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Query: UMLS:C0001430 (
adenoma
)
21,222
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The urinary corticoid:creatinine (c:c) ratio was determined in ten pony mares suffering from hyperlipoproteinaemia. The mean (+/- sd) urinary c:c ratio of these ten ponies (47 +/- 31 x 10(-6)) was not significantly different from that of twelve pony mares with a pituitary pars intermedia
adenoma
(31 +/- 18 x 10(-6). The correlation between the urinary concentration of corticoids and plasma total lipids, and the correlation between the urinary c:c ratio and plasma total lipids in ponies with hyperlipoproteinaemia were not significant (P > 0.05; r = 0.53 and r = 0.008, respectively). Preliminary results favour primary
hyperadrenocorticism
being associated with hyperlipoproteinaemia. In conclusion, the data presented here suggest that cortisol can contribute to insulin resistance in ponies with hyperlipoproteinaemia.
...
PMID:Urinary concentration of corticoids in ponies with hyperlipoproteinaemia or hyperadrenocorticism. 1068 89
Multiple endocrine neoplasia type 1 was diagnosed in a 12-year-old male crossbred dog. Relevant history included polyuria and polydipsia of four months' duration. Physical examination revealed abdominal enlargement, seborrhoea and polypnoea. Diagnostic tests indicated hypercalcaemia, elevated serum alkaline phosphatase and alanine aminotransferase, an exaggerated response to adrenocorticotropic stimulation of the adrenal gland, lack of cortisol suppression with a low dose dexamethasone suppression test and suppression of cortisol secretion with a high dose dexamethasone test. An enlarged right parathyroid gland was removed surgically and confirmed histopathologically to be a parathyroid
adenoma
. The pituitary-dependent
hyperadrenocorticism
was treated successfully with mitotane for 14 months before the patient was euthanased for an unrelated problem.
...
PMID:Multiple endocrine neoplasia type 1 in a crossbred dog. 1070 Nov 89
Pituitary diseases are relatively common entities in the general population. They include pituitary adenomas and hypopituitarism. Pituitary tumours can cause symptoms of mass effect and hormonal hypersecretion that can be reversed with surgical resection or debulking of the
adenoma
, radiotherapy, or medical treatment. Transsphenoidal adenomectomy is the treatment of choice for acromegaly, Cushing's disease, gonadotropin-secreting tumours; and thyrotropin (TSH)-secreting adenomas. Pituitary irradiation and medical therapy are secondary options. Conversely, medical treatment is the primary choice for prolactinomas. Dopamine agonists are very effective in the treatment of prolactin (PRL)-secreting tumours, with rates of control as high as 80 to 90% for microprolactinomas (< 10 mm) and 60 to 75% for macroprolactinomas (> or = 10 mm). Somatostatin analogues have also shown efficacy in patients with acromegaly who have not responded to surgery or in patients with TSH-secreting adenomas who have not improved with surgery and radiotherapy. In patients with Cushing's disease, who are not cured surgically or who relapse after pituitary adenomectomy and irradiation, steroidogenic inhibitors can be an efficient method of controlling the
hypercortisolism
. Pituitary insufficiency is the partial or complete loss of the anterior hypophyseal function, which is due to hypothalamic or pituitary disease. Although the classic sequence of loss of pituitary secretion is growth hormone (GH), gonadotropins, TSH, and corticotropin (ACTH), the order to begin the replacement therapy of the deficient hormone(s) is cortisol, thyroxine, androgens/estrogens and, if necessary, GH. There are multiple preparations that can be used to achieve clinical and biochemical improvement. In general, the hormone replacement therapy is lifelong.
...
PMID:Pituitary disorders. Drug treatment options. 1071 1
Incidentally discovered adrenal masses are mostly benign, asymptomatic lesions, often arbitrarily considered as nonfunctioning tumors. Recent studies, however, have reported increasing evidence that subtle cortisol production and abnormalities in the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis are more frequent than previously thought. The purpose of this study was to investigate the clinical and hormonal features of patients with incidentally discovered adrenal adenomas, in relation to their clinical outcome. Fifty consecutive patients with incidentally detected adrenal adenomas, selected from a total of 65 cases of adrenal incidentalomas, were prospectively evaluated. All of them underwent abdominal computed tomography scan and hormonal assays of the HPA axis function: circadian rhythm of plasma cortisol and ACTH, urinary cortisol excretion, 17-hydroxyprogesterone, androgens, corticotropin stimulation test and low-dose (2 mg) dexamethasone test. The patients were reevaluated at regular intervals (6, 12, and 24 months) for a median period of 38 months. Subtle
hypercortisolism
, defined as abnormal response to at least 2 standard tests of the HPA axis function in the absence of clinical signs of Cushing's syndrome (CS), was defined as subclinical CS. Mild-to-severe hypertension was found in 24 of 50 (48%) patients, type-2 diabetes in 12 of 50 (24%), and glucose intolerance in 6 of 50 (12%) patients. Moreover, 18 of 50 patients (36%) were diffusely obese (body mass index, determined as weight/height2, > 25), and 14 patients (28%) had serum lipid concentration abnormalities (cholesterol > or = 6.21 mmol/L, low-density lipoprotein cholesterol > or = 4.14 mmol/L and/or triglycerides > or = 1.8 mmol/L). Compared with a healthy population, bone mineral density Z-score, determined by the DEXA technique, tended to be slightly (but not significantly) lower in patients with adrenal adenoma (-0.41 SD). Endocrine data were compared with 107 sex- and age-matched controls, and patients with adenomas were found to have heterogeneous hormonal abnormalities. In particular, significantly higher serum cortisol values (P < 0.001), lower ACTH concentration (P < 0.05), and impaired cortisol suppression by dexamethasone (P < 0.001) were observed. Moreover, in patients with adenomas, cortisol, 17-OH progesterone, and androstenedione responses to corticotropin were significantly increased (P < 0.001, all), whereas dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate levels were significantly lower at baseline, with blunted response to corticotropin (P < 0.001, both). However, the criteria for subclinical CS were met by 12 of 50 (24%) patients. Of these, 6 (50%) were diffusely obese, 11 (91.6%) had mild-to-severe hypertension, 5 (41.6%) had type-2 diabetes mellitus, and 6 (50%) had abnormal serum lipids. The clinical and hormonal features improved in all patients treated by adrenalectomy, but seemed unchanged in all those who did not undergo surgery (follow-up, 9 to 73 months), except for one, who was previously found as having nonfunctioning
adenoma
and then revealed to have subclinical CS. In conclusion, an unexpectedly high prevalence of subtle autonomous cortisol secretion, associated with high occurrence of hypertension, diabetes mellitus, elevated lipids, and diffuse obesity, was found in incidentally discovered adrenal adenomas. Although the pathological entity of a subclinical
hypercortisolism
state remained mostly stable in time during follow-up, hypertension, metabolic disorders, and hormonal abnormalities improved in all patients treated by adrenalectomy. These findings support the hypothesis that clinically silent
hypercortisolism
is probably not completely asymptomatic.
...
PMID:Subclinical Cushing's syndrome in patients with adrenal incidentaloma: clinical and biochemical features. 1115 83
Multiple pituitary hormone hypersecretions have been already described, but the combination of PRL and ACTH excess is rare. This report deals with a 42-yr-old woman affected by macroprolactinoma (PRL 12,720 microg/l, huge tumor with extrasellar extension at imaging). After one year on dopaminergic treatment causing PRL normalization and tumor shrinkage, she developed
hypercortisolism
(UFC 1,000 microg/24 h, ACTH 200 ng/l). Cushing's disease was diagnosed. After neurosurgery (at immunocytochemistry mixed ACTH-PRL
adenoma
was shown)
hypercortisolism
remitted, whereas pathological hyperprolactinemia with tumor remnant in cavernous sinus persisted and hypopituitarism developed. The patient reported seems atypical for the following reasons: 1) the concomitant PRL and ACTH hypersecretions; 2) the clinical presentation with
hypercortisolism
following hyperprolactinemia; 3) the surgical cure of
hypercortisolism
with persisting hyperprolactinemia.
...
PMID:From macroprolactinoma to concomitant ACTH-PRL hypersecretion with Cushing's disease. 1080 Jul 64
Patients with familial adenomatous polyposis (FAP) frequently have extracolonic manifestations of their disease. Prior reports have indicated an increased prevalence of adrenal lesions in patients with FAP. Although most of the adrenal lesions represent nonfunctioning adenomas, some patients have had
hypercortisolism
due to adrenocortical carcinoma or bilateral nodular hyperplasia. We present a case of a patient with FAP who had mineralocorticoid excess due to an aldosterone-producing adrenocortical
adenoma
.
...
PMID:Primary aldosteronism in a patient with familial adenomatous polyposis. 1085 26
Prolonged exposure of every tissue in the body to an excess of cortisol produces Cushing's syndrome. Endogenous causes of Cushing's syndrome are ACTH-dependent, including Cushing's disease, ectopic ACTH-producing tumors. CRH-producing tumors, and ACTH-independent Cushing's syndrome, including cortisol-producing adrenal benign or malignant tumors, and rare micronodular adrenal hyperplasia. In Japan the incidence of ACTH-dependent Cushing's syndrome due to endogenous causes is about 60%, in which autonomous pituitary ACTH secretion is responsible for 95%, and the rest are ectopic ACTH-producing tumors. Cortisol-secreting tumors are responsible for about 40% of endogenous causes, in which benign
adenoma
is 90% and adrenocortical carcinoma is 10%. The first step for the diagnosis of Cushing's syndrome is to demonstrate the presence of
hypercortisolism
biochemically by determining 24-hour urinary free cortisol excretion and low-dose dexamethasone suppression test. The next step is to identify the precise etiologic causes. To differentiate Cushing's syndrome, the most important procedures are dynamic endocrine tests to check the integrity of hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal function by high dose dexamethasone suppression test, CRH test arid measurement of steroid hormone profile. Imaging techniques can help to determine the etiology of Cushing's syndrome.
...
PMID:Pathophysiology and diagnosis of Cushing's syndrome. 1091 6
Recent studies from several groups have indicated that abnormal or ectopic expression and function of adrenal receptors for various hormones may regulate cortisol production in ACTH-independent
hypercortisolism
. Gastric inhibitory polypeptide (GIP)-dependent Cushing's syndrome has been described in patients with either unilateral
adenoma
or bilateral macronodular adrenal hyperplasia; this syndrome results from the large adrenal overexpression of the GIP receptor without any activating mutation. We have conducted a systematic in vivo evaluation of patients with adrenal Cushing's syndrome in order to identify the presence of abnormal hormone receptors. In macronodular adrenal hyperplasia, we have identified, in addition to GIP-dependent Cushing's syndrome, other patients in whom cortisol production was regulated abnormally by vasopressin, ss-adrenergic receptor agonists, hCG/LH, or serotonin 5HT-4 receptor agonists. In patients with unilateral adrenal adenoma, the abnormal expression or function of GIP or vasopressin receptor has been found, but the presence of ectopic or abnormal hormone receptors appears to be less prevalent than in macronodular adrenal hyperplasia. The identification of the presence of an abnormal adrenal receptor offers the possibility of a new pharmacological approach to control
hypercortisolism
by suppressing the endogenous ligands or by using specific antagonists for the abnormal receptors.
...
PMID:The diversity of abnormal hormone receptors in adrenal Cushing's syndrome allows novel pharmacological therapies. 1100 21
Laparoscopic adrenalectomy is gaining widespread acceptance. To evaluate this new approach, the authors evaluated 40 laparoscopic adrenalectomies. Between June 1995 and February 1999, 40 lateral transperitoneal laparoscopic adrenalectomies were performed in 38 patients. The clinical diagnoses were primary aldosteronism (20 patients), Cushing
adenoma
(2 patients), cortical hyperplasia with
hypercortisolism
(2 patients), pheochromocytoma (8 patients), and other conditions (6 patients). There were no deaths or subsequent procedures. The mean operative time was 121 minutes. One procedure performed for
hypercortisolism
was converted to open adrenalectomy because of hepatomegaly and postoperative adhesions. Seven patients had complications: one patient with small pulmonary embolus with transient dyspnea, one patient with pneumothorax, two patients with postoperative bleeding, two patients with prolonged pain at a trocar wound, and one patient with a urinary tract infection. Lateral transperitoneal laparoscopic adrenalectomy seems to be a safe and effective minimally invasive approach for adrenal surgery, and the authors consider it to be the standard surgical procedure for benign adrenal tumors.
...
PMID:An institutional experience with 40 first lateral transperitoneal laparoscopic adrenalectomies. 1114 14
The authors analyse hormonal and morphological characteristics of adrenal incidentalomas, i.e. pathological adrenal masses accidentally found on CT scan performed due to extraadrenal causes of other causes of adrenal pathology. The group of patients was consisted by 42 patients at the age 24-79 years (27 females and 15 males). The most frequent clinical symptoms included arterial hypertension, diabetes mellitus and obesity. CT examinations revealed 36 cases of unilateral lesions (in 21 cases the lesions were localised on the right and in 15 cases on the left) and 6 bilateral lesions. The size of adrenal masses ranged from 7 mm to 12 cm. The CT examination helped in characterising myelolipomas in 3 cases, cysts in two cases, and pre-assuming malignity in 6 cases. Hormonal analyses have revealed primary aldosteronism in 2 cases, subclinical
hypercortisolism
in 1, steroid enzymopathy in 2 and secondary hyperaldosteronism in 2 patients. No patient had catecholamine overproduction. 19 patients were indicated for adrenalectomy with the following histological findings.:
adenoma
(n = 5), cyst (n = 2), myelolipoma (n = 3), carcinoma (n = 3), feochromocytoma, ganglioneuroma, metastases, lymphoma, sarcoidosis and pseudodrenal structure--Gravitz tumor (n = 1, respectively). The size of all neoplasms exceeded 3 cm, therefore the authors recommend adrenalectomy in incidentalomas with hormonal activity exceeding 3 cm in size. (Tab. 2, Fig. 1, Ref. 17.)
...
PMID:[Hormonal and morphologic characteristics of adrenal incidentalomas]. 1118 53
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