tumors also being immunoreactive for calcitonin. The results were confirmed by control reactions. Apart from the demonstration that conventional marker proteins are not reliable in identifying all carcinoid tumors, the present study proves that the visualization of neuropeptide-immunoreactive cells in thymus carcinoids does not necessarily correspond to the manifestation of the clinical symptoms. Furthermore, each of the investigated neoplasms, as also known from other carcinoid tumors, appears to be able to produce more than one hormone.
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PMID:Carcinoid tumors of the thymus. An immunohistochemical study. 366 30

Three cases of clinically benign pancreatic papillary cystic tumors in young female patients were studied by immunohistochemistry and electron microscopy in order to define the cellular nature of this type of neoplasm. Two of the tumors showed focal cytokeratin- and desmoplakin-positivity as evidence of focal epithelial differentiation, while the tumor cells were in all cases positive for vimentin--the intermediate filament protein typical of (but not specific for) mesenchymal cells. Electron microscopy showed some cell-cell junctions, but there was no evidence of acinar or islet cell differentiation. The tumors were at least focally positive for neuron-specific enolase, and small clusters of polypeptide hormone immunoreactive cells were present in all cases (glucagon 3/3, somatostatin 2/3, insulin 2/3). However, the tumors were negative for synaptophysin and neurofilament proteins, unlike most islet cell tumors. Trypsin and chymotrypsin immunoreactivity was found in all tumors, but because many nonpancreatic carcinomas were also positive, we doubt whether these two enzyme proteins can act as specific markers for pancreatic acinar cell differentiation. Two of the tumors that were studied immunohistochemically for the presence of nuclear estrogen receptors, were negative. Therefore no proof of the suggested hormone dependence of this tumor could be obtained. We conclude that papillary cystic tumor is a neoplasm of primitive pancreatic epithelial cells, that may exhibit focal endocrine cell differentiation.
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PMID:Papillary cystic tumor of the pancreas. An analysis of cellular differentiation by electron microscopy and immunohistochemistry. 367 83

We present the first reported case (to our knowledge) of duodenal gangliocytic paraganglioma (GPG) to be associated with an underlying invasive adenocarcinoma. The patient, a 71-year-old man, presented with epigastric tenderness and was found to have metastatic adenocarcinoma in two regional lymph nodes. Immunohistochemical evaluation of the GPG demonstrated positive staining for gastrin, glial-fibrillary acidic protein, glucagon, neuron-specific enolase, pancreatic polypeptide, S100 protein, somatostatin, and substance P. The clinical, pathologic, and immunohistochemical features of GPG are discussed, with a review of the literature.
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PMID:Gangliocytic paraganglioma associated with duodenal adenocarcinoma. Case report with immunohistochemical evaluation. 380 Jun 4

Solid and papillary epithelial neoplasms of the pancreas from six female patients were studied using immunohistochemistry and electron microscopy to define better their histogenesis. The tumors ranged in diameter from 5 to 15 cm (average: 9 cm), and, on cross section, most had areas of hemorrhage and necrosis, sometimes extensive. Microscopically, there was a solid and pseudopapillary pattern, with tumor cells typically having ovoid nuclei with delicate folding and indistinct nucleoli. Of note were the following: a relatively low mitotic rate (range: 0-6/20 hpf), the presence of hyaline globules (four of six cases), and collections of foam cells (three of six cases). Staining for cytoplasmic argyrophil granules was negative in each case. Ultrastructurally, the solid and papillary epithelial neoplasms of the pancreas showed evidence of acinar or ductular differentiation. Two contained zymogen granules, one had intermediate filaments (probably keratin), and three had abundant rough endoplasmic reticulum and mitochondria. Immunostaining was positive for chymotrypsin (six of six cases), trypsin (four of six), and amylase (three of six). None was positive for alpha-1-antitrypsin, neuron-specific enolase, pancreatic polypeptide, gastrin, glucagon, somatostatin, or insulin. The findings support an origin from exocrine pancreas, and follow-up indicates a low rate of malignancy, with local recurrence in two of the six patients.
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PMID:Solid and papillary epithelial neoplasm of the pancreas. An ultrastructural and immunocytochemical study of six cases. 381 76


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