Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0018681 (headache)
56,091 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A 33-year-old male was admitted to the Department of Neurosurgery, Fukui Medical School with a complaint of headache. There were no neurological deficits on admission. Craniogram demonstrated a so-called "phantom sella". A computed tomography revealed a high density mass lesion and the mass was enhanced well, that mainly extended from the sella to the left middle cranial fossa. The left carotid angiogram revealed an avascular mass lesion extending from the sella to the left middle cranial fossa. Pituitary function tests revealed an extremely high serum prolactin (PRL) levels (70, 100 ng/ml). PRL response to TRH was delayed in peak and the high level continued. Serum PRL levels elevated to 90, 800 ng/ml at 180 min after injection of TRH. A biphasic response was demonstrated in response to CB-154 suppression test to PRL secretion, that is, CB-154 stimulated PRL release initially (up to 90 min) and suppressed thereafter. Serum PRL levels (178, 400 ng/ml) reached to peak about 90 min after CB-154 administration. Response of growth hormone (GH) and adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) to insulin were also impaired. Craniotomy was performed. The tumor was partially removed and was diagnosed as a prolactinoma histologically. Tumor tissue removed was subjected to the monolayer culture and electron microscopic study. Their observations demonstrated hyperactive PRL secretion of the individual cells. A total dose of 5,000 rads was irradiated postoperatively.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[A case of male prolactinoma presenting extremely high serum prolactin levels and biphasic response to CB-154 suppression test]. 404 Dec 91

The clinical efficacy, dose-response relationship, and safety of TRH-T (thyrotropin releasing hormone tartrate) were assessed in 290 patients with spinocerebellar degeneration (SCD) in a 2-week, double-blind study using placebo as control. 254 patients satisfied the criteria for inclusion in evaluation of the drug efficacy. The patients were treated with TRH-T in an intramuscular dose of 2 mg, 0.5 mg or 0 mg (placebo) as TRH once a day for 2 weeks. Clinical responses to these treatments were evaluated 3 times: at the end of weeks 1 and 2 of treatment and a week after the end of treatment. The results of "global improvement rating" as well as those of "ataxia improvement rating" showed that both 2 mg and 0.5 mg TRH-T treatments were significantly superior to placebo treatment in patients with predominantly cerebellar form of SCD. The effect was well maintained a week after the end of the 2-week treatment in the patients who were given TRH-T in daily dose of 2 mg and showed improvement at the end of treatment. The results of "improvement rating of each symptom" revealed that 2 mg treatment was significantly more effective than placebo for disorders of standing, gait, speech and writing. In the patients who had no pyramidal involvement or disorder of deep sensation, the drug efficacy and dose-response relationship were evident. Adverse reactions to the drug such as headache, feeling febrile and nausea were observed in 50% of the patients on 2 mg treatment, in 38% of those on 0.5 mg treatment and in 21% of those on placebo patient, however, discontinued treatment because of adverse reactions.
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PMID:Controlled trial of thyrotropin releasing hormone tartrate in ataxia of spinocerebellar degenerations. 641 82

We studied the dopaminergic control of TSH secretion in a patient with hyperthyroidism due to a TSH-secreting pituitary adenoma. A 34-yr-old previously thyroidectomized woman had mild clinical hyperthyroidism and a diffuse goiter without exophthalmos. She complained of headaches and had bitemporal hemianopsia. Serum T4 and T3 by RIA were elevated, and TSH was 112 microU/ml (normal range, 1.1-7.2). The alpha-subunit to TSH molar ratio was 1.7 (normal, less than 1), as reported in other patients with tumoral TSH hypersecretion. After TRH, a marked increase in TSH occurred. There was no evidence of pituitary deficiency. Skull x-rays and computerized axial tomography revealed an intrasellar tumor with suprasellar extension. Selective transsphenoidal adenomectomy was performed, and a pituitary tumor was removed. The tumor was almost entirely composed of cells reactive with antihuman beta TSH serum by indirect immunofluorescence. A unique feature of this patient was the marked increase in TSH levels after L-dopa administration. To our knowledge, this paradoxical response has never been reported previously in such patients. Using [3H]domperidone as ligand, dopaminergic receptors were demonstrated in the membranes of the adenomatous thyrotroph cells. The reason for the paradoxical response of TSH to dopaminergic agents is not known.
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PMID:Paradoxical response of thyrotropin to L-dopa and presence of dopaminergic receptors in a thyrotropin-secreting pituitary adenoma. 643 Sep 50

During the last four years 12 Prolactin (PRL) secreting adenomas whose first clinical manifestation appeared before the age of 15 years have been studied. The first signs were a decreased growth rate and arrest of pubertal development in 4 girls and 2 boys in whom the adenoma occurred before or during puberty. In the other six cases (5 girls and 1 boy) the first signs were secondary amenorrhea and galactorrhea in girls and in the boy gynecomastia followed by galactorrhea. Symptoms of the tumour (headaches, and visual disturbances) were almost invariable (11/12) and led to the diagnosis in two cases. Plasma PRL levels were always elevated (80 to more than 5,000 ng/ml) and did not rise in response to TRH. 11 out of 12 were large tumours and pituitary tomography showed that tumour was circumscribed in five cases and invasive in the other seven. The prognosis is related to the short term outcome. The condition may be cured by surgery only (25% cases only) or by surgery and bromocriptine.
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PMID:[Prolactin adenomas in children (author's transl)]. 739 49

Pituitary apoplexy is a rare but sometimes dramatic complication of pituitary tumors. We report the case of a 64-year-old man with a macroadenoma who complained of a sudden and intense headache after a dynamic TRH (200 micrograms) and GnRH (100 micrograms) test. Two days later, he presented an acute ophthalmoplegia with fever and deteriorating consciousness. Emergency CT scan showed contrast hypofixation compatible with necrosis of the adenoma. Surgical, tumoral decompression resolved quickly almost all symptoms. Immunohistochemical study of the tumor confirmed the diagnosis of gonadotropinoma. Several similar cases of pituitary apoplexy occurring after TRH or GnRH tests have been described the last ten years. As this test may sometimes confirm the diagnosis of gonadotropinoma, it should be performed with caution in cases of clinically non functioning pituitary macroadenoma.
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PMID:[Pituitary apoplexy of a gonadotrophinoma and TRH/GnRH tests. Literature review]. 763 32

The phenomenon of clinical improvement of diabetes mellitus after occurrence of pituitary insufficiency has been reported occasionally in the medical literature, as a human counterpart of Houssay's experiment with hypophysectomized diabetic animals. We report the case of a 76-year-old woman who developed diabetes in 1928, at the age of 14, and was treated with low doses of insulin. At the age of 29, during the 7th month of her second pregnancy, she suddenly developed severe headaches and soon afterwards an intense polyuria which subsided under treatment with posterior pituitary extract. Her pregnancy followed to term but uterine stimulants had to be used at delivery because of lack of contractions. She was unable to nurse her baby and a permanent amenorrhea ensued. She continued using the posterior pituitary powder for several years, after which she discontinued it without adverse effects. The dose of insulin was decreased gradually until its replacement by chloropropamide in 1967 and glibenclamide in 1970. The present dose of glibenclamide is 2.5 mg daily, on which she has occasional mild hypoglycemic reactions. When the medication was discontinued for 5 days glycemia rose to 450 mg/dl but responded immediately to 2.5 mg of the drug with a mild hypoglycemia. She never required thyroid hormone therapy. Glucocorticoid substitution was instituted recently because of evidence of mild adrenocortical insufficiency. Basal hormone levels were normal for thyroxin, thyrotropin, FSH, LH, prolactin, hGH and cortisol; the responses to pituitary stimulation with TRH and LHRH were subnormal or nil. Cortisol stimulation with ACTH was normal. Insulin levels rose moderately after stimulation with glucagon, and with glibenclamide, with simultaneous marked decrease in glycemia.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Houssay's phenomenon in man]. 820 16

Pituitary apoplexy has been reported as a rare complication of combined tests and of TRH administration in prolactinomas. A 54-year-old man with a pituitary macroadenoma had a single injection of 100 micrograms GnRH. Twenty minutes later he complained of increasing headache and vomited. These symptoms settled spontaneously and were attributed to the pharmacological effects of GnRH. Five hours later he was found to be blind and disorientated without spontaneous complaint. Emergency CT showed a large adenoma with central necrosis, consistent with pituitary apoplexy. An urgent surgical decompression was carried out and necrotic haemorrhagic debris removed. Baseline bloods revealed non-pulsatile FSH of 40 U/l with LH 0.3 U/l with no hormonal response to GnRH administration, but the sequence of events strongly suggests a causal relationship between this and pituitary apoplexy. To our knowledge this is the first time that GnRH administration has been associated with pituitary apoplexy of a glycoprotein secreting pituitary adenoma.
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PMID:Pituitary apoplexy and sudden blindness following the administration of gonadotrophin releasing hormone. 782 63

The case history of a 54-year-old male suffering from pituitary macroadenoma with suprasellar extension is reported. A TRH-test with 200 micrograms i.v. was followed by severe headache and vomiting after 60', and by development of ophthalmoplegia on the following day. Hyperdens patches on the CT scan showed haemorrhage into the tumor. A chromophobic adenoma with macroscopic and histological signs of haemorrhage was removed via the transsphenoidal route. In the postoperative period the ophthalmoplegia gradually disappeared but central hypoadrenia and hypothyroidism occurred. This is the second case in the literature showing that TRH alone and in a low dose may cause pituitary tumor apoplexy. It is concluded that TRH-testing is a risk for the patient with pituitary apoplexy. If, due to the size of the tumor the patients have to be operated on in any case, and the test is not of essential diagnostic value, the TRH-test should be done only in selected cases. Its use in the postoperative evaluation however is without risk for the patients.
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PMID:Apoplexy of a pituitary macroadenoma as a severe complication of preoperative thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH) testing. 928 12

Primary empty sella syndrome (ESS) is an anatomo-radiological picture characterized by the presence of an arachnoid herniation filled with liquor that compresses the pituitary against the sellar wall. ESS occurs particularly in obese, hypertensive, cephalgic women, it is often asymptomatic but it may be associated with ophthalmologic, neurologic and sometime non-characterizing endocrine disorders. We report here 71 cases of primary ESS observed and assessed during the last fourteen years. The following endocrinological diagnostic procedures were carried out: hormonal (RIA) basal profile: FT3, FT4, TSH, PRL, ACTH, FSH, LH, 8.00 a.m. and p.m. cortisolemia, Aldo, PRA, DHEA-S, FTe, E2, P, PTH, CT, and calcemia and phosphoremia; provocative tests: TRH, GnRH, insulin hypoglycemia, etc.; inhibition tests: "overnight" and high dose dexamethasone. Clinical, radiological (skull radiographs, CT and/or MRI) and ophthalmologic (fundus, visual fields) assessment were made. We found principally cephalgia (52/71: 73.2%), hypertension (42/71: 59.1%), obesity (47/71: 66.1%). But we found especially mental disorders (57/71: 80.2%), in our knowledge not previously reported in the literature, as anxiety or dysthymic disorders with behavioural disturbances (chiefly oral compulsion). We found endocrinopathies in 36/71 (50.7%), isolated or coexisting in some patients: hyperPRL (14%), hypopituitarism (10.4%), hypogonadism (7%), diabetes insipidus (2.8%), hyperACTH (1.4%), hypoGH (15.4%), pituitary adenomas (8.4%). Several hypothalamic illness show a clinical picture including mental disorders and obesity. The Authors hypothesize that the ESS may be a "new" hypothalamic syndrome (compression/stretching on hypophysis and/or hypophyseal stalk by arachnoidocele; disorder of some hormones and neurotransmitters as leptin, neuropeptide Y, orexins, POMC-derived peptides, etc).
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PMID:[Primary empty sella syndrome. Observations on 71 cases]. 1020 96

Pituitary apoplexy is the most serious and life-threatening complication of pituitary adenomas. Most of the cases occur spontaneously but it may occur also after a number of events such as the pituitary stimulation tests. We report a case of acromegaly due to a giant pituitary adenoma in which pituitary apoplexy developed 88 hours after TRH/GnRH stimulation test. The patient had severe headaches, nausea, vomiting, visual disturbance and mental alteration and the computed tomography (CT) scans revealed intratumoral and intraventricular bleeding. The pituitary mass was removed by transsphenoidal approach. The patient developed pneumonia and died on the 9th postoperative day. Pituitary apoplexy was confirmed at surgery and on histological examination. Immunohistochemical staining was positive for GH and PRL. This case indicates that pituitary apoplexy may develop several days after TRH/GnRH stimulation test.
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PMID:Pituitary apoplexy probably due to TRH and GnRH stimulation tests in a patient with acromegaly. 1090 71


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