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Query: UMLS:C0018681 (
headache
)
56,091
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
25 patients with sub-perennial idiopathic
headache
were given tiapride or a placebo in a double-blind controlled trial, over thirteen weeks. Tiapride was given orally in a dosage of 300 mg per day. Blood was drawn in 10 patients and 10 healthy controls for blood
prolactin
determination. No significant side-effects were recorded during the trial. Statistical analysis of the results is reported. Tiapride proved effective in reducing the frequency of
headache
(in 65% of patients), with an improvement rate which was statistically significant in comparison to the placebo. The drug seems to improve the
headache
index itself, although the difference was not statistically significant; however, the number of patients was small.
...
PMID:[Double-blind trial of tiapride versus placebo in patients with sub-perennial idiopathic headache]. 630 51
Endogenous hyperprolactinaemia induced by anterior pituitary transplantation under the kidney capsule has been found to reduce the behavioural responsiveness to electrical footshock and to increase morphine-induced analgesia. The apparent analgesic effect of
prolactin
has been related to the stimulation of nigro-striatal dopaminergic transmission, as suggested by the increase in striatal dopamine turnover observed in hyperprolactinaemic rats. It seems likely that central opiate system is involved in the behavioural effects of
prolactin
. Thus, naloxone prevents the effects of hyperprolactinaemia on footshock responsiveness and heroin self-administration is decreased in hyperprolactinaemic rats.
Cephalalgia
1983 Aug
PMID:Role of prolactin-opiate interactions in the central regulation of pain threshold. 631 24
Growth hormone and
prolactin
levels and their response to various stimuli were studied in patients with cluster
headache
. All the endocrine responses evaluated were normal.
...
PMID:Endocrinological responses in cluster headache. 641 80
During a systematic study of women with idiopathic galactorrhea, we observed several patients with normal random serum
prolactin
(
PRL
) levels and normal menses, but abnormal sellar tomograms characteristic of a pituitary adenoma. To test the hypothesis that these women might have intermittent
PRL
hypersecretion, we studied
PRL
secretion by sampling blood every half hour for 24 h in 10 patients and for 17.5 h in another, and compared the findings to those of a group of 5 normal women. The mean 24-h
PRL
of the 10 patients (16.8 +/- 7.8 ng/ml; mean +/- SD) was not significantly different from that of the normal women (13.6 +/- 3.2 ng/ml), and each patient showed a normal sleep-associated
PRL
increment. Three individuals exhibited an abnormally elevated 24-h
PRL
(greater than 20 ng/ml). Increased
PRL
secretion occurred primarily at night or in the afternoon. Thyrotropin releasing hormone (TRH) administration caused normal or exaggerated
PRL
responses in all patients tested. High resolution CT scanning of two of the hypersecretors suggested a microadenoma in one case. In another case whose
PRL
was normal over 17.5 h, transsphenoidal surgery, carried out because of the tomographic findings and the symptom of
headaches
, demonstrated a 5-mm chromophobe adenoma that did not contain
PRL
by immunohistochemistry. Postoperatively the galactorrhea persisted. We conclude that most women with galactorrhea, normal
PRL
, normal menses, and abnormal tomograms have normal
PRL
secretion. However, a minority of patients with this syndrome do demonstrate intermittent
PRL
hypersecretion. The etiology of intermittent
PRL
hypersecretion and its relevance to galactorrhea have not been determined.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Twenty-four-hour prolactin secretory patterns in women with galactorrhea, normal menses, normal random prolacting levels and abnormal sellar tomograms. 643 70
In a 32 year old woman harboring a macroprolactinoma with supra and laterosellar extension, bromocriptine was able to reduce the size of the tumor and the very high circulating levels of
prolactin
, restoring ovulatory menstrual cycles. At the 8th week of a not recommended pregnancy, the patient presented bitemporal superior quadrantopsia and
headache
. After reinstitution of bromocriptine therapy the woman showed a rapid improvement of neuroophtalmological complications. The treatment was continued till the delivery; a normal baby was born.
...
PMID:[Bromocriptine therapy from the 2d month of pregnancy induces regression of neuro-ophthalmologic complications caused by macroprolactimona]. 646 9
Plasma levels and urinary excretion of the dopamine agonist, transdihydrolisuride (TDHL), were measured by radioimmunoassay in healthy male volunteers given TDHL 50 micrograms i.v. and oral doses of 200, 400 and 800 micrograms. Plasma
prolactin
was also measured by radioimmunoassay. Following i.v. injection, the concentration of TDHL declined with a half-life of 37 +/- 19 min. The total clearance was 38 +/- 27 ml/min/kg and the apparent volume of distribution was 1.3 +/- 0.41/kg. The bioavailability of oral TDHL was proportional to the dose; after 200, 400 and 800 micrograms the bioavailability was 20 +/- 25%, 31 +/- 24% and 48 +/- 26%. TDHL was almost totally metabolized and less than 0.5% of the dose was excreted unchanged in urine in 24 h. Plasma
prolactin
levels were depressed by 66 +/- 15%, 75 +/- 11% and 80 +/- 7% after TDHL 200 micrograms, 400 micrograms and 800 micrograms. The effect lasted for more than 12 h after the lowest dose and for more than 24 h after 400 and 800 micrograms. Side effects, mainly nausea and
headache
, only occurred at the two highest dose levels.
...
PMID:Pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of the ergot derivative, transdihydrolisuride, in man. 651 Apr 62
The temporal organization of plasma melatonin, cortisol, growth hormone (GH) and
prolactin
secretion was examined in healthy rested controls and in patients suffering from episodic cluster
headache
. Eleven patients with typical cluster
headache
(10 men, 1 female) and 8 male controls were studied over a 24-h period: blood was collected at 2-h intervals during the day and at 1-h intervals at night. Plasma melatonin, cortisol, GH and
prolactin
levels were determined by radioimmunoassay. Most of the cluster
headache
patients showed a decrease in nocturnal melatonin secretion and the melatonin rhythm was even completely abolished in one patient. Chronobiological analysis of the cluster
headache
patients' 24-h plasma melatonin profile showed a significant decrease in amplitude and mesor: these were 58.7 pg/ml and 34.4 pg/ml respectively in control subjects, versus 18.7 pg/ml and 17.6 pg/ml for the patients. In addition, patients showed a significant phase-advance in their melatonin rhythm. For cortisol, the rhythm appeared slightly blunted in the cluster
headache
group and was significantly phase-advanced. The plasma
prolactin
profile showed no significant alteration, but for plasma GH the nocturnal peak was advanced in some patients; in the absence of sleep recording, however, no conclusion could be drawn. Results from this study suggest a neuroendocrine dysregulation in cluster
headache
in the endogenous clock which controls the pineal rhythmicity.
Cephalalgia
1984 Dec
PMID:A chronobiological study of melatonin, cortisol growth hormone and prolactin secretion in cluster headache. 651 1
A 28-year-old man was admitted to the Kyushu University Hospital with an episode of severe
headache
. When driving a car, he suddenly developed severe
headache
and this was followed by nausea and vomiting. he had been quite well except for slightly decreased libido before this episode. On admission, he showed galactorrhea. The pubic and axillary hairs appeared normal and the development of the external genital organs seemed normal. However, the movement of the sperma was decreased. Ophthalmologic examination was negative. Endocrinological studies revealed hyperprolactinemia of 697 ng/ml, and the serum
prolactin
level was suppressed by bromocriptine and L-DOPA loading test. The serum testosterone level was 282 ng/dl. Growth hormone and gonadotropin levels were normal. Plain films of the skull and tomograms of the sella showed double floor and slight ballooning. CT scan showed an isodensity mass in and above the sella, and this mass was slightly enhanced with contrast media. The suprasellar extension was better demonstrated by metrizamide cisternography and CT. The diagnosis of prolactinoma was made, and a radical removal of the tumor was done through the transsphenoidal route. During surgery, dark reddish fluid was aspirated in an amount of 1.8 ml. Histologically the tumor was chromophobe adenoma, and immunohistochemical stain revealed
prolactin
granules in the majority of the tumor cells. Postoperative serum
prolactin
level decreased to 150 ng/ml and finally returned to normal by administration of 2.5 mg of bromocriptine. The serum testosterone level was slightly elevated. The movement of the sperma showed no improvement. There were no postoperative complications such as hypopituitarism and CSF rhinorrhea. The usefulness of combination therapy of operation and medication with bromocriptine was suggested.
...
PMID:[A case of prolactinoma with galactorrhea in man]. 654 Mar 73
Ergot derivatives are the most effective compounds in the treatment of migraine attacks. It has been proposed that these compounds exert this effect by direct action on skull arteries or arteriovenous anastomoses, or by interfering with peripheral or central serotonin receptors. It is also possible that these compounds influence monoaminergic neurotransmission and, thereby, endorphins modulating the threshold for pain or sensory perception. In testing these hypotheses, changes in receptor sensitivity or function have to be considered since we have observed simultaneous tolerance and supersensitivity development in the same animal treated chronically with lisuride. We therefore propose that ergot derivatives can reduce the well documented higher sensitivity of migraine sufferers to various stimuli. In humans,
prolactin
-levels can be used for determining bioavailability of some ergot derivatives and for studying whether dopaminergic mechanism plays a role in their antimigraine effect.
Cephalalgia
1983 Aug
PMID:Influence of ergot derivatives on prolactin secretion in rats. Mechanisms of action and clinical implications. 661 95
Prolactin-secreting pituitary adenoma is a common cause of gynecologic problems that include oligomenorrhea, infertility, amenorrhea and galactorrhea. Diagnosis requires a combination of endocrine testing and radiologic evaluation. The diagnosis of macroadenomas is usually straightforward and these large tumors may be associated with mass effects such as severe
headache
, nerve palsies or visual changes. Microadenomas may be more subtle in presentation, and the diagnosis of hyperprolactinemia without radiologic evidence of a tumor frequently is problematic. The management of
prolactin
-secreting adenoma remains controversial, with no clear consensus or indication for surgical versus medical treatment. Surgical intervention is a realistic option for those patients who have access to an experienced neurosurgeon and who have tumor characteristics that offer a reasonable hope for cure. Many questions remain to be answered, including the cause, natural history of development and the optimum treatment for individual cases.
...
PMID:Prolactin-secreting pituitary adenomas. 665 90
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