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Query: UMLS:C0001430 (
adenoma
)
21,222
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A patient with Cushing's disease due to a chromophobe
adenoma
was studied for 243 days before pituitary surgery and evidence for periodicity in cortisol steroid production was found with cycles occurring every 85.8 days (peak-to-peak length), associated with laboratory remissions and paradoxical response to dexamethasone. The autonomy of ACTH secretion was suggested by the nonresponsiveness to repeated
lysine
-vasopressin stimulation tests and lack of increase in urinary 170HCS following metyrapone. A distinct response of the hyperplastic glands (as demonstrated by percutaneous adrenal venography) was obtained on several B1-24 corticotropin stimulation. The patient's hypercortisolism disappeared following removal of the chromophobe
adenoma
through transphenoidal hypophysectomy.
...
PMID:Periodic remission in Cushing's disease with paradoxical dexamethasone response: an expression of periodic hormonogenesis. 18 34
Twelve patients (10 women and 2 men) with a primary empty sella turcica were studied. Endocrine function tests were performed as follows: growth hormone (GH) was measured after insulin-induced-hypoglycaemia, luteinizing hormone (LH) and follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) after LH-releasing hormone, thyrotrophin (TSH) and prolactin after thyrotrophin-releasing hormone; pituitary reserve of adrenocorticotrophin (ACTH) was determined by measurement of plasma cortisol after
lysine
-vasopressin and 11 deoxycortisol after metyrapone. Five of the patients (group A) had no endocrine disturbance. Seven patients (group B) had a hypothalamo-pituitary disorder. Two of them had panhypopituitarism which appeared in one case after meningoencephalitis and in the other after a severe cranial trauma. In two cases an amenorrhoea-galactorrhoea syndrome with increased prolactin level (68 and 230 ng/ml) led to a diagnosis of a prolactin producing
adenoma
, which was confirmed by surgery. Finally three cases of amenorrhoeagalactorrhoea, with normal prolactin level, and/or diabetes insipidus remained unexplained. However, no causal relationship could be demonstrated between the pituitary disturbance and the "empty sella". Primary empty sella turcica is therefore a neuroanatomical and neuroradiological entity with no endocrine implication. A pituitary disorder might suggest a microadenoma or an incidentally associated disease.
...
PMID:The primary empty sella an endocrine study on 12 cases. 98 92
Up to now, the diagnosis of silent corticotroph cell pituitary adenomas has been made only on histopathological basis. In this paper we describe 6 women affected with pituitary adenomas, without evident clinical features of hypercortisolism, in whom retrospective data suggested the possibility of clinically diagnosing silent corticotropinomas in vivo. In all patients basal ACTH and cortisol levels were normal, and the low-dose dexamethasone test constantly suppressed serum cortisol and urinary 17-hydroxycorticosteroid levels. The CRH and/or
lysine
-vasopressin tests, performed in five patients, always induced exaggerated ACTH/cortisol rises. In three cases the response to the opiate agonist loperamide was assessed and no inhibition of ACTH/cortisol levels was found. All patients underwent pituitary surgery. In five cases evidence of corticotropinoma was obtained by immunohistochemistry or immunofluorescence studies; moreover, in one
adenoma
ACTH was secreted into the culture medium, and in another one CRH and arginine-vasopressin induced a marked intracellular [Ca++] rise. Electron microscopy study of the
adenoma
, removed from three patients, showed the presence of adenomatous corticotroph cells. Finally, in another woman no hormonal abnormalities were initially observed and she was operated for a "nonfunctioning" pituitary adenoma, but four years later an overt Cushing's disease appeared, suggesting that a silent corticotropinoma subsequently became functional, although the formation of a different
adenoma
cannot be excluded. In conclusion, the occurrence of ACTH/cortisol hyperresponsiveness to CRH and/or
lysine
-vasopressin and the lack of suppression of ACTH/cortisol secretion to opioid agonists in patients with apparently "nonfunctioning" pituitary tumors might allow the in vivo recognition of silent corticotropinomas.
...
PMID:The silent corticotropinoma: is clinical diagnosis possible? 132 50
Using polymerase chain reaction and sequence-specific oligonucleotide hybridization, the frequency of three ras oncogene mutations (N-ras, Ha-ras, and K-ras) in thyroid tumors (25 adenomas, 16 follicular carcinomas, and 22 papillary carcinomas) was investigated in both iodide-deficient and iodide-sufficient areas. The ras oncogene mutation rate was significantly higher in the iodide-deficient area, being 85 versus 17% in the adenomas, and 50 versus 10% in the follicular carcinomas. No mutations were found in papillary carcinomas. The most common mutation site was Ha-ras codon 61 with Gln----Arg substitution. Two ras mutations at codon 61 (Gln----
Lys
in N-ras and Gln----Arg in Ha-ras) were found in a microfollicular
adenoma
specimen from Eastern Hungary. We conclude that dietary iodine may modulate ras oncogene mutations, and that in the iodide-deficient area, ras oncogene activation may play a more important role in the initiation and/or maintenance of follicular tumors. Additional factors are, however, necessary to initiate carcinogenesis.
...
PMID:High rates of ras codon 61 mutation in thyroid tumors in an iodide-deficient area. 202 46
We examined 8 normal subjects and 16 patients with non-functioning pituitary tumors with a combined anterior pituitary test to evaluate the clinical usefulness of the test. Diagnoses included 9 of chromophobe
adenoma
, 3 of craniopharyngioma, 2 of Rathke's cleft cyst, and 1 each of intrasellar cyst and tuberculum sella meningioma. All subjects received hypothalamic releasing hormones: 1 micrograms/kg corticotropin releasing hormone (CRH), 1 micrograms/kg growth hormone releasing hormone (GRH), 500 micrograms thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH), 100 micrograms luteinizing hormone releasing hormone (LH-RH), and a relatively small dose (5 mU/kg) of
lysine
vasopressin (LVP). In the normal subjects, the addition of LVP potentiated the secretion of adenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) induced by CRH, but had no significant effect on the secretion of other anterior pituitary hormones. In the combined test with 5 releasing hormones, the plasma ACTH and cortisol responses were not impaired in the majority of the patients before pituitary surgery. Serum thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH), prolactin (PRL) and follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) responses were not impaired in 82%, 70% and 67% of the patients, respectively, while the serum LH and GH responses were impaired in 67% and 73% of the patients, respectively. Following pituitary surgery, responses of these hormones to combined testing were similarly impaired in more than 75% of the patients. These results indicate that plasma ACTH, cortisol and serum TSH responses are fairly good before pituitary surgery but are impaired significantly after surgery. No subjects experienced any serious adverse effects related to the testing. These results suggest that combined testing with hypothalamic hormones is a convenient and useful method for evaluating pituitary function.
...
PMID:Combined anterior pituitary function test using CRH, GRH, LH-RH, TRH and vasopressin in patients with non-functioning pituitary tumors. 220 Feb 36
To characterize the functional aspect of prolactin (Prl) cells coexisting with corticotroph adenomas, pituitary adenoma cells obtained from a patient with Cushing's disease and a patient with Nelson's syndrome, who were associated with hyperprolactinaemia, were cultured in monolayer and their Prl responses to various secretagogues were compared with those of prolactinoma cells in culture. Immunohistochemistry performed in one of these two adenomas demonstrated the presence of Prl-containing cells in addition to ACTH cells. When ACTH-Prl
adenoma
cells were exposed to ovine corticotrophin-releasing factor (CRF), a dose-dependent increase in both ACTH and Prl secretion was observed, which was blocked by coincubation with hydrocortisone. In contrast, no stimulatory effect of CRF on Prl release was observed in all of the experiments using prolactinoma cells. Thyrotrophin-releasing hormone, which consistently stimulated Prl secretion in ACTH-Prl adenomas, was effective in triggering Prl release in only 25% of the prolactinomas. Exposure of the cultured cells to
lysine
vasopressin, growth hormone-releasing factor and vasoactive intestinal peptide resulted in an increase in ACTH and Prl secretion in one ACTH-Prl
adenoma
, however, none of the prolactinomas responded to these stimuli to secrete Prl. Dopamine and somatostatin, on the other hand, uniformly suppressed Prl secretion from ACTH-Prl adenomas as well as from prolactinoma cells. These results suggest that the mode of Prl secretion by mixed ACTH-Prl pituitary adenomas is not identical to that by pure prolactinomas and is, at least in part, common to that of ACTh secretion.
...
PMID:Prolactin secretion by mixed ACTH-prolactin pituitary adenoma cells in culture. 285 25
A 61 year old Japanese man with a diagnosis of Addison's disease was admitted to Kyushu University Hospital for further investigation of high ACTH levels and hyperpigmentation which 37.5 mg of cortisone acetate failed to alleviate. The basal level of plasma ACTH was 700-1000 pg/ml, and following 25-37.5 mg cortisone acetate or 1 mg dexamethasone the levels were 300-600 pg/ml. The general pigmentation showed little improvement with such medication. Radiographic studies revealed a double floor of the sella turcica and cisternal herniation. These observations suggested the existence of a pituitary ACTH-secreting tumour. Plasma ACTH showed a circadian rhythm ranging from 440 to 1570 pg/ml and it was not suppressed to a normal range by oral administration of dexamethasone, 8 mg/day or by continuous infusion of dexamethasone, 1.25 mg/h for 2 h. Plasma ACTH responses of 80% above basal level to
lysine
-vasopressin (LVP), and 12% above basal to synthetic ovine corticotrophin releasing factor (CRF) were observed. FK 33-824, a methionine-enkephalin analogue, suppressed plasma ACTH to 85% of basal level, while bromocriptine (CB-154) caused no significant change. These findings led to a diagnosis of pituitary ACTH-secreting
adenoma
(corticotropinoma) in association with Addison's disease. The persistent circadian rhythm of plasma ACTH suggested that this
adenoma
may not be completely free from regulation by the central nervous system. This case may be clinically significant for investigation of the pathogenesis of pituitary adenoma, particularly in Nelson's syndrome.
...
PMID:Probable ACTH-secreting pituitary tumour in association with Addison's disease. 299 36
A pentapeptide with analgesic activity has been isolated from human lung squamous cell carcinoma and from three other types of propagated tumors of human lung small-cell carcinoma (SCC),
adenoma
(AD) and large-cell carcinoma (LCC) in nude mice. The amino acid sequence of the peptide has been revealed to be H-Thr-Ser-
Lys
-Tyr-Arg-OH, which is exactly the same as that of neo-kyotorphin, an analgesic peptide originally isolated from bovine brain [(1982) Life Sci. 31, 1733]. No neo-kyotorphin could be isolated from normal lung tissue using the same procedures as those used for carcinomas. The results suggest that the presence of neo-kyotorphin in the lung carcinoma may represent the ectopic expression of peptide hormone. Our findings constitute the first example of a human lung carcinoma producing analgesic peptide.
...
PMID:Neo-kyotorphin, an analgesic peptide isolated from human lung carcinoma. 378 Sep 65
We report an 18-month-old girl with Cushing's disease caused by a large
adenoma
of the pituitary gland. Tumour size and extension were determined by X-ray, CT-scan and angiographic studies. The endocrinological findings were typical for this disease: elevated plasma levels of ACTH, cortisol, 17-Hydroxyprogesterone (17-OHP) and testosterone, elevated urinary excretion of 17-Ketosteroids (17-KS) and 17-Hydroxycorticoids (17-OHCS). Dexamethasone failed to suppress ACTH and cortisol plasma levels. TRH induced only a minimal TSH increase. Following LH-RH injection gonadotropin levels rose to pubertal values. The hGH response to insulin-induced hypoglycaemia was subnormal. After resection of the tumour the infant died because of non-treatable arrhythmia. Histological findings showed a non-differentiated
adenoma
with extension into the subarachnoid space and into nerve tissues. In vitro
lysine
-vasopressin (LVP) and arginine-vasopressin (AVP) exhibited only weak stimulatory effects on the ACTH secretion of the tumour cells.
...
PMID:Cushing's disease due to an unusually large adenoma of the pituitary gland in infancy. 398 21
A non-ACTH aldosterone-stimulating factor(s) has been implicated in the pathogenesis of idiopathic hyperaldosteronism (IHA). Although this factor has not been fully characterized, some evidence suggests that it may be related to a pro-gamma-melanotropin (pro-gamma-MSH), derived from the NH2-terminal region of pro-opiomelanocortin. In the present study, plasma immunoreactive (IR-) gamma-MSH levels at 0800 h in patients with IHA were evaluated (90 +/- 17 fmol/ml; range: 13-173 fmol/ml) and found to be significantly higher (P less than 0.05) than those in subjects with aldosterone-producing adenomas (33 +/- 8 fmol/ml), essential hypertension (33 +/- 6 fmol/ml), and normotensive controls (19 +/- 2 fmol/ml). Seven of nine IHA subjects had circulating IR-gamma-MSH levels above the normal range (greater than 35 fmol/ml). In plasmas sampled at 1200 h, IR-gamma-MSH was significantly higher in patients with IHA (95 +/- 26 fmol/ml) and adenomas (63 +/- 23 fmol/ml), as compared with essential hypertensives (31 +/- 6 fmol/ml) and normotensives (19 +/- 3 fmol/ml). Mean plasma IR-ACTH, plasma cortisol, and urinary cortisol levels did not differ significantly between any of these groups. In order to evaluate the effect of a pro-gamma-MSH in vitro, adrenal adenoma tissue was obtained from two patients, one with elevated IR-gamma-MSH (61 fmol/ml) and a second with low IR-gamma-MSH (12 fmol/ml). Aldosterone secretion by dispersed
adenoma
cells from the former, but not the latter, underwent a fourfold dose-dependent (10(-14)-10(-9) M) increase in response to human
Lys
-gamma 3-MSH. These data suggest that a pro-gamma-MSH may be implicated as a pathogenic factor in a subset of patients with primary aldosteronism, particularly among those differentially diagnosed as having IHA.
...
PMID:Plasma immunoreactive gamma melanotropin in patients with idiopathic hyperaldosteronism, aldosterone-producing adenomas, and essential hypertension. 401 76
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