Gastric Secretion With Ulcerogenic Islet Cell Tumor

Abstract
AN INCREASING proportion of patients with peptic ulcer due to gastrin-producing islet cell tumor are being recognized in whom features of the syndrome are atypical or delayed in onset.1-4In such instances, identifying the tumor and establishing its causal relationship with the ulcer2,4-6may involve complex surgical and biochemical methods.7,8The purpose of this paper is therefore to investigate the diagnostic importance of gastric secretory findings. Zollinger and Ellison9originally emphasized abnormally high nocturnal gastric secretion as characteristic of this syndrome, a finding confirmed by others.10Summerskill11found a greatly increased one-hour basal acid output which approximated unusually the acid response to an augmented dose of histamine. Rawson and co-workers12and Marks and associates13reported similar results, and Marks and colleagues proposed that the ratio of basal to maximal acid secretion would be useful in diagnosis of the syndrome.13Information included in many subsequent case