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)

Some pituitary hormones secrete hormones while others do not. Nonsecreting tumors can interfere with normal pituitary hormone secretion and produce tumor symptoms and signs like headaches and visual field defects. The most frequent hormone-secreting tumors are prolactinomas. Growth hormone or ACTH or gonadotropin or gonadotropin-alpha and beta chain-producing tumors are less frequent, TSH producing tumors are extremely rare. The most important elements of the diagnostic work-up are clinical signs and symptoms, assessment of pituitary function (measurement of TSH, free T4, LH, FSH, oestradiol/free testosteron, growth hormone, IGF-1, prolactin, ACTH, Cortisol, serum and urine osmolality), CT and/or MRI and, in patients with large tumors, a visual field exam. The treatment of choice of pituitary tumors is often surgery. Alternative therapies are radiation treatment (in nonoperable patients or when hormone levels are persistently elevated after pituitary surgery) and drug treatment (dopamine agonists in hyperprolactinemia, somatostatin analogues in acromegaly). Pituitary hormone deficiencies are treated depending on the specific deficiency with thyroxine, cortisone, oestrogen/gestagen/testosterone gonadotropines or ADH analogues.
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PMID:[Hypophyseal dysfunction and tumors]. 158 68

A 29-year-old male presented with acromegaly and hyperthyroidism and was found to be hypersecreting both GH and TSH. A somatostatin analogue, SMS 201-995, at doses of 50 and 100 micrograms s.c. 3 times a day produced an acute decrease in serum GH and TSH levels to less than 20% of basal concentrations. An increase in serum SMS 201-995 levels preceded the decline in serum GH and TSH levels. Partial resolution of signs and symptoms related to GH excess occurred and the patient developed normal serum thyroxine levels. These latter effects were maintained during the 3.5 months of SMS 201-995 therapy; however, pituitary adenoma size as judged by MRI was unchanged. Side effects of therapy were minimal and included transient abdominal pain, diarrhea and weight gain. Adenomatous pituitary tissue was surgically removed and placed in monolayer culture. It was observed that SMS 201-995 produced significant inhibition of GH and TSH release. Histology revealed a partly chromophobic, partly acidophilic adenoma containing GH and TSH. Electron microscopy showed a pituitary adenoma which appeared to consist of smaller cells resembling somatotrophs and larger cells exhibiting ultrastructural features of thyrotrophs. Immunoelectron microscopy localized the two biochemically distinct peptides in the same cell type, often in the same secretory granules. No morphologic abnormality, attributable to SMS 201-995 medication, was evident. Thus it can be concluded that pituitary adenomas can simultaneously secrete GH and TSH which produce acromegaly and hyperthyroidism. These bi-hormonal tumors may synthesize GH and TSH in the same cell type.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Response of a GH- and TSH-secreting pituitary adenoma to a somatostatin analogue (SMS 201-995): evidence that GH and TSH coexist in the same cell and secretory granules. 271 53

Ten acromegalic patients were treated with the somatostatin analogue SMS 201-995 (SMS) for 3-38 weeks in various doses and by different administration routines (thrice daily or multiple sc injection). Plasma GH daily profiles, plasma IGF-I, urinary GH, serum TSH, IRI and fasting blood glucose (FBG) concentrations were measured before and during SMS treatment. Plasma GH rapidly decreased within one hour in all patients and was suppressed for at least 4 h after a 50 micrograms sc injection of SMS in 8 patients. Multiple injections of 300-600 micrograms/day SMS (25-50 micrograms X 12) suppressed GH throughout the day. Plasma IGF-I was completely normalized in 4 patients, and, in all but one of the others, decreased markedly. Urinary GH decreased within the first week of treatment in all patients and normalization was obtained in 3 patients. Shrinkage of the pituitary tumor, as determined by CT or MRI, was observed in 7 of 9 patients. Other clinical improvements, such as diminution or complete disappearance of swelling of soft tissues, excessive perspiration, and headache, were observed in 7 of 8 patients. Changes in serum TSH, IRI and FBG were seen in 3-4 patients, but without any apparent clinical problems. In conclusion, SMS is a useful clinical tool for treatment of acromegaly, and a multiple sc injection method seems to be preferable.
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PMID:Treatment of acromegaly with long acting somatostatin analogue SMS 201-995. 322 51

Apart from the very frequent HIV encephalitis, which lays the foundation for opportunistic infections, the most common diseases encountered in HIV-infected patients are toxoplasmosis and lymphoma; the percentage of cases of other diseases is very small. It is capital to diagnose cerebral lymphoma at an early stage in these patients who already are in a precarious general and neurological state since this type of lesion usually occurs late in the natural course of AIDS. In the differential diagnosis between toxoplasmosis and lymphoma only stereotaxic biopsy enables a positive diagnosis to be made, but imaging methods, such as CT and MRI, provide data that help guide to a diagnosis which sometimes may be definitive. Suggestive of lymphoma is a single infiltrating lesion wider than 4 cm, which is paraventricular or located in the posterior fossa, has little perilesional alteration and a short tumoral doubling time during the imaging follow-up. Suggestive of toxoplasmosis are multiple, small, annular or nodular lesions with an important perilesional inflammation and usually located in basal ganglia. In addition, in MRI the kinetics of enhancement after contrast injection is intense and occurs early in lymphoma, in contrast with the toxoplasmic abscesses, and this should provide a more specific differential diagnosis. Scintigraphic studies with somatostatin or positron emission tomography, using fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG-PET scintigraphy), also seem to be an interesting mean of making a specific diagnosis of cerebral lesion, according to a principle that is close to dynamic MRI. In lymphoma, capturing of the tracer is about 3 times greater than in infective lesions, notably the toxoplasmic ones. Imaging, therefore, is provided with tools which permit an increasingly specific approach to the primary cerebral lymphoma of AIDS, the definitive diagnosis of which rests on stereotaxic biopsy. This high specificity facilitates a better selection of patients requiring this procedure and shortens the delay in its execution.
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PMID:[The diagnosis of primary cerebral lymphoma in AIDS. The contribution of imaging]. 747 39

Gastrointestinal neuroendocrine tumors are rare neoplasms that cause classic clinical syndromes because of the excess secretion of specific gastrointestinal hormones. The two most important tumors clinically are insulinomas and gastrinomas. The clinical management of patients with these disorders usually involves the localization and surgical removal of the responsible tumor. Many radiological techniques can be used for tumor localization, including preoperative and intraoperative ultrasound, endoscopic ultrasound, CT, MRI, radionuclide scanning, angiography, and venous sampling. However, there are conflicting claims as to the relative accuracy of these procedures, and many of these investigations are difficult to justify because of their high cost, degree of invasiveness, or lack of precise anatomic information that is obtained. If surgical resection of a neuroendocrine tumor is planned, intraoperative sonography should always be used to detect occult nonpalpable tumors and to discern the relationship of the tumor to vital adjacent pancreatic ductal anatomy. The choice of preoperative imaging is more controversial, and depends on the clinical problem, local expertise, and availability of imaging techniques. Sonography and contrast-enhanced helical CT are the most commonly used preoperative imaging methods, because of their relatively low cost and widespread availability. Radionuclide scanning with a somatostatin analogue, which is a relatively new procedure, may be valuable in patients with symptoms of tumor recurrence.
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PMID:Imaging of gastrointestinal neuroendocrine tumors. 757 79

Neuroendocrine tumors of the gastroenteropancreatic system represent a group of tumors with various diagnostic problems. Especially detection of primary tumor lesions is often difficult. Endoscopic ultrasonography is a relatively new imaging procedure localizing insulinomas preoperatively in about 90% of cases. Thus, previously used invasive preoperative imaging methods are usually unnecessary. The combination of endoscopic ultrasonography and somatostatin receptor scintigraphy allows visualization of gastrinomas in 90% of cases. Somatostatin receptor scintigraphy can also visualize metastatic lesions of gastrinomas and carcinoids in the whole body with high accuracy. In surgical management of a gastrinoma, duodenal transillumination and intraoperative ultrasound should be performed in all cases to exclude small duodenal or periduodenal, extrapancreatic tumors. US, CT, and MRI should be mainly used to exclude local and distant metastases. Angiography is helpful in detecting anatomical variations of abdominal vessels preoperatively. Due to the excellent results of endoscopic ultrasonography and somatostatin receptor scintigraphy in localizing insulinomas and gastrinomas, transhepatic portal venous sampling appears to be obsolete.
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PMID:[Imaging methods in diagnosis of neuroendocrine tumors of the gastrointestinal tract]. 775 24

Spontaneous splenic rupture as a complication of infectious mononucleosis was diagnosed in a 19-year-old woman. Sonographic and MRI investigations revealed subcapsular hematoma of the spleen without overt rupture. The patient was managed conservatively. Somatostatin treatment was initiated in order to reduce splanchnic blood flow. Further clinical course of the patient was favourable. Seven days after the diagnosis of splenic rupture the patient was discharged from hospital. Non-operative management should be considered in patients with subcapsular splenic rupture to avoid complications of splenectomy (e.g. post-splenectomy sepsis).
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PMID:Non-operative management in a case of spontaneous splenic rupture in infectious mononucleosis. 788 80

The localization of islet cell tumours presents a challenge to the radiologist and requires meticulous attention to detail in both technique and interpretation. As several imaging techniques are capable of demonstrating the tumour and none is absolutely accurate, a rational approach to the localization of these tumours requires a careful consideration of cost, sensitivity and the availability of special expertise. In almost all cases, initial imaging is performed with a combination of transabdominal ultrasound and CT. This will demonstrate the tumour and any hepatic metastases in about 40% of gastrinomas, 80% of insulinomas and almost all other functioning and non-functioning tumours. Where these tests are negative or equivocal, arteriography (which may be combined with ASVS) is the next line of investigation. If the tumour remains undetected, it is likely to be a small insulinoma or gastrinoma. Further investigation is dependent on local practice and the tumour type. Endoscopic ultrasound is rapidly emerging as a technique of high sensitivity in detecting small pancreatic tumours and may also demonstrate extrapancreatic gastrinomas. Transhepatic venous sampling and somatostatin receptor imaging have the advantage that they are not directly dependent on tumour size and they are particularly applicable to difficult cases where other imaging modalities are negative. TPVS is invasive and, while sensitive for insulinomas, is frequently unhelpful in gastrinomas. Somatostatin receptor scintigraphy, on the other hand, is more sensitive for gastrinomas. In future, MRI may prove to be at least as accurate as CT but as yet its exact role is uncertain. At the time of surgery, intraoperative ultrasound is a useful adjunct to palpation, and may avoid a standard distal pancreatectomy in patients with insulinoma.
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PMID:Imaging islet cell tumours. 801 89

The diagnostic criteria of GH deficiency and acromegaly have been revised in 1990 by the Ministry of Health and Welfare in Japan. According to this criteria, not only the classical type of severe GH deficiency but also partial GH deficiency can be diagnosed and treated. With development of technology, anatomical abnormalities could be seen by MRI and genetic abnormality analysed. For the treatment of patients with GH deficiency, the pen-system has becomes available, which makes the daily injection of GH painless and easy. For the treatment of GH producing pituitary tumor (acromegaly), a long acting analog of somatostatin is now available to reduce the size of the tumor.
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PMID:[Recent progress in diagnosis and treatment of patients with GH deficiency and GH overproduction]. 825 39

Recently radiolabeled somatostatin analog, [111In]pentetreotide, was developed and its usefulness for the diagnosis and localization of neuroendocrine tumors has been described. In this paper, we reported the results of [111In]pentetreotide scintigraphy in four patients with gastroenteropancreatic endocrine tumors. Two patients with metastatic gastrinoma, one patient with gastric carcinoid, and one patient suspected with gastrinoma, were injected with 119-156 MBq of [111In]pentetreotide. Planar and SPECT images were obtained 4, 24, and 48 hours postinjection. Both primary and metastatic tumors were well visualized in patients with metastatic gastrinoma. Especially in one patient small liver metastases which were not detected by CT or MRI were imaged. We could not obtain positive images in the other two patients. Four-hour or 24-hr images were better than 48-hr images because of higher count density and lower gut activity. No significant adverse effect were seen in any patient. [111In]pentetreotide scintigraphy is a useful procedure for the localization of gastroenteropancreatic endocrine tumors.
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PMID:[Imaging of somatostatin receptor using 111In-pentetreotide]. 868 86


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