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

Neurohumoral correlations of sleep are considered from three aspects: 1. Metabolism and cerebral blood circulation (CBF, EEG, endocranial pressure, cerebral temperature); 2. Neuromediators and neuropeptides (5-HT, hypnogen neuropeptides); 3. The influence of the sleeping-waking cycle on adeno-hypophyseal secretion rhythms (GH, PRL, LH, TSH). Variations of these parameters can play an important role in the onset of night crises of migraine and cluster headache.
Cephalalgia 1983 Aug
PMID:Pituitary secretions and wake-sleep cycle. 661 8

The circadian periodicity of some endocrine (PRL, cortisol, GH) and vegetative (oral temperature, blood pressure) functions has been studied in cluster headache, common migraine, atypical facial pain, and "mixed" headache. Changes in several biological rhythms have been found not only in cluster headache (CH) but also in other kinds of headache. Although a great individual variability of rhythometric changes has been observed, particularly in CH, the dysrhythmic condition seems to be more evident in chronic than in episodic CH. The clinical and chronobiological effects of lithium administration and of a short-term sleep deprivation have been studied in CH.
Cephalalgia 1983 Aug
PMID:Changes of biological rhythms in primary headache syndromes. 661 10

The authors reported a case of pneumocephalus induced by bromocriptine (Bc) treatment for a recurrent invasive prolactinoma. The patient was a 38-year old man, who had been treated for 12 years, with three times of craniotomies and two times of irradiation therapies. CT scan showed the recurrence of the tumor, which extended into bilateral middle fossa, left orbit and left cerebellopontine angle. Serum prolactin levels elevated to 35,200 ng/ml. Then Bc was administered in a dose of 5 mg/day. Serum PRL concentration fell to 2,090 ng/ml one month after the initiation of the treatment, when he complained of headache, nausea and vomiting. Since these symptoms were considered as the side effects of Bc, the dose was reduced to 2.5 mg/day. Three weeks later, plain craniograms showed marked pneumocephalus, while no tumor was found on CT scan. The administration of Bc was stopped and he was prescribed a complete rest for a month. The air was collected again when he began to walk around. Therefore, the transsphenoidal operation was performed in order to pack the sella turcica and sphenoid sinus with muscle pieces. Since the pneumocephalus could not be cured, the muscle, taken from the thigh, was spread throughout the left middle fossa by the front-temporal craniotomy. When Bc reduces the size of the invasive prolactinomas, the intra- and extra-cranial spaces may be communicated. The greatest care should be taken for pneumocephalus, CSF rhinorrhea and/or meningitis during the Bc treatment of prolactinomas.
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PMID:[Pneumocephalus induced by bromocriptine treatment in male prolactinoma--a case report]. 666 17

A double-blind cross-over study with Org OD 14 and placebo was performed in 82 menopausal patients presenting with hot flushes and associated symptoms. Patients were randomly allocated to Org OD 14 or placebo as first treatment, and switched to placebo or Org OD 14 as second treatment. Each treatment period lasted for 16 weeks; no wash-out period was introduced. Tablets containing 2.5 mg of Org OD 14 or matched placebo tablets were supplied. Data on the following variables were obtained and analysed by the non-parametric randomization test for paired observations: hot flushes, sweating, dizziness, palpitations, fatiguability, headache, sleeplessness, irritability, breathlessness, backache and loss of libido and, in 16 patients, on circulating levels of FSH, LH, PRL, T3, T4, cortisol (F), SHBG, TBG and CBG. Twenty patients (13 placebo, 7 Org OD 14) withdrew, because their symptoms did not improve and one patient withdrew for reasons unrelated to treatment, so that 61 patients completed the study. The data demonstrated a good clinical effect and statistically significant differences in favour of Org OD 14 for hot flushes and a number of associated symptoms. Many patients reported on a general feeling of well being and a mood-elevating effect following Org OD 14. Org OD 14 significantly suppressed FSH and LH levels, while those of PRL remained unchanged. Although there was slight suppression of TBG and T4 which attained statistical significance, there was no influence on the most important parameter, T3. SHBG levels were slightly suppressed, whereas F and CBG levels were unaffected.
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PMID:Placebo-controlled cross-over study of effects of Org OD 14 in menopausal women. 675 12

Therapy for large prolactinomas remains controversial. Surgery is often unsuccessful in restoring endocrine function to normal. However, medical therapy with bromocriptine, a dopamine agonist, not only suppresses PRL levels, but may also lead to a reduction in tumor size. Previous reports have demonstrated radiographic evidence of tumor regression only after 3 or more months of bromocriptine therapy. We have now documented, for the first time, objective evidence of extremely rapid reduction in tumor size in two patients harboring large PRL-secreting pituitary tumors (mean pretreatment serum PRL levels, 2350 and 3900 ng/ml) who were prospectively treated with bromocriptine (7.5 mg/day) in preference to surgical intervention despite marked visual impairment in one of the patients. After 2 and 6 weeks of therapy, respectively, marked reduction in tumor size was demonstrated radiographically in both patients. Headache, visual acuity, and visual fields had improved after only 3 days. Although the mechanism of bromocriptine's antitumor activity is unclear, we believe that a large prospective trial to study the effects of bromocriptine therapy on the size of PRL-secreting macroadenomas is urgently needed to determine whether medical therapy should become the primary modality of treatment to reduce tumor size as well as restore endocrine function.
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PMID:Rapid regression of pituitary prolactinomas during bromocriptine treatment. 677 72

25 patients with subcontinual primary headache were treated with Tiapride an Placebo in a controlled double-blind study. The duration of trial was 13 weeks. Blood samples were taken to value PRL in 10 patients and in 10 normal subjects. During the pharmacological trial no side-effects appeared. Authors refer results elaborated through statistical examinations. Tiapride is useful to reduce the frequency of the attacks (in 65% of the patients) with percentage of improvement statistically significant in comparison with placebo. Headache index appears influenced although in non statistically significant way.
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PMID:[Double-blind study of tiapride and placebo in patients with subcontinuous essential headache]. 704 24

A clinicopathological study of 56 pediatric patients with non-ACTH-secreting pituitary adenomas removed by a transsphenoidal neurosurgical approach was undertaken to better define the clinical presentation, to assess demographic factors, to determine the immunohistochemical staining characteristics of the tumors, and to evaluate the outcome of transsphenoidal surgical treatment and other adjuvant therapies. A separate analysis of prolactinoma patients was performed. All tumors were confirmed histologically and immunophenotyped for pituitary hormones. Forty-one patients had tumors that stained for PRL alone, eight patients had tumors that stained for PRL and GH, six patients had plurihormonal adenomas, and one patient had a tumor that stained for glycoprotein hormones. No tumors contained GH alone. Macroadenomas exceeded microadenomas (1.4:1). There were no male patients with microadenomas of any type. Females outnumbered males (3.3:1). Patients presented most frequently with headache, menstrual dysfunction (in females), galactorrhea, and hypopituitarism. All but one of the patients with hypopituitarism at presentation had macroadenomas. Tumor staining characteristics did not always correlate well with clinical status, especially with regard to GH-containing tumors. Pediatric pituitary tumors did not appear to be more invasive or more aggressive than adult pituitary tumors, contrary to some previous reports. The patients with microadenomas had a 70% operative cure rate and a 65% long term cure rate; the recurrence rate for microadenoma patients was 25%. Macroadenoma patients had a 33% operative cure rate, a 55% long term cure rate, and a recurrence rate of 33%. Thus, microadenoma and macroadenoma patients had similar long term cure rates, but macroadenoma patients required more aggressive adjuvant therapy (second surgery, radiation, or bromocriptine) and had higher rates of hypopituitarism (52% of macroadenoma patients vs. 0% of microadenoma patients required long term hormone replacement).
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PMID:Pituitary adenomas in childhood and adolescence. 752 27

The long-term efficacy and tolerability of CV 205-502, a non-ergot dopamine agonist with D-2 receptor affinity, were studied for up to 36 months in 16 patients with macroprolactinomas. Prolactin values were reduced in all cases, becoming either normalized or suppressed in 12. The pituitary tumor size was reduced in the 13 patients with an obvious tumor and visual function normalized in all six patients with initial defects. Concomitantly we observed improvement in gonadal function, galactorrhea, headache, libido and general well-being. Adverse reactions were experienced by 15 patients during dosage increment and caused one patient to discontinue the medication. Seven patients had persistent adverse effects which prohibited a dosage increase of CV 205-502, sufficient to normalize PRL levels in three. Two patients experienced serious adverse events, causing the discontinuation of treatment in one case. In eight patients treatment with CV 205-502 and bromocriptine could be compared. Three patients responded better to CV 205-502 than to bromocriptine treatment. Only one patient preferred bromocriptine to CV 205-502 for long-term treatment. We conclude that CV 205-502 is an effective and in most cases well-tolerated treatment for patients with macroprolactinomas. CV 205-502 is preferable to bromocriptine as an initial treatment and should also be tried in patients where treatment with bromocriptine has failed.
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PMID:Long-term treatment of macroprolactinomas with CV 205-502. 809 91

Cabergoline (CAB), a new, potent, and long-lasting PRL-lowering agent, was shown to be effective in tumoral hyperprolactinemia. The aim of this study was to investigate the effectiveness of CAB in patients with prolactinoma proven to be resistant to bromocriptine (BRC) and quinagolide (CV 205-502). Twenty-seven patients (19 macro- and 8 microprolactinomas) were treated with CAB at a weekly dose of 0.5-3 mg for 3-22 months. All patients were previously shown to be resistant to BRC, and 20 of them were resistant to CV 205-502 as well. Basal serum PRL levels before CAB treatment ranged from 108-3500 micrograms/L in macroprolactinomas and from 64-205 micrograms/L in microprolactinomas. Gonadal failure was present in all patients, whereas symptoms of tumor expansion, such as visual field defects and headache, were present in 10 of 27 patients. Eight macroprolactinomas had previously undergone surgery and/or radiotherapy. CAB treatment normalized serum PRL levels in 15 of 19 macroprolactinomas and in all 8 microprolactinomas. In 3 of the remaining 4 patients it caused a notable decrease in prolactinemia (89%, 80.5%, and 68.7% of the baseline). Only 1 patient was withdrawn from CAB therapy after 3 months at the weekly dose of 2 mg due to the absence of any significant clinical, hormonal, or radiological improvement. Gonadal function was restored in 18 of 27 patients, galactorrhea disappeared in 5 of 6 women, and headache improved in 7 of 8 patients. A significant tumor shrinkage was detected by computed tomography and/or magnetic resonance imaging in 9 macroprolactinomas and 4 microprolactinomas. CAB was well tolerated by all patients, except 6 who referred slight and short-lasting nausea, postural hypotension, abdominal pain, dizziness, and sleepiness at the beginning of treatment. In particular, CAB was well tolerated by 19 patients previously shown to be poorly tolerant to BRC and CV 205-502. In conclusion, CAB may represent, at the moment, the only successful therapy for prolactinoma-bearing patients resistant to BRC and CV 205-502, as it normalized PRL levels in 22 of 27 patients, reduced tumor size in 13 of 27 patients, and improved clinical symptoms in 25 of 27 patients in the present study.
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PMID:Prolactinomas resistant to standard dopamine agonists respond to chronic cabergoline treatment. 925 67

One hundred and twenty-four cases of lymphocytic adenohypophysitis have been reported since 1962. Nearly 60% of the cases in women involved inset of the disease in relation to pregnancy. Headache and visual field defects were the most frequent symptoms. Most patients showed signs of either isolated or multiple anterior pituitary hormone deficiency. ACTH secretion was impaired the most frequently, followed by TSH, gonadotropins, GH and PRL secretion. One third of the cases involved hyperprolactinemia. Tissue from patients with lymphocytic infundibuloneurohypophysitis, also suffering from DI, revealed lymphocytic inflammation limited to the infundibulum, stalk, and neurohypophysis. Twenty of these 124 lymphocytic adenohypophysitis patients developed DI before treatment, and neuroimaging studies revealed thickening of the pituitary stalk in some. At least in a few cases, chronic lymphocytic infiltration occurred in both the infundibuloneurohypophysitis and adenohypophysis. Although both lymphocytic adenohypophysitis and infundibuloneurohypophysitis may be caused by autoimmune disorders, the antigens involved may differ.
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PMID:Lymphocytic adenohypophysitis and lymphocytic infundibuloneurohypophysitis. 915 9


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