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Query: UMLS:C0018681 (headache)
56,091 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The familial occurrence of brain tumors are exceedingly rare except in cases with phacomatosis. We encountered pituitary adenomas in two sisters of a family, so far presenting no evidence of multiple endocrine adenomatosis (MEA). Case 1, K. O. a 26-year-old woman was admitted to our Hospital on September 10, 1970 with visual acuity and field disturbance, irregular menstruation and acromegaly. Neurological examination: Her visual acuity was Vd 0.6 and Vs 0.3, visual field was bitemporal hemianopsia, and ther was papilledema bilaterally. She had left exophthalmos and left abducens palsy. Roentgenogram of the skull, brain scanning, cerebral angiogram, pneumoencephalogram suggested the presence of a pituitary tumor. On Sep. 17, 1970, through a left frontotemporal craniotomy the tumor was removed subtotally. The pathological diagnosis was pituitary adenoma (chromophobe). Case 2, M. T. a 31-year-old woman, sister of case 1, was admitted to the Hospital on September 19, 1973, with mild headache, left visual field disturbance and amenorrhea. She had a child, and a past history of pulmonary tbc. Neurological examination: Her visual acuity was Vd 1.2 and Vs 0.03, and visual field of the right eye was temporal lower quandrant anopsia. There was optic nerve atrophy in the left eye. Plain X-ray craniogram, brain scanning, cerebral angiogram and pheumoencephalogram suggested the presence of a pituitary tumor. On Sep. 28, 1973, a right frontal craniotomy was performed. The tumor tissue with capsule was removed subtotally. The pathological diagnosis was pituitary adenoma (mixed type). In the literatures about familial brain tumors with histological diagnosis, glioma and glioblastoma are common, meningioma is relatively rare. Pituitary adenoma with no evidence of MEA is exceedingly rare. The two sisters presented in this paper, have no evidence of hyperparathyroidism, pancreas adenoma and peptic ulcer. So, we consider, at present, these cases should not be field in MEA.
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PMID:[Familial occurrence of pituitary adenoma (author's transl)]. 94 79

Somatic symptoms are common in patients on dialysis. Their causes are largely unknown and their therapy is unsatisfactory. To examine the relationship of psychological and clinical factors to these symptoms, 191 interviews were done in patients on hemo- and peritoneal dialysis. The severity of 8 somatic symptoms (tiredness, sleep disturbance, cramps, pruritus, headache, nausea, dyspnea, joint pain) of importance in dialysis patients was measured using previously validated scales. Indices of affect and quality of life were obtained, as was demographic, clinical and laboratory information. The severity of each symptom was significantly related to the indices of affect and quality of life. Using multiple logistic regression, poor affect score was the strongest correlate of each of the following somatic symptoms, tiredness, pruritus, sleep disturbance and cramps. It was ahead of any clinical or demographic variable and was also significantly correlated with the severity of the other symptoms. Indices of hyperparathyroidism were significantly associated with headache, joint pain, dyspnea and nausea. We conclude that the strongest correlate of common somatic symptoms in dialysis patients is affect disturbance, and that therapy aimed at improving the affect may improve the symptoms.
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PMID:Clinical and psychological correlates of somatic symptoms in patients on dialysis. 235 74

A 20-yr-old black woman presented in 1969 with headache, amenorrhea, hyperprolactinemia, hypogonadotropism, hypogonadism, and hypercalcemia due to a chromophobe adenoma. She received 5000 rads to the sella. One year later she was found to have hyperparathyroidism due to parathyroid adenoma and three and a half glands were removed. Thirteen years later she presented with 3 months of profuse watery diarrhea, hypokalemia, hypercalcemia, hyperchloremic metabolic acidosis, and a normal anion gap. A vasoactive intestinal polypeptide-producing tumor of the pancreas was found and successfully removed, after which hypercalcemia resolved. This is an unusual case of the multiple endocrine neoplasia syndrome, type 1, being associated with a vasoactive intestinal polypeptide-oma and pancreatic cholera.
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PMID:Multiple endocrine neoplasia, type 1, with pancreatic cholera. 288 44

Self-rated psychiatric symptoms were investigated in 30 patients referred for surgery because of primary hyperparathyroidism (HPT) (serum calcium, 2.87 +/- 0.21 mmol/L) in 38 subjects detected in a health screening, with 15 years of mild hypercalcemia and probable HPT (serum calcium, 2.66 +/- 0.09 mmol/L), and in 38 normocalcemic control subjects. The psychiatric symptomatology was evaluated by use of the Hopkins Symptom Checklist (HSCL-56), a self-rating symptom scale. The patients with verified HPT had the highest mean HSCL score, 89.1 +/- 20.1 before surgery, compared with 76.6 +/- 17.0 (p less than 0.01) in the health survey hypercalcemic patients and 73.8 +/- 16.0 (p less than 0.001) in the controls. The factors for anxiety, depression, and cognitive symptoms were the most pronounced in the HPT patients and were also increased among the mildly hypercalcemic persons of the health survey, compared with the controls. Somatic symptoms such as headache, back pain, chest pain, and weakness were equally common in HPT and in the controls, and measurements of isometric muscle strength of knee extension did not demonstrate reduction of muscle strength in the health survey hypercalcemic patients. Follow-up of the HPT patients 1 year after parathyroid surgery revealed a marked improvement in mental health (HSCL score 73.2 +/- 13.7, p less than 0.001). In the health survey hypercalcemic patients, neither the psychiatric symptomatology nor the muscle strength were influenced by 6 months of oral vitamin D therapy (alphacalcidol). The results demonstrate that psychiatric symptoms are experienced frequently by patients with HPT and minimum to moderate increases in the serum calcium level and that these disturbances are reversed by parathyroid surgery.
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PMID:Self-rated psychiatric symptoms in patients operated on because of primary hyperparathyroidism and in patients with long-standing mild hypercalcemia. 291 6

The neurologic findings in 120 patients with possible diagnosis of hyperparathyroidism are reported and the world literature on this matter is reviewed. The neurologic signs and symptoms were divided in 3 categories: central, peripheral and miscellaneous. Headache, cramps weakness and depression where the most frequent complaints but with a so wide list of symptoms we expect mainly to salient the importance of calcium and phosphorus blood levels on neurologic patients as well as the value of neurologic evaluation on hyperparathyroid patients.
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PMID:[Neurologic manifestations of hyperparathyroidism. Study of 120 cases]. 629 35

Giant-cell tumor rarely affects the sphenoid bone. Ten cases of this tumor seen at the Mayo Clinic are reviewed, bringing the number of cases in the world literature to 31. These tumors, which present in the second and third decades of life and are slightly more frequent in women than in men, may present with various symptoms, including headache, visual field defects, blindness, and diplopia. The symptom complex and roentgenographic findings are seldom, if ever, sufficiently characteristic to allow preoperative diagnosis. The microscopic differential diagnosis of giant-cell tumor of the sphenoid region includes giant-cell reparative granuloma, aneurysmal bone cyst, fibrous dysplasia, and "brown tumor" of hyperparathyroidism. Interesting features of this series include the presence of multifocal giant-cell tumor in one case, and the absence of Paget's disease of bone in every case. Complete follow-up review in these cases allowed a discussion of therapy and prognosis; it appears that subtotal excision with postoperative radiation therapy is the treatment of choice. While the histological appearance of giant-cell tumor is characteristic, caution must be exercised in interpreting small samples, and various reparative and metabolic disorders must be considered in the differential diagnosis.
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PMID:Giant-cell tumor of the sphenoid bone. Review of 10 cases. 686

An apparent case of psychosis induced by cimetidine is reported. A 61-year-old Caucasian woman was hospitalized with chief complaints of left-sided paresthesias, headache, and vertigo. She had a history of hyperparathyroidism, thyroid insufficiency, and chronic but stable renal insufficiency. Admitting laboratory data indicated possible hepatic compromise. On day 16 of hospitalization, cimetidine (300 mg q 6 hr p.o.) was begun because of a falling hematocrit and guaiac-positive stools. Within 24 hours after cimetidine therapy was begun, the patient was confused, tearful, and disoriented. This confusional state continued during treatment with cimetidine, and was refractory to antipsychotic therapy. On day 5 of cimetidine therapy, the patient experienced visual and auditory hallucinations, and both cimetidine and antipsychotic drugs were discontinued. The patient was noted to be alert and oriented 24 hours later. A review of the literature revealed 30 cases of apparent cimetidine-induced CNS changes. Patients experiencing such reactions were typically elderly with compromised renal or hepatic failure, or both. Future studies on this topic should focus on predisposing patient factors and serum or cerebrospinal fluid concentrations of cimetidine associated with the symptomology.
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PMID:Cimetidine-induced mental status changes: case report and literature review. 744 41

Pheochromocytoma accounts for about 0.1 per cent of patients with diastolic hyperstension. It mimics many diseases varying from anxiety psychoneurosis to intracranial tumors. Cardinal symptoms include sevre headache (72 to 92 per cent), sweating (60 tp 70 per cent), palpitations (51 to 73 per cent), and hypertension (> 90 per cent) of which 50 per cent is sustained, 50 per cent paroxysmal. Many drugs (phenothiazines, Saralasin, antiemetics, steroids, etc.) have been reported as precipitating factors. Patients who should be screened for pheochromocytoma include: (1) all symptomatic patients with sustained or paroxysmal hyperstension; (2) asymptomatic hypertension; (3) all patients with MEA 2a,b (hyperparathyroidism, medullary carcinoma of the thyroid, neurocutaneous lesions) and their first degree relatives, even if the latter are asymptomatic and normotensive; (4) hypertension plus diabetes mellitis or hypermetabolism; (5) hypertensive episode during induction of anesthesia or radiologic procedure; and (6) hypertensive response during histamine administration, i.e., gastric analysis. Urinary metanephrine is the single best screening test. Plasma catecholamine determination is particularly helpful when collected before and immediately after an attack. Provacative agents (histamine, glucagon, tyramine) are needed rarely. Preoperative localization of the tumor can be done with nephrotomography IVP, computerized axial tomography, ultrasound, 131-I-19-iodocholesterol scan, arteriography, venography.
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PMID:Pheochromocytoma: clinical manifestations and diagnostic tests. 745 90

A 71-year-old woman was admitted with the chief complaint of headache, lumbago and slight fever. Computerized tomographic (CT) scan demonstrated a large soft tissue mass with multiple cystic necrosis in the right adrenal region. The plasma norepinephrine concentration was excessive and serum levels of neuron-specific enolase (NSE), calcitonin and parathormone were elevated. MIBG scintigraphy showed a high uptake in the same region. Under the diagnosis of pheochromocytoma without distant metastasis, right adrenalectomy was performed. The tumor was removed en bloc with right kidney and a part of the liver because of inflammatory adhesion. The histological examination revealed benign pheochromocytoma. After the operation, norepinephrine and calcitonin decreased to normal but the levels of NSE and PTH remained high. One year after operation, chest X-ray revealed multiple lung metastases and after 1.5 years she died of respiratory failure. Autopsy revealed multiple lung and bone metastases and a liver metastasis, parathyroid glands showed hyperplasia but the thyroid gland showed no abnormal change. This clinical course suggests that serum NSE might be a useful tumor marker for differentiating malignant pheochromocytoma from benign one, and this tumor producing calcitonin caused secondary hyperparathyroidism.
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PMID:[A case of malignant pheochromocytoma with high levels of serum neuron-specific enolase (NSE) and calcitonin]. 780 42

MEN-1 is an autosomal dominantly inherited disorder, characterised by the occurrence of multiple tumours, particularly in the parathyroid glands, the pancreatic islets, the pituitary gland and the adrenal glands, as well as by neuroendocrine carcinoid tumours. Various clinical manifestations are presented by description of three patients harbouring a MEN1 gene germline mutation. A 44-year-old man had symptoms of hyperparathyroidism and in addition to parathyroid adenomas proved to have tumours in the thymus, adrenal and pituitary glands. A 48-year-old woman from a family with MEN-1 had suffered since her 40th year from headache and heartburn; she appeared to have adenomas in the parathyroid glands and gastrinomas in the pancreas, leading to a Zollinger-Ellison syndrome. One of her relatives, a man aged 29, had suffered from childhood from convulsions due to attacks of hypoglycaemia, and an insulinoma was assessed. In all patients, surgical and/or medical treatment alleviated symptoms. Clearly, the position or nature of the mutations in the MEN1 gene do not correlate with the clinical expression of the disease. Family investigation, DNA analysis and periodic examination improve quality of life and the life expectancy.
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PMID:[Diverse expression of multiple endocrine neoplasia type 1]. 1115 52


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