Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0001430 (adenoma)
21,222 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Glucocorticoids, mineralocorticoids, and adrenal androgens were studied in 3 groups of patients: control subjects (group I), hyperprolactinemic subjects (group II) and miscellaneous patients including chromophobe adenomas and normalized hyperprolactinemic subjects treated with Bromocriptine (group III). All the patients were studied in the basal state and under various conditions: Metyrapone, ACTH, TRH for glucocorticoids, ACTH, TRH, saline perfusion for mineralocorticoids, ACTH and TRH for androgens. It is concluded that: the adrenal secretion of glucocorticoids, mineralocorticoids and androgens is not altered under basal conditions in chronic hyperprolactinemia nor during dynamic tests in chronic hyperprolactinemia (prolactin adenoma) nor in acute hyperprolactinemia (induced by TRH).
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PMID:[Adrenocortical function in hyperprolactinemia. The study of glucocorticoids, mineralocorticoids and androgens in chronic and acute hyperprolactinemias (author's transl)]. 23 34

We describe thirty-one patients with Cushing's syndrome, with the object of evaluating the relative merit of the Dexamethasone suppression test, Metyrapone test and Corticotrophin Releasing Factor (CRF) test in classifying the syndrome. Bilateral adrenocortical hyperplasia (Cushing's disease) was present in sixteen patients. Three had bilateral macrodular hyperplasia of the adrenal cortex, six had adrenocortical adenoma, four had adrenocortical carcinoma, and two patients presented ectopic ACTH-syndrome. The diagnosis was surgically verified in every case. The Metyrapone test was found to give the safest classification in patients with Cushing's syndrome. The Dexamethasone test will diagnose Mb. Cushing reliably when suppression of serum cortisol is present following the large dose of Dexamethasone, but failure to suppress does not exclude the diagnosis. The CRF test is easy to perform and distinguished reliably between Mb. Cushing and other causes of the syndrome in eight out of ten patients in whom it was performed. Outpatient examination including the CRF test and CT-scanning of the pituitary and adrenal glands is advocated as a preliminary step in the classification of biochemically and clinically suspected cases of Cushing's syndrome.
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PMID:[Investigation of Cushing's syndrome. The diagnostic value of the dexamethasone suppression test, the metopirone test and the CRF test]. 255 27

ACTH and lipotropins (beta- and gamma-LPH) are synthesized from a common precursor by the pituitary corticotropic cell. We have measured LPH plasma levels under physiological and pathological conditions and we have compared them with ACTH plasma levels in the same circumstances. Spontaneous variations (nycthemeral rhythm) in LPH, ACTH and cortisol plasma levels were parallel, while responses to Dexamethasone freination test and stress (Insulin induced hypoglycemia) or more specific stimulation (Metopirone, lysine-vasopressin) were parallel and superimposable. LPH levels were always higher than ACTH levels in two pathological circumstances: chronic renal failure and Cushing's syndromes with ectopic ACTH producing tumors. The determination of both ACTH and LPH levels assists the diagnosis of corticotropic insufficiency and etiologic investigation of Cushing's syndrome, after hypercorticolism had been established. Although unable to confirm the presence of corticotropic adenoma in patients with Cushing's disease, or the predict effectiveness of pituitary surgery, these determination bring good arguments for treated Cushing's diseases follow up.
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PMID:[ACTH, beta-endorphin and lipotropins: physiopathological studies in man (author's transl)]. 628 91

Adrenocortical tumors can be divided into two groups based on their histopathological characteristics, i.e., benign (adenoma) and malignant (carcinoma), and also classified as functioning (or hormonal) and non-functioning (or non-hormonal) tumors, depending on the presence or absence of recognizable clinical syndromes due to excessive steroids. The syndrome of functioning adrenocortical tumors includes Cushing's syndrome, primary aldosteronism and the adrenorge genital syndrome, of which a minority presents most of the specific clinical features: Cushing's syndrome; red face, typical moon face, truncal obesity, and purplisch red striae, primary aldosteronism; muscle weakness, noctural polyuria, hypertension and hypokalemia, adrenogenital syndrome; virilization or feminization, but many of them present complete clinical picture. The diagnosis of these syndromes needs to measure urinary 17-OHCS and 17-KS and plasma concentrations of cortisol, aldosterone, dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA) and the other steroids. Dexamenthasone suppression test, various stimulation tests and the measurement of plasma ACTH are also useful for diagnosis. Usually, adrenocortical tumors can be detected preoperatively by physical examination or radiographic studies. Some are massive enough to be palpable through the abdominal wall. Some are large enough to cause displacement of the kidney, as seen intravenous urography. Most are visible by adrenal scintigraphy using 131I-iodocholesterol, computerized tomography, or adrenal arteriography. The standard treatment for adrenocortical tumors are surgical resection. Unresectable adrenocortical carcinomas may be treated with an adrenocorticolytic drug, o'p'-DDD. Metyrapone and aminoglutethimide can be also employed to inhibit the production of steroids.
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PMID:[Diagnosis and treatment of adrenocortical tumors]. 631