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Query: UMLS:C0002453 (
amenorrhea
)
6,245
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In this report we describe longitudinal measurements of forearm and spinal bone mineral in healthy women and women with hyperprolactinemia. One hundred and ten women underwent yearly assessment of forearm and spinal bone mineral by single photon absorptiometry and computed tomography for an average of 4.7 yr. At entry into the study, women with hyperprolactinemic
amenorrhea
had 21% lower spinal bone mineral and 2.5% lower forearm bone mineral than healthy premenopausal women. Despite decreased estradiol levels (31 +/- 23 pmol/L), spinal bone in women with hyperprolactinemic
amenorrhea
did not change over time (+0.08%/yr; P = 0.89). In contrast, spinal bone in healthy women with regular menses (mean age, 34.6 +/- 6.6 yr) decreased significantly (1.7%/yr; P = 0.01). Cortical bone in the forearm did not change in either group. The hyperprolactinemic subjects had higher body mass index (28 +/- 6 vs. 24 +/- 4 kg/m2) and serum testosterone (0.5 +/- 0.2 vs. 0.39 +/- 0.16 pmol/L) than control subjects, but neither parameter correlated with bone loss. Although 64% of the hyperprolactinemic subjects had serum estradiol levels below 30 pmol/L, there was no correlation between estradiol or duration of
amenorrhea
and bone loss. Women with normal
PRL
levels and regular menses 3-9 yr after treatment of hyperprolactinemia had significantly lower spinal bone mineral (147 +/- 28 mg/mL) than healthy premenopausal women (169 +/- 29 mg/mL) and showed no change in spinal bone (+0.3%/yr; P = 0.67) over 5 yr. Despite significant hypoestrogenemia, women with hyperprolactinemic
amenorrhea
did not evidence a rapid decline in spinal bone. Restoration of gonadal function was not associated with normalization of bone mineral. The bone loss that accompanies hyperprolactinemia is not comparable to that which occurs after oophorectomy or menopause. These findings raise important questions about the importance of osteopenia as an indication for treatment of hyperprolactinemic
amenorrhea
.
...
PMID:A longitudinal analysis of premenopausal bone loss in healthy women and women with hyperprolactinemia. 151 55
The physiological
amenorrhea
occurring in suckled females has been associated with both hypopulsatile gonadotropin secretion and hyperprolactinemia. To test whether these phenomena are opiate mediated and whether these effects are dependent on the presence of ovaries, we studied six suckled, lactating cynomolgus monkeys, three with intact ovaries and three that were ovariectomized 14 days postpartum. Frequent blood sampling (every 15 min) was performed at approximately monthly intervals using chronic venous catheters accessed remotely via a jacket and tether system. Each monkey was administered saline or naloxone (2 mg bolus then 2 mg/h) by constant infusion, in alternating 6-h blocks. During saline infusions,
PRL
concentrations varied markedly in a diurnal pattern with concentrations varying from 30-70 micrograms/L during the day and from 100-200 micrograms/L during the night. In both gonadal intact and ovariectomized groups of monkeys naloxone dramatically suppressed and maintained
PRL
concentrations at less than 20 micrograms/L irrespective of the time of day or the order of administration. The effects of naloxone on gonadotropin concentrations were much less dramatic. In gonadal-intact monkeys, no effect of naloxone was seen on pulse frequency of either FSH or LH, or on mean LH concentration, and only a slight increase was noted in mean FSH concentrations. In ovariectomized monkeys, naloxone was also without effect on pulsatile LH secretion, although mean LH concentrations were slightly higher during naloxone infusions than during saline infusions (P less than 0.05). From these results, we conclude that opiate peptides are released in response to the suckling stimulus in the cynomolgus monkey and that they mediate the effects of suckling on
PRL
secretion in both gonadal-intact and agonadal cynomolgus monkeys. The lack of effect of opiate blockade on gonadotropin concentrations suggests that multiple pathways may be involved with the inhibition of the GnRH pulse generator during lactational anovulation.
...
PMID:Postpartum lactational anovulation in a nonhuman primate (Macaca fascicularis): endogenous opiate mediation of suckling-induced hyperprolactinemia. 161 32
In a 30-year-old woman with
amenorrhea
due to hyperprolactinemia, serum
PRL
increased to twice the basal amount in response to growth hormone-releasing hormone (GHRH). Roentgenological studies revealed no pituitary adenoma but empty sella. Bromocriptine therapy normalized serum
PRL
and made the paradoxical response to GHRH disappear. The paradoxical response did not occur in any of eight other patients with hyperprolactinemia due to prolactinoma. Although this case is rare, GHRH stimulates
PRL
as well as GH release remarkably in some cases with hyperprolactinemia without a GH-producing tumor.
...
PMID:Paradoxical prolactin response to growth hormone-releasing hormone in a patient with hyperprolactinemia and empty sella. 175 37
The authors reported a rare case of sellar germinoma which was misdiagnosed as nonfunctioning pituitary adenoma. A 32-year-old woman was admitted to our hospital because of
amenorrhea
and disturbance of left visual acuity. She had become amenorrhagic after her second delivery two years before. Neurological examination revealed she was normal except for diminished left visual acuity (Rt. = 1.2, Lt. = 0.5). The general condition was good. Urine volume and its specific gravity were within normal range. Endocrinological examination showed hyperprolactinemia (
PRL
72 ng/ml) accompanied with impairment of GH, TSH, LH and FSH's reserve. Basal levels and reserve of the blood cortisol were normal. AFP and hCG were within normal range. CT scan revealed a homogenously enhanced intrasellar tumor which had a suprasellar portion (vertical length: 15 mm). T1 weighted MRI revealed low intensity tumor, and T2 weighted image revealed high intensity tumor. Sagittal MR image with gadolinium enhancement showed the pituitary gland anterior to the tumor. Transsphenoidal removal was performed. The histological diagnosis was pure germinoma. After the operation, the intracranial and spinal disseminations were disclosed. Complete neuraxis irradiation resulted in the complete remission of the tumor. Sellar germinoma without diabetes insipidus is considered to be very difficult to diagnose preoperatively. However, the authors proposed that anterior shift of the pituitary gland in sagittal MR image may be a clue to the diagnosis of sellar germinoma.
...
PMID:[A case of sellar germinoma which was misdiagnosed as pituitary adenoma]. 176 58
Several neuroendocrine disregulations have been demonstrated in patients with hypothalamic
amenorrhea
, but a definite therapeutic strategy has not yet been found. Since acetyl-l-carnitine (ALC) has been reported to have a specific effect on central cholinergic, serotoninergic, dopaminergic and opioidergic systems, 20 patients with hypothalamic
amenorrhea
were treated with ALC (2 g/day, per os). Both the clinical efficacy and the endocrine parameters were evaluated after 6 months. The patients were subdivided in two groups according to their LH plasma levels: A) hypogonadotropic: 10 subjects with plasma LH less than 3 mIU/ml, and B) normogonadotropic: 10 subjects with plasma LH greater than 3 mIU/ml. All subjects underwent: 1) a pulsatility study (4 h sampling every 10 min), 2) GnRH test (two bolus injections of 10 micrograms at time 0 and +120), 3) TRH test (200 micrograms). These parameters were evaluated before and after 6 months of ALC administration. The occurrence of a spontaneous menstruation was observed in 6 out of 10 hypogonadotropinemic and in 4 out of 10 normogonadotropinemic patients. Menstrual bleeding occurred between the 3rd and the 6th month of therapy. Major hormonal changes after ALC administration were observed in the hypogonadotropic subjects. They showed a significant increase in baseline plasma LH levels (from 0.9 +/- 0.1 to 3.5 +/- 0.7 mIU/ml, p less than 0.05) (mean +/- SEM), a significant increase in LH pulse amplitude (p less than 0.01) with no changes in LH pulse frequency, and a significantly increased response of LH to the latter GnRH bolus during the GnRH test. Hypogonadotropic patients also showed a significant increase in both estradiol (from 18.8 +/- 2.5 to 48 +/- 3.3 pg/ml, p less than 0.05) and
PRL
(from 6 +/- 1 to 11.4 +/- 1.7 ng/ml, p less than 0.05). No significant differences were observed in the hormonal parameters of normogonadotropic patients after 6 months of ALC therapy.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Acetyl-l-carnitine as possible drug in the treatment of hypothalamic amenorrhea. 176 15
Since the secretion of
PRL
is regulated by the hypothalamic-pituitary axis, an increase in large molecular size
PRL
in the serum is most likely due to secretion by the pituitary itself. The present study was performed to investigate the possible occurrence of
PRL
heterogeneity in 128 subjects with menstrual disorder in conjunction with hyperthyroxinemia (88 with untreated Graves' disease, 40 with subacute thyroiditis) and 50 age- and sex-matched healthy controls. All 128 patients in this study were suffering from
amenorrhea
or oligomenorrhea at the time of their initial visit.
PRL
heterogeneity was found in the sera of 5 of 88 (5.7%) patients with untreated Graves' disease, in 2 of 40 (5.0%) patients with subacute thyroiditis, but in none of the normal controls.
PRL
heterogeneity remained essentially unchanged in patients with Graves' disease over 6 months of treatment; however, in patients with subacute thyroiditis, either big-big
PRL
or big
PRL
decreased significantly along with a corresponding increase in little
PRL
associated with recovery from the illness within 6 months. The menstrual disorders in all patients were restored to normal after restoration to a euthyroid state. The underlying cause of the occurrence of
PRL
heterogeneity in patients with menstrual disorder in conjunction with hyperthyroxinemia is not known.
...
PMID:Heterogeneity of serum prolactin in patients with menstrual disorder in conjunction with hyperthyroxinemia. 177 53
Lymphocytic hypophysitis is in itself rare and usually occurs in the postpartum period or the last trimester of pregnancy. It has not been described in combination with a pituitary tumor. A twenty-two year old woman, who had never been pregnant, presented with a history of nine months
amenorrhea
and spontaneous galactorrhea. She was not taking any medication and had never used oral contraceptives. Physical examination was unremarkable except that whitish fluid could be expressed from both breasts. Her visual fields were normal. Her serum
PRL
levels was high at 105.7 micrograms/l and increased to 138.4 micrograms/l at 60 minutes in a triple bolus test. GH values were normal and there was no evidence of overproduction of other pituitary hormones. CT scan showed an intrasellar mass with suprasellar extension. A tumor was selectively removed transsphenoidally. Morphologic examination revealed a clinically silent sparsely granulated growth hormone cell adenoma with lymphocytic infiltration of the adjacent pituitary tissue. Postoperatively her menstrual periods resumed and she conceived despite a slightly elevated
PRL
level. Three months after an uneventful pregnancy and full term delivery her
PRL
level was 69.9 micrograms/l and increased to 102.2 micrograms/l at 60 min. Basal GH and cortisol levels were normal. She remains well without replacement fourteen months after delivery. This case is of interest because it is the first reported simultaneous occurrence of a pituitary adenoma and lymphocytic hypophysitis and also because the hypophysitis preceded her first pregnancy.
...
PMID:A case of sparsely granulated growth hormone cell adenoma associated with lymphocytic hypophysitis. 177 54
Seventeen somatotropic adenomas removed from patients without acromegaly were studied. Thirteen of them presented as a prolactinoma with
amenorrhea
and/or galactorrhea and elevated serum
PRL
levels. According to basal serum GH levels, the patients were divided into two groups, namely Group I: GH slightly elevated (n = 4) and group II: GH less than or equal to 5 micrograms/l (n = 13). The tumoral GH secretion was proved by immunocytochemistry in all cases and by intratumoral RIA, in vitro study and/or in situ hybridization in five of them. Pathological, clinical and biochemical relationships suggested two anatomoclinical aspects. In group I, the tumors were small, well-differentiated somatotropic adenomas with clinically silent GH hypersecretion. It is probably an early stage of the disease. In group II, the tumors were large with normal GH serum levels. They were poorly differentiated and secreted very low amounts of GH. In nine of them,
PRL
and/or
PRL
mRNA expression were also detected. These tumors do not secrete enough GH to increase serum levels and cause acromegaly. The somatotropic adenomas without acromegaly correspond to two anatomoclinical aspects of the disease.
...
PMID:Somatotropic adenomas without acromegaly. 179 90
We describe here 9 patients with somatotroph adenomas associated with mild features of acromegaly and basal plasma GH levels in the normal range. In 5 women and 4 men, 26 to 61 yrs old, the diagnosis of prolactinoma or non-secreting pituitary adenoma had been previously made on the basis of
amenorrhea
-galactorrhea or tumoral symptoms. However, they had discrete signs of coarsening of the facial features and moderate but evolutive changes of hand and foot sizes. Basal GH levels were in the normal range (0.4 to 4.5 micrograms/l, N less than 5 micrograms/l) but unaffected by oral glucose and insulin tolerance tests while IGF-I concentrations were elevated in all the cases (range 1.7 to 5.8 U/ml, N: 0.37-1.41 U/ml). Plasma
PRL
concentrations were elevated in 5 patients (range 16 to 80 micrograms/l, N less than 13 micrograms/l in men and N less than 19 micrograms/l in women). The 9 patients had a macroadenoma with an extrasellar extension in 8 of them and all were operated on by the transsphenoidal route. Immunocytochemical studies demonstrated IRGH-cells in all the adenomas and IRPRL-cells in 5 of them. Electron microscopic analysis of 3 tumors showed that the secretory granules were sparse and the Golgi apparatus poorly developed. Molecular biology of 7 tumors showed the presence of small amounts of GH mRNA. This result was in agreement with the morphological aspect, suggesting a low rate of GH synthesis. Thanks to these different approaches the diagnosis of silent somatotroph adenoma should sometimes be reconsidered.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Apparently silent somatotroph adenomas. 179 91
The endocrine profiles associated with long and short lactational
amenorrhea
were assessed in a longitudinal study in which morning blood samples were drawn in 48 women from the first postpartum month until the recovery of ovulation and in a cross-sectional study in which the samples were drawn throughout 24 h at the end of the third postpartum month in 10 fully nursing and amenorrheic women.
PRL
, LH, FSH, estradiol (E2), progesterone, cortisol, and dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate were measured. In both studies we detected a smaller
PRL
increase in response to suckling (P less than 0.001) and higher E2 levels (P less than 0.001) in nursing women who ovulated within 6 months postpartum compared to those in women who did not. Such differences were observed early after delivery when all women were fully nursing and amenorrheic. These results suggest some probable sources of variability in the duration of lactational
amenorrhea
in our population. The greater
PRL
response to suckling associated with longer
amenorrhea
may be due to higher sensitivity of the breast-hypothalamus-pituitary system or a stronger suckling stimulus in this group. Differences in plasma E2 levels between longer and shorter periods of
amenorrhea
may reflect dissimilar endogenous production, intake, or clearance of estrogens.
...
PMID:Early difference in the endocrine profile of long and short lactational amenorrhea. 182 8
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