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Query: UMLS:C0015672 (
fatigue
)
51,768
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A 40-year-old white woman presented with hirsutism, amenorrhea, generalized
fatigue
, diffuse weight gain, acral changes, and coarsened facial features. Physical examination revealed mild diastolic hypertension, acromegalic features, hirsutism, and seborrhea. The growth hormone concentration was elevated and did not suppress after glucose administration. Urinary free cortisol excretion was increased and was not suppressed during a 2 mg low-dose dexamethasone suppression test. Magnetic resonance imaging of the sella demonstrated a 1.3 x 1.2 x 0.8 cm pituitary adenoma. Trans-sphenoidal resection was performed, and portions of the resected tumor were analyzed by routine pathologic methods. Histopathologic and immunohistochemical findings indicated discrete growth hormone- and adrenocorticotropic hormone-producing pituitary adenomas. Coexisting acromegaly and Cushing's syndrome due to pituitary neoplasia was previously reported in two patients. However, to the authors' knowledge, this represents the first description of a patient with acromegaly and
Cushing's disease
resulting from discrete synchronous adenomas of the pituitary gland as defined by modern histopathologic techniques.
...
PMID:Case report: acromegaly and Cushing's disease in a patient with synchronous pituitary adenomas. 144 69
To explore whether possible differences in central nervous system neuromodulators contribute to the differential presentation of affective symptomatology in
Cushing's disease
and major depression, we examined the levels of immunoreactive CRH and ACTH in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) of 11 patients with
Cushing's disease
, a patient with ectopic ACTH secretion, 34 patients with major depression, and 60 healthy subjects. We elected to measure these peptides not only because both are classically involved in pituitary-adrenal regulation, but also because their primarily arousal-producing and anorexigenic behavioral effects in experimental animals suggest that they may play a role in the symptom complex of depressive syndromes. We also explored whether the CSF levels of these peptides were more helpful in determining the often difficult differential diagnosis between major depression and
Cushing's disease
than the plasma ACTH response to ovine CRH, a currently used but somewhat insensitive laboratory means of distinguishing these disorders. CSF levels of immunoreactive CRH and ACTH were significantly lower in
Cushing's disease
patients [21.9 +/- 2.7 and 15.4 +/- 1.8 pg/mL, (mean +/- SEM), respectively] compared to patients with major depression [38.4 +/- 2.3 pg/mL (P less than 0.01) and 24.5 +/- 1.6 pg/mL (P less than 0.01), respectively] and controls [38.4 +/- 1.6 pg/mL (P less than 0.001) and 26.3 +/- 1.1 pg/mL (P less than 0.001), respectively]. The coexistence of high plasma ACTH and low CSF ACTH in
Cushing's disease
yielded a CSF/plasma ACTH ratio consistently less than that in depressed patients, with only 2 of 31 subjects comprising both groups showing values that overlapped. In contrast, 9 of the combined patients showed ACTH responses to ovine CRH that overlapped. These data suggest that differences in centrally directed CRH secretion may account for the differential presentation of the dysphoric syndromes seen in major depression and
Cushing's disease
. Hence, the classic form of major depression (melancholia), is often associated with evidence of pathological hyperarousal, such as intense anxiety, sleeplessness, and anorexia, while that of
Cushing's disease
is associated with evidence of pathological hyperarousal, including hyperphagia,
fatigue
, and inertia. Moreover, measurement of the CSF/plasma ACTH ratio may serve as a clinically useful adjunct to the ovine CRH stimulation test and other laboratory measures in determining the differential diagnosis between major depression and
Cushing's disease
.
...
PMID:Cerebrospinal fluid immunoreactive corticotropin-releasing hormone and adrenocorticotropin secretion in Cushing's disease and major depression: potential clinical implications. 199 96
A 58-year-old woman was admitted to our hospital with complaints of general
fatigue
, thirst and lumbago. A diagnosis of Cushing's syndrome was made on the basis of elevated serum levels of cortisol and adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH). Although
Cushing's disease
was most suspected, no evident image of pituitary adenoma could be found on brain CT scan and MRI. Therefore, treatment with oral Trilostane was started. Three months after admission, left hemiplegia was noticed and cerebral abscess in the right frontal lobe was demonstrated by brain CT scan. In spite of surgical removal of the abscess by total resection, she had a relapse in the same site and also developed a new lesion in the left lateral lobe. Surgical drainage was performed and Nocardia asteroides was isolated from the drained pus. An intensive chemotherapy with aminobenzylpenicillin (ABPC) and latamoxef (LMOX) in combination resulted in marked decrease in size of the lesion in the brain and subsequent improvement of left hemiplegia was achieved. Since approximately one month before when a diagnosis of cerebral abscess was made, there had been demonstrated a coin lesion in the right middle field on chest X-ray films. This lesion in the right lung disappeared concomitantly with the improvement of the lesions in the brain. This fact strongly suggests that the lesion in both brain and lung were of the same nature. Nocardia is known to make a primary lesion in the lung after being inhaled and then through hematogenous dissemination to make distant lesions in various sites, especially in the brain.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[A case of Cushing's syndrome associated with Nocardia cerebral abscess]. 206 9
Hypercortisolism in depression seems to preferentially reflect activation of hypothalamic CRH secretion. Although it has been postulated that this hypercortisolism is an epiphenomenon of the pain and stress of major depression, our data showing preferential participation of AVP in the hypercortisolism of chronic inflammatory disease suggest specificity for the pathophysiology of hypercortisolism in depression. Our findings that imipramine causes a down-regulation of the HPA axis in experimental animals and healthy controls support an intrinsic role for CRH in the pathophysiology of melancholia and in the mechanism of action of psychotropic agents. Our data suggest that hypercortisolism is not the only form of HPA dysregulation in major depression. In a series of studies, commencing in patients with
Cushing's disease
, and extending to hyperimmune
fatigue
states such as chronic fatigue syndrome and examples of atypical depression such as seasonal affective disorder, we have advanced data suggesting hypofunction of hypothalamic CRH neurons. These data raise the question that the hyperphagia, hypersomnia, and
fatigue
associated with syndromes of atypical depression could reflect a central deficiency of a potent arousal-producing anorexogenic neuropeptide. In the light of data presented elsewhere in this symposium regarding the role of a hypofunctioning hypothalamic CRH neuron in susceptibility to inflammatory disease, these data also raise the question of a common pathophysiological mechanism in syndromes associated both with inflammatory manifestations and atypical depressive symptoms. This concept of hypofunctioning of hypothalamic CRH neurons in these disorders also raises the question of novel forms of neuropharmacological intervention in both inflammatory diseases and atypical depressive syndromes.
...
PMID:Corticotropin releasing hormone in the pathophysiology of melancholic and atypical depression and in the mechanism of action of antidepressant drugs. 859 44
The cytokines tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF alpha), interleukin-1 (IL-1), and IL-6 are secreted at inflammatory sites in tandem and play a crucial role in the inflammatory and wound-healing processes. All three cytokines are potent activators of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis, through which they restrain inflammation, whereas IL-6 itself plays a role in the termination of inflammation as well. To test the hypothesis that endogenous glucocorticoids exert a negative tonic effect on the secretion of these cytokines, we studied 17 patients with
Cushing's disease
and 2 patients with primary adrenal Cushing's syndrome before and after surgery. Plasma TNF alpha, IL-1 beta and IL-6 were measured before surgery, while the patients were hypercortisolemic; on postoperative day 4 or 5, when they were hypocortisolemic; and on postoperative day 9 or 10, when they were receiving glucocorticoid replacement. During severe hypocortisolism, on postoperative day 4 or 5, plasma IL-6 levels rose significantly, compared to the preoperative values (P < 0.001). During the same interval, TNF alpha and IL-1 beta also rose, albeit to a lesser extent. Over the same interval, patients with severe hypocortisolism experienced temperature elevation,
fatigue
, somnolence, flu-like symptoms, and anorexia, symptoms that have been traditionally attributed to glucocorticoid deficiency; these were also experienced by subjects that received recombinant human IL-6. There was no postoperative increase in any of the cytokines studied in the patients who were not hypocortisolemic after surgery and who also lacked the corresponding symptomatology. Plasma IL-6 concentrations decreased significantly, albeit not to normal levels, in the hypocortisolemic group of patients on postoperative day 9 or 10, when they were receiving glucocorticoid replacement. We conclude that the peripheral levels of IL-6 and to a lesser extent, those of TNF alpha and IL-1 beta are tonically inhibited by basal levels of glucocorticoids. The increased IL-6 production that occurs when cortisol levels fall might explain the symptomatology of acute glucocorticoid deficiency.
...
PMID:Acute glucocorticoid deficiency is associated with plasma elevations of interleukin-6: does the latter participate in the symptomatology of the steroid withdrawal syndrome and adrenal insufficiency? 896 68
A retrospective analysis of Cushing's syndrome from the retrieved records of 24 out of a total of 27 referred cases over a period of 10 years (January 1985-January 1995) showed confirmation in 16 cases. Fourteen (88%) were females, 9 (56%) were in their third decade. Duration of symptoms before admission was one year or less in eleven (69%) patients. Among symptoms weakness,
fatigue
and weight gain and among signs moon face, truncal obesity and buffalo hump were found in all patients. Amenorrhea occurred in all the women of childbearing age. Basal urinary 17-hydroxycorticoid (17-OHCS) values were elevated in 9/12 patients and low dose dexamethasone suppression test favoured Cushing's syndrome in 8/9 patients. Definitive treatment consisted of bilateral adrenalectomy in 7 and transfrontal pituitary adenomectomy in 3. Two patients declined surgery; 4 patients were lost to follow up before definitive treatment. Two patients who had bilateral adrenalectomy and two who had transfrontal adenomectomy died subsequently while three remained in good health on corticosteroid replacement therapy. Three of the 7 patients who had bilateral adrenalectomy developed Nelson's syndrome. It is concluded that
Cushing's disease
is the most frequent cause of Cushing's syndrome in our series. The patients presented with the well-known clinical manifestations of hypercortisolism. However, our laboratory facilities require considerable improvement to serve as a reliable adjunct to clinical evaluation. Since Cushing's syndrome, whatever the cause, is eventually fatal if left untreated, surgical intervention is mandatory after confirmation of the cause with appropriate laboratory tests.
...
PMID:Cushing's syndrome: a ten year experience at Tikur Anbassa Hospital. 1021 44
A prospective study of 48 patients with pituitary adenomas, 19 adenomas causing
Cushing's disease
, 18 adenomas causing acromegaly, and 11 clinically hormone-inactive adenomas (inactive adenomas), was performed to study emotional disorders occurring before and after transsphenoidal microsurgery. Factors which led to an obvious delay in the diagnostic process were identified. - The tools utilised were an interview and repeated personality assessments. The personality assessments were begun preoperatively and continued for about half a year postoperatively. The interview data, including retrospective statements regarding somatic difficulties, was analysed. - The thesis of a uniform psychopathology due to the influence of elevated hormone levels, and a lack in patients' sensitivity towards their changed appearance in acromegaly could not be confirmed. A high variability of reported emotional problems was found. The most common psychopathological signs for
Cushing's disease
were excitability and depression, for acromegaly
fatigue
/loss of energy was the most frequent complaint. Six to eight months postoperatively, a majority of patients noticed an increase of physical well-being. In acromegaly, the time span between first consultation and diagnosis averaged 6.2 years, in
Cushing's disease
it was 4.3 years, and in inactive adenomas it was 3.9 years. Only a small part of the delay in diagnosis, less than two years, could be attributed to the patients' hesitation to consult a physician.
...
PMID:Emotional disorders in patients with different types of pituitary adenomas and factors affecting the diagnostic process. 1108 69
Atypical depression, somatoform disorder, neurasthenia and fibromyalgia seem to form a spectrum of disorders, who share a common biological basis, i.e. a reduced activity of the hypothalamus-pituitary-adrenocortical (HPA)-system. This is similar to the situation in
Cushing's disease
, where the central part of the hypothalamus-pituitary-adrenocortical-system is decreased by an increased feedback via increased intracerebral cortisol concentration.
Cushing's disease
is accompanied by features of atypical depression and of somatisation. Treatment with hypericum seems to disinhibit the hypothalamus-pituitary-adrenocortical-system in healthy subjects and patients with a depression. Furthermore it decreases intracerebral corticosteroids, possibly by increasing the expression of p-glycoprotein at the blood brain barrier. Therefore hypericum might be especially effective in patients with a symptom cluster of atypical depressive features and somatisation. Clinical studies with patients with depression with atypical features like the seasonal affective disorder (SAD) and with patients with a depressive syndrome accompanied by somatic complaints or
fatigue
support this view.
...
PMID:[Atypical depression and related illnesses--neurobiological principles for their treatment with Hypericum extract]. 1224 86
About 3% of our hypertensive patients have high blood pressure induced by corticosteroids. Muscle weakness,
tiredness
, polyuria and polydipsia may indicate hypokalaemia. Hypokalaemic hypertension in the presence of a low plasma renin activity is the typical finding of corticosteroid hypertension. The most frequent cause of corticosteroid hypertension is primary aldosteronism (Conn's syndrome) due to an adrenal adenoma or bilateral hyperplasia of the adrenal glands. The plasma concentration of aldosterone and the ratio between plasma aldosterone and renin concentrations are high, and the kaliuresis exceeds 30 mmol/24 h in the presence of hypokalaemia. Adrenal carcinomas are rare and very malignant. The localization of an adrenal tumour is made by computer tomography (CT-scan) or nuclear magnetic resonance imaging and by measurement of the aldosterone/cortisol concentrations in the adrenal venous blood. Adenomas are removed under laparoscopy, and adrenal hyperplasias are treated with spironolactone (50-400 mg daily) or amiloride (5-30 mg daily). In rare cases (<1%), excessive stimulation of the mineralocorticoid receptor is due to cortisol (apparent mineralocorticoid excess,
Cushing's disease
, liquorice, or hereditary deficiency of 11beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase) or to a chimeric gene coding for 11beta-hydroxylase (CYP11B1/CYP11B2). In these rare cases, the synthesis of aldosterone is under the control of the adrenocorticotrophic hormone, so treatment with glucocorticoids (dexamethasone 0.25-1.0 mg daily) is therefore possible (glucocorticoid-remediable aldosteronism). Excessive deoxycorticosterone (DOC) causes the same symptoms and signs as hyperaldosteronism. Excessive DOC is found in patients with adrenal tumours that secrete DOC, in those with hereditary or acquired disorders with dysfunctioning glucocorticoid receptors, or in those with congenital hyperplasia of the adrenal glands (deficiency of 17alpha-hydroxylase or 11beta-hydroxylase). Liddle's syndrome is a constitutive hyperactivity of the transepithelial transport of sodium, which under normal conditions is controlled by the mineralocorticoid receptor. Plasma renin and aldosterone concentrations are suppressed and the plasma potassium concentration may be normal. In contrast, plasma aldosterone and renin concentrations are increased in patients with hypokalaemic hypertension which represents secondary aldosteronism. The increased aldosterone is the consequence of stimulated renin activity due to renal or renovascular or other disorders, antihypertensive drugs or other medications. In conclusion, a work-up for corticosteroid-induced hypertension is indicated in patients with hypokalaemic hypertension and in those with severe hypertension even in the absence of hypokalaemia, and in hypertensive patients with a family history of cardiovascular diseases.
...
PMID:Investigating mineralocorticoid hypertension. 1292 4
To evaluate the long-term impact of cured
Cushing's disease
on subjective well-being, we assessed quality of life by validated health-related questionnaires in 58 patients cured from
Cushing's disease
by transsphenoidal surgery (n = 58), some of whom received additional radiotherapy (n = 11) and/or bilateral adrenalectomy (n = 3). The mean duration of remission was 13.4 +/- 6.7 yr (range of 2-25 yr). Patient data were compared with a control group of 98 healthy subjects with the same age and sex distribution and with age-adjusted reference values available from the literature. General perceived well-being, measured by the Nottingham Health Profile and the Short Form, was reduced compared with controls for all subscales (P < 0.001). Patients with
Cushing's disease
had worse scores on subscales of
fatigue
Multidimensional
Fatigue
Index and anxiety and depression (Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale). Compared with reference values from the literature, quality of life was also reduced in the patients according to all questionnaires and all items, except pain (Short Form), sleep (Nottingham Health Profile), and reduced activity (Multidimensional
Fatigue
Index). Despite conventional hormone replacement therapy, hypopituitarism was an important independent predictor of reduced quality of life. Patients without hypopituitarism (n = 28) showed reduced scores on physical items but normal scores on mental items compared with controls. In conclusion, despite long-term cure of
Cushing's disease
, patients experience a considerable decrease in quality of life, with physical and psychosocial impairments, especially in the presence of hypopituitarism.
...
PMID:Quality of life in patients after long-term biochemical cure of Cushing's disease. 1574 Dec 67
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