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

A patient with Addison's disease, treated with conventional hydrocortisone replacement, developed deep hyperpigmentation, headache and vomiting. Plasma adrenocorticotropin (ACTH) level was extremely high, showing abnormal diurnal rhythm. Suppression of ACTH with glucocorticoids was attenuated and the responses to ovine corticotropin-releasing hormone (oCRF) and lysine vasopressin (LVP) were absent. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) suggested an enlargement of the pituitary gland, while immunohistological examination of pituitary fragments obtained by transsphenoidal surgery revealed corticotroph hyperplasia without microadenoma. Postoperatively, plasma ACTH returned to normal and adequately responded to oCRF and LVP. Over the year since surgery, the symptoms have gradually improved and the patient has resumed normal activities.
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PMID:Inappropriate secretion of adrenocorticotropin from corticotroph hyperplasia in a case of Addison's disease. 217 Jul 22

Pituitary apoplexy is characterized by a wide spectrum of clinical features. A quite rare case of painless thyroiditis, hypopituitarism and central diabetes insipidus (DI) followed by pituitary apoplexy was presented. A 61-year-old woman was admitted to our hospital in May, 1986 because of marked general malaise, polydipsia and weight loss which became progressively worse. Four months earlier she had experienced episodes of abrupt onset of severe headache associated with nausea and blurring vision. Physical examinations revealed a fine tremor, dry skin and nervousness. The thyroid gland was not palpable. Visual fields were intact. Her blood pressure was 105/64 mmHg with variable tachycardia. The routine laboratory studies were normal or negative except for hypoalbuminemia, hypocholesterolemia and hypernatremia. Erythrocyte sedimentation rate was 12 mm/hr. An impairment in corticotropin secretion was suspected from the low plasma cortisol and the low urinary excretion of 17-OHCS and the sufficient response to ACTH. Basal levels of GH and gonadotropin were also low, and responses to the stimulation tests (Insulin-stress, L-DOPA, and LH-RH) were all blunted. Brain computed tomographic scan and magnetic resonance imaging demonstrated a suprasellar mass that, after infusion, developed peripheral ring-like enhancement and large hyperintense pituitary mass, respectively. A diagnosis of pituitary apoplexy with anterior pituitary failure was made. However, the initial levels of thyroid hormones showed elevated as follows: Free T3 7.6 pg/ml, Free T4 3.3 ng/dl and T3-resin uptake 41.1%. TSH responses to TRH were all suppressed. TSH receptor antibody (TBII) was negative. Both antithyroglobulin and antimicrosomal antibodies were repeatedly positive. A thyroid scan with 99mTc revealed no uptake in the thyroid area. These findings led us to the diagnosis of "painless autoimmune thyroiditis". She had become hypothyroid without any medication. At that time radioactive 99mTc and 123I uptakes increased significantly. When hydrocortisone was substituted, daily urine output abruptly increased to about 10 liters with low osmolality, and the presence of DI was suspected. This diagnosis was confirmed by water deprivation and hypertonic saline infusion tests and subsequent pitressin test. She is currently quite well on L-thyroxine, hydrocortisone and desmopressin (1988). This association with pituitary apoplexy must be a rare occurrence, as a literature search has failed to find a similar case. The pathogenetic trigger of "painless thyroiditis" in this case may be responsible for some immunological change due to secondary adrenal insufficiency after pituitary apoplexy.
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PMID:[An unusual association of transient resolving thyrotoxicosis due to painless thyroiditis, hypopituitarism and central diabetes insipidus associated with spontaneous pituitary apoplexy]. 230 57

In this study we have examined the results of salmon calcitonin treatment on migraine pain. The mechanism by which calcitonin induces analgesia is still not understood. We observed the effect of a 5-day treatment with salmon calcitonin (IM 100 IU/day) on circulating levels of beta-endorphin, ACTH, and cortisol in 20 patients with migraine during the headache-free period. All 3 hormones were increased after the calcitonin administration and the maximum increase was obtained in beta-endorphin levels. There were significant statistical correlations between beta-endorphin, ACTH, and cortisol levels determined before and after calcitonin treatment.
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PMID:Treatment of migraine with salmon calcitonin: effects on plasma beta-endorphin, ACTH and cortisol levels. 256 Apr 8

A markedly cushingoid 32-year-old man presented to Queens Hospital Center with headache, hyperpigmentation, and visual field loss. Twelve years earlier, he had undergone subtotal adrenalectomy for Cushing's disease, but symptoms of hypercortisolemia promptly recurred. Workup revealed the presence of a large, expanding intrasellar mass, plasma ACTH levels between 3,000 and 10,000 pg/ml, and markedly elevated cortisol levels. The secretion of ACTH (mainly ACTH 1-39-like peptide) by the pituitary tumor showed neither diurnal periodicity nor response to a variety of pharmacologic agents known to affect ACTH secretion. The patient demonstrates a rarely observed presentation of Nelson's syndrome, with aggressive adrenotropic pituitary tumor growth even in the presence of chronic hypercortisolemia.
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PMID:Development of Nelson's syndrome in a patient with recurrent Cushing's disease. Analysis of secretory behavior of the pituitary tumor. 284 51

Plasma levels of beta-endorphin and ACTH were measured during and outside migraine attacks in 17 patients with common migraine and 11 patients with classic migraine. Specific radioimmunoassays for beta-endorphin and ACTH were used. The beta-endorphin assay did not cross-react with beta-lipotropin. In common migraine, median plasma beta-endorphin was 3.3 pmol/l (95% confidence limits: 2.5-4.0 pmol/l) during attacks and 2.9 (2.4-3.2) pmol/l in the headache-free period. In classic migraine, plasma beta-endorphin was 3.2 (1.4-4.3) pmol/l during attacks and 2.4 (1.1-3.6) pmol/l outside attacks. ACTH plasma levels were 15 (10.5-20) pmol/l during and 15.7 (13.4-17) pmol/l outside attacks in common migraine. In classic migraine, plasma ACTH was 16 (7-36) pmol/l and 12.3 (8-28) pmol/l respectively. No significant differences were found between attacks and headache-free periods in common or classic migraine. Accordingly, we could not add evidence to the theory of a dysfunction of the endogenous opioid system in migraine.
Cephalalgia 1985 Sep
PMID:Beta-endorphin and ACTH in plasma during attacks of common and classic migraine. 299 87

The short, overnight, metyrapone test with plasma ACTH and beta-endorphin (beta-EP) determination has been performed in patients with migraine, other forms of headache, and healthy volunteers. A rise in plasma ACTH and beta-EP after metyrapone occurred in all investigated subjects. The rate of increase varied greatly from one individual to the other, but no significant differences between the mean values of plasma ACTH and beta-EP in different groups of headache patients and volunteers were observed. Three months of nadolol therapy in migraine patients caused a significant increase in plasma ACTH and decrease in beta-EP concentrations. Findings support the view that migraine patients do not have a primary dysfunction of the hypothalamus-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis as demonstrated by methods currently in use.
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PMID:The short metyrapone test in chronic headache patients. 303 4

Flunarizine, a Ca-antagonist with demonstrated antimigraine properties, and indoprofen, an anti-inflammatory non-steroidal agent, were used in the treatment of daily chronic headache. Forty-two migraineurs with interval headache (MIH) were treated with flunarizine in a 6-month open trial, while indoprofen was administered to 23 patients with MIH and 7 with chronic tension headache (CTH) in a 2-month, double-blind, cross-over placebo-controlled study. Flunarizine was found effective in over 65% of the patients, while indoprofen was able to improve headache severity in only 30% of the subjects. In the responder patients, the effectiveness of both drugs is more pronounced in MIH, and seems to be ascribable to the ability of the treatments to reduce number and severity of attacks. A higher incidence of previous affective disturbances is found in non-responsive cases. The analysis of factors converting episodic into chronic headache shows slight but not significant differences between responders and non-responders. An impairment of plasma beta-endorphin levels, in the presence of normal ACTH, cortisol and nociceptive RIII threshold values, characterizes daily chronic headache (DCH) patients. Moreover, indoprofen does not significantly affect these biological and neurophysiological parameters independently of the therapeutic response.
Cephalalgia 1985 May
PMID:Antimigraine drugs in the management of daily chronic headaches: clinical profiles of responsive patients. 401 38

The mechanism of the circadian hormonal secretions is still obscure. The cyclic activity of the hypothalamus-ACTH-adrenal (H-A-A) axis is perhaps the most studied. ACTH derives with other peptides from a common precursor, proopiomelanocortin. ACTH secretion is under inhibitory and stimulatory influences. The inhibitory influence is mediated by the negative feed-back of adrenal corticosteroids and by the short loop feed-back of ACTH on its own secretion. The stimulatory influence is exerted by the hypothalamic corticotropin releasing factor (CRF), recently isolated in the ovine hypothalamus. CRF is regulated by various neurotransmitttttorial activities. Serotonin and acetylcholine play a stimulatory role, while dopamine and norepinephrine, in particular, seem to exert an inhibitory tonic control. The increased ACTH secretion in stress-response seems to be mediated by a reduction of this tone. However, the neurotransmitorial modifications involved in the rhythmic secretion of the H-A-A axis are still obscure. So chrononeuroendocrine study of the H-A-A axis in various psychoneuroendocrine diseases is of great interest in clearing up the neurotransmitorial mechanisms of this rhythm. Primary depression represents an interesting model being characterized by monoaminergic neurotransmitorial alterations. We have observed in this pathology an increase of the H-A-A axis activity and an alteration of the circadian cortisol profile characterized by an increase both in numeric and quantitative secretory bursts.
Cephalalgia 1983 Aug
PMID:Chrononeuroendocrine perspectives of ACTH and related peptides. 613 88

In order to clarify the mechanism of the analgesic effect of ceruletide (CRL), the peptides B-endorphin (BE), ACTH, prolactin (PRL), growth hormone (GH) and substance P were determined in the basal state and following IV CRL administration in 11 patients. CRL, at the dose of 2 ng/kg/min, significantly augmented BE levels in the plasma, and in CSF. Substance P levels were significantly augmented by CRL in the plasma, while ACTH levels were significantly augmented in CSF. GH and PRL levels were not affected by CRL. Placebo had no effect on any of the measured peptides. The effect of CRL on mood and anxiety, known to be affected by opioids, was studied in 14 patients with psychogenic headache. The effect of histamine induced headache on State trait anxiety inventory and on Mood adjective check list was studied before and after administration of placebo or CRL. CRL significantly diminished anxiety when compared to placebo. Elation, surgency and egotism were significantly augmented while skepticism was significantly diminished by CRL. The CRL effect on mood and pain may be mediated by augmented levels of neurohormones both in the plasma and in CSF.
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PMID:Effect of ceruletide on pituitary-hypothalamic peptides and on emotion in man. 617 96

A young woman developed intermittent headaches and progressive hyperpigmentation after bilateral adrenalectomy for Cushing's disease. Results of sellar polytomography were abnormal. Her plasma ACTH levels increased to 4750-7340 pg/ml and did not rise with insulin-induced hypoglycemia. Although she experienced no clinical features associated with spontaneous infarction of a pituitary tumor, plasma ACTH levels fell to 474-575 pg/ml, and hemorrhagic necrosis was found in a 5-mm chromophobe adenoma at transsphenoidal surgery. Postoperatively, ACTH levels returned to normal (51-88 pg/ml), with the rest of her anterior pituitary function remaining intact 4 yr later. Spontaneous infarction of pituitary microadenomas may be subclinical, resulting in improvement of pituitary hormone hypersecretion without impairment of other anterior pituitary hormone secretion.
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PMID:Silent pituitary apoplexy: subclinical infarction of an adrenocorticotropin-producing pituitary adenoma. 625 8


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