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Query: UMLS:C0002453 (
amenorrhea
)
6,245
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A retrospective study of 75 patients operated for pituitary prolactin-secreting adenomas between 1972 and 1992 is presented. 57 were women, 18 males. The major symptom was
amenorrhea
for women and
impotence
for men. Prolactinemia is correlated to the size of adenoma and thus permits a prediction of surgical results. Most of the patients with a prolactinemia under 300 ng/ml were cured by surgery alone. Surgical treatment alone at the-term follow-up cure 87% of the micro-adenomas, 17% of the enclosed adenomas, and none of the invasive adenomas. In this study there is only 7% of true recurrence. According to the high cure rate and low frequency recurrence after transphenoidal surgery for micro-adenomas we suggest this approach as the first choice treatment. On the other hand the best treatment for macro-prolactinomas is medicamentous.
...
PMID:[Pituitary adenoma secreting prolactin. Results of their surgical treatment]. 895 6
Hereditary hemochromatosis is an autosomal recessive disorder, the gene for which occurs in approximately 10% of Americans, most of whom are unaffected heterozygotes. Approximately 5/1000 white Americans are homozygous and at risk of developing severe and potentially lethal hemochromatosis. The disorder affects numerous organ systems, but the most common symptoms are fatigue, palpitations, joint pains, and
impotence
; the most common signs are those that relate to hypothalamic, cardiac, hepatic or pancreatic dysfunction, including poor cold tolerance,
impotence
in males,
amenorrhea
in females, cardiac arrhythmias, dyspnea, edema, hepatosplenomegaly, spider telangiectases, ascites, deformity, swelling or limitation of motion of joints, weight loss, hyperpigmentation. Characteristic abnormalities of laboratory tests include elevated serum iron concentration, high transferrin saturation, elevated serum ferritin concentration, elevated serum transaminases, hyperglycemia and low values for thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) and gonadotropins. Death may be the result of cardiac arrhythmia, congestive heart failure, liver failure or liver cancer. Since many of these complications cannot be reversed once they have developed, early diagnosis and treatment are essential. In view of the high prevalence in the American population (prevalence varies with ethnic background), the low cost of diagnosis and treatment, the efficacy of treatment if begun early, and, on the other hand, high costs and low success rate of late diagnosis and treatment, systematic screening for hemochromatosis is warranted for all persons over the age of 20 years. The initial screening should be by measurement of serum iron concentration and transferrin saturation. The practice guideline provides a diagnostic algorithm for cases in which the serum transferrin saturation is 60% or greater. It also provides guidelines for clinical management.
...
PMID:Practice guideline development task force of the College of American Pathologists. Hereditary hemochromatosis. 886 84
Primary hemochromatosis is characterized by a specific pattern of clinical manifestations. It includes liver disease with hepatomegaly, glucose intolerance, e.g. diabetes, hyperpigmentation oft the skin,
impotence
/
amenorrhea
, arthropathy, cardiomyopathy and fatigue. Laboratory investigation reveals significantly elevated serum ferritin and transferrin saturation with iron. The diagnosis is confirmed by liver biopsy and quantitative determination of elevated liver iron content. Wilson's disease represents a copper storage disease. Prominent clinical features are hepatomegaly and splenomegaly. Neurological alterations and detection of Kayser-Fleischer corneal rings are typical. In the acute initial phase the often young patients present with Coombs-negative hemolysis. Psychiatric alterations, cardiomyopathy, arthropathy, nephropathy, as well as thrombocytopenia and leucopenia are other clinical features. Laboratory parameters of Wilson's disease include low serum ceruloplasmin and serum copper. There is an elevated urinary copper excretion and elevated serum free copper concentration. The diagnosis is confirmed by liver biopsy with quantitative determination of an elevated liver copper content.
...
PMID:[Current diagnosis: hereditary metabolic diseases of the liver (primary hemochromatosis, Wilson disease)]. 898 78
Among various diseases of the adrenals, major disorders that cause sexual and gonadal disturbances are congenital adrenal hyperplasia(CAH) and Cushing's syndrome, and the others include virilizing or feminizing adrenocortical tumors. CAH was reviewed based on the recent advances in molecular genetics. The most striking discovery was steroidogenic acute regulatory protein, mutations of which produce lipoid adrenal hyperplasia that was previously attributed to P-450scc deficiency. Reversible
amenorrhea
or
impotence
is found in patients with Cushing's syndrome. Low plasma estrogen and testosterone levels are associated with female and male patients, respectively. Elevated adrenal androgen accounts for mild virilization in female patients with ACTH-dependent subtypes. The sites of action at which hypercortisolemia suppresses the hypothalamic-pituitary-gonadal axis were discussed.
...
PMID:[Sexual and gonadal dysfunction in adrenal disorders]. 939 99
Sleeping sickness (SS; African trypanosomiasis) is an anthropozoonosis transmitted by the tsetse fly. Infection with Trypanosoma brucei in humans is associated with adynamia, lethargy, anorexia, and more specifically
amenorrhea
/infertility in women and loss of libido/
impotence
in men. Recent evidence suggests that experimental infection in animals with Trypanosoma brucei species causes polyglandular endocrine failure by local inflammation of the pituitary, thyroid, adrenal, and gonadal glands. In a cross-sectional study we investigated the prevalence and significance of neuroendocrine abnormalities in 137 Ugandan patients with SS. In the untreated stage of the disease, there was a high prevalence of adrenal insufficiency (27%), hypothyroidism (50%) and hypogonadism (85%). Pituitary function tests suggested an unusual combined central (hypothalamic/pituitary) and peripheral defect in hormone secretion. Specific therapy resulted in a rapid recovery of adrenal/thyroid function, whereas hypogonadism persisted for years in a substantial portion of patients. We did not detect pituitary, thyroid, adrenal, and gonadal autoantibodies in patients with endocrine dysfunction, ruling out an autoimmune origin of the endocrine abnormalities. However, the presence of hypopituitarism correlated with high cytokine concentrations (TNF-alpha, IL-6) which--together with direct parasitic infiltration of the endocrine glands--are involved in the pathogenesis of SS-associated endocrine dysfunction.
...
PMID:Neuroendocrine dysfunction in African trypanosomiasis. The role of cytokines. 962 7
Glycoprotein hormone alpha subunit (alpha SU) is expressed in nearly all thyreotroph adenomas and most gonadotrophinomas, but is less well documented in plurisecreting adenomas. We therefore examined the immunohistochemical (IHC) expression of alpha SU in a generally accepted model of plurisecreting adenomas (somatoprolactinic type) by comparison to a series of pure monosecreting somatotroph tumors. Fifty patients (32 females, 18 males) aged 15 to 68 years with clinical and/or biological acromegaly requiring adenomectomy were studied. Forty-five had clinical acromegaly and 5 had isolated
amenorrhea
and/or galactorrhea syndromes. Forty-eight of the 49 patients who had baseline assessments of plasma GH had a mean concentration of 5 ng/ml or more (normal value < 5). Fifteen of the 46 patients who had baseline measurements of plasma PRL had a prolactinemia value greater than 20 ng/ml (normal value < 20) but below 100 ng/ml, except for one patient. All the adenomas studied were positive by GH immunohistochemistry; 21 were immunostained by an antiPRL antibody and formed the "somatoprolactinic" (GH-PRL) group. Five of these 21 patients were male. The 12 female patients younger than 50 years had
amenorrhea
or galactorrhea, and one male patient complained of
impotence
. Eleven patients (9 females, 2 males) in this GH-PRL group had hyperprolactinemia. Sixteen of these GH-PRL adenomas were immunolabeled by alpha SU antiserum. The remaining 29 adenomas, which were immunonegative with the PRL antibody and formed the "somatotroph adenoma" (GH) group, were more frequent in male patients (13/29; 45%) compared to GH-PRL group. Eight
amenorrhea
or galactorrhea syndromes occurred among the 14 women younger than 50 years, 3 of whom had hyperprolactinemia. Thirteen of these 29 adenomas (45%) were immunopositive with alpha SU antibody. Compared to the GH group, the GH-PRL group had a significant higher frequency of
amenorrhea
and/or galactorrhea syndromes among women under 50 years (100% vs 57%; p < 0.01), as well as hyperprolactinemia (55% vs 15%; p < 0.01) and positive alpha SU immunoreactivity (76% vs 45%; p < 0.05). The frequency of extrasellar macroadenomas was not different according to PRL or alpha SU immunoreactivity. Thus, in this series of somatoprolactinic adenomas, alpha SU immunopositivity was slightly more frequent than in a control group of pure somatotroph adenomas. Moreover, hyperprolactinemia was more frequent in patients with GH-PRL adenomas, although the size of the pure and mixed adenomas was not different. These results suggest that hyperprolactinemia and/or alpha SU immunopositivity are more often associated with mixed GH-PRL adenomas.
...
PMID:Immunohistochemical detection of glycoprotein hormone alpha subunit in somatoprolactinic and pure somatotroph adenomas. 976 57
Until the introduction of the first atypical antipsychotic, clozapine, in 1975, hyperprolactinemia was assumed to be an inevitable consequence of treatment with any antipsychotic agent. Now we know that atypical antipsychotics such as clozapine, olanzapine, quetiapine, sertindole, and ziprasidone are not associated with significant prolactin increase. These new antipsychotics appear to spare dopamine blockade within the brain's tubero-infundibular tract, a dopamine pathway that also controls prolactin secretion. Since the release of prolactin is tonically inhibited by the hypothalamus, with dopamine acting as the prolactin release-inhibiting factor, any disruption of the connection between the hypothalamus and the pituitary gland is associated with hyperprolactinemia. Other factors that can increase prolactin secretion are also reviewed (e.g. estrogens, thyroid-releasing factor, vasoactive intestinal peptides, opioids, surgery, illness such as epilepsy or herpes zoster infection, and psychic or physical stress). Prolactin levels are at their highest 1-2 hours before waking, and early waking interrupts its secretion. The major effects of hyperprolactinemia in women are
amenorrhea
, cessation of normal cyclic ovarian function, loss of libido, occasional hirsutism, and increased long-term risk of osteoporosis. The effects in men are
impotence
, loss of libido, and hypospermatogenesis. Current data indicate that conventional antipsychotics, as well as high doses of risperidone (> 6 mg/day), increase prolactin levels to a range associated with sexual dysfunction in nonpsychiatric patients. The lack of prolactin elevation reported with the atypical antipsychotics is believed to be due to their much greater specificity, which results in less blockade of dopamine receptors in the tubero-infundibular pathway.
...
PMID:Prolactin and antipsychotic medications: mechanism of action. 1019 Feb 27
Prolactin is a polypeptide hormone essential for lactation. Its production in the lactotroph cells of the anterior pituitary is regulated primarily by the inhibitory action of hypothalamic dopamine. Hyperprolactinemia is the most common endocrine disorder of the hypothalamic-pituitary axis, occurring mostly in women and presenting most commonly with
amenorrhea
and galactorrhea. Causes of hyperprolactinemia include physiologic, pharmacologic and pathologic factors; pituitary adenoma is a common pathologic cause. Women may present with decreased libido, infertility, oligomenorrhea/
amenorrhea
and galactorrhea. Men may present with decreased libido, infertility, gynecomastia or
impotence
. In the absence of an identifiable and treatable underlying cause, hyperprolactinemia is generally treated with dopamine agonist medications.
...
PMID:Clinical presentation of hyperprolactinemia. 1064 15
The charts of 184 patients with clinically significant hyperprolactinaemia who presented to a teaching hospital between 1978-1995 were reviewed, 158 (86%) females and 26 (14%) males. Hyperprolactinaemia was due to a microadenoma or was idiopathic in 36.4%, drug induced in 16%, associated with a macroadenoma in 12%, due to epilepsy in 7%, with other causes each contributing 5% or less. The presenting symptoms were
amenorrhoea
in 64%, galactorrhoea in 40.5%, infertility in 15%, visual field defect in 9%, with
impotence
in 30% and, gynaecomastia in 8% of men. One hundred and one patients were treated with bromocriptine (80%), surgery (35.4%) and radiotherapy (10.7%). Twenty-five percent of patients developed side-effects of bromocriptine for which cabergoline, a new long-lasting dopaminergic agonist, was successfully substituted. Presenting features responded to drug treatment in 70-80% of patients.
...
PMID:Hyperprolactinaemia: analysis of presentation, diagnosis and treatment in the endocrine service of a general hospital. 1096 51
Quinagolide (QUI) and cabergoline (CAB) are dopamine agonists recently introduced for the treatment of hyperprolactinemia. In the present study, these drugs have been compared in terms of effectiveness and tolerability. Twenty patients (18 females and 2 males) with hyperprolactinemia (8 with microprolactinomas, 6 with idiopathic hyperprolactinemia and 6 with empty sella turcica syndrome) were treated with oral QUI (75 microg once daily) and CAB (0,5 mg twice weekly), in a randomized cross-over trial with placebo between both drugs. Each drug was administered for 12 weeks, separated by other 12 weeks with placebo. PRL levels decreased with both drugs at 2 or 4 weeks of starting the treatment, without differences between both drugs at weeks 4, 8 and 12. At week 12, normal PRL levels (<20 ng/ml) were attained in 90% patients with CAB and only in 75% patients with QUI (p<0.05). After discontinuation of treatment, significant increase in serum PRL was higher after QUI withdrawal than after CAB. Clinical efficacy of both treatments was similar in terms of improvement
amenorrhea
, oligomenorrhea, galactorrhea, and
impotence
. All patients completed both cycles of treatment, and the most frequent side-effects were nausea, headache and dizziness, without significant differences between CAB (30%) and QUI (55%). Our study indicates that, at the doses employed here, CAB showed a high percentage of patients with normal PRL at the end of treatment and long-lasting efficacy in the levels of PRL. Clinical response and side-effects were similar in both drugs.
...
PMID:A randomized cross-over study comparing cabergoline and quinagolide in the treatment of hyperprolactinemic patients. 1100 66
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