| Literature DB >> 2446952 |
J N Weitzel1, P A Pooler, R Mohammed, M D Levitt, J H Eckfeldt.
Abstract
A 71-yr-old woman with a widely metastatic lipid-rich variant of breast cancer was found to have striking hyperamylasemia (85-fold normal). By isoelectric focusing, agarose gel electrophoresis, and a wheat protein inhibitor assay, the predominant serum amylase appeared to be identical to pancreatic isoamylase. Serum trypsin, serum lipase, and an abdominal computed tomography scan were normal, excluding the possibility of pancreatitis. Furthermore, both the primary breast tumor and skin metastases that developed 10 yr later stained immunohistochemically for amylase. Thus, breast carcinoma must be added to the list of tumors causing ectopic hyperamylasemia, and this case shows that nonpancreatic malignancies may produce pancreatic-type hyperamylasemia.Entities:
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Year: 1988 PMID: 2446952 DOI: 10.1016/0016-5085(88)90447-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Gastroenterology ISSN: 0016-5085 Impact factor: 22.682