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Query: UMLS:C0019621 (
Langerhans cell histiocytosis
)
3,250
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Hypothalamic lesions occasionally lead to excessive hypernatraemia and hyperosmolarity which cannot be explained by defective ADH secretion alone. As osmoregulation is a complex system the clinical features differ widely from one patient to another. In general central dysregulation of osmolarity is due to diffuse hypothalamic lesions, e.g. inflammatory inflammatory infiltration by
histiocytosis X
or by large suprasellar tumours. We report on a ten-year-old girl suffering from a suprasellar spongioblastoma and a twelve-year-old-girl, who had been operated for a large
craniopharyngioma
. Polyuria and polydipsia were not present. Whereas one patient presented hypernatraemic crises and showed normal osmolarity at the intervals, the other patient suffered from sustained hypernatraemia and hyperosmolarity. In the first patient water loading led promptly to clinical and laboratory normalisation. In the other case water loading failed to decrease hyperosmolarity but led to oedema. In the first patient hypernatraemic crises were combined with decreased serum potassium levels and elevated urinary aldosterone excretion. Therefore acute and long-term trials of spironolactone treatment were successful. Exogenous ADH-derivatives failed to normalize hyperosmolarity. In the other patient, however, DDAVP decreased the serum sodium level seen with small doses.
...
PMID:[Hypothalamic hyperosmolarity in childhood (author's transl)]. 31 68
The posterior pituitary lobe and stalk were studied by magnetic resonance imaging in 20 children with diabetes insipidus of different origins: primary familial autosomal dominant (n = 2) or idiopathic (n = 2), and secondary to
craniopharyngioma
(n = 6, resected in 5), to
Langerhans cell histiocytosis
(n = 5), to excessive water intake (dipsogenic; n = 3), to renal vasopressin insensitivity (n = 1), and to osmoreceptor dysfunction (n = 1). Of the four children with primary diabetes insipidus, the posterior bright signal was recognizable in two with the familial autosomal dominant form and one with the idiopathic form; in the latter, the pituitary stalk was thin, while it was normal in the first two patients; no posterior hyperintense signal with enlarged and gadolinium-enhanced pituitary stalk was observed in the fourth. The posterior hyperintense signal was absent without evidence of ectopic posterior pituitary tissue regeneration in five children with surgically removed
craniopharyngioma
and was doubtful in the child with unresected
craniopharyngioma
; the stalk was unrecognizable in all patients. In the five children with Langherans cell histiocytosis, the posterior bright signal was absent, while the stalk was normal in two and unexpectedly enlarged in three (uniformly in two and mainly at the level of median eminence and hypothalamus in one). All five patients with dipsogenic or nephrogenic diabetes insipidus or osmoreceptor dysfunction had normal images of posterior pituitary lobe and stalk. Normal posterior pituitary bright signal and stalk were found in all 25 healthy control children. Plasma vasopressin was undetectable in all patients except in nephrogenic one, in the child with osmoreceptor dysfunction, and in two of three dipsogenic children, the third mimicking partial neurogenic diabetes insipidus.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Correlation between magnetic resonance imaging of posterior pituitary and neurohypophyseal function in children with diabetes insipidus. 154 43
Five cases of central diabetes insipidus demonstrate the potential of MRI to explore the hypothalamohypophysial axis. The diversity of the detected pathologies are illustrated: abnormal signal of the posterior pituitary in an idiopathic diabetes insipidus, lobar prosencephaly, malignant teratoma (embryonal carcinoma),
histiocytosis X
,
craniopharyngioma
.
...
PMID:[Contribution of MRI in 5 cases of central diabetes insipidus]. 217 Sep 28
CT and MR imaging findings of 57 sphenoidal masses were retrospectively reviewed to assess the possibility of differential diagnosis between them. Various kinds of masses such as pituitary adenoma, epipharyngeal cancer, mucocele, chordoma, chondroma, chondrosarcoma, distant metastasis, multiple myeloma, fibrous dysplasia,
craniopharyngioma
, hemangiopericytoma, giant cell tumor, primary sphenoidal cancer, malignant melanoma, leukemia,
histiocytosis X
, and giant cell tumor were included in this series. CT scanning was performed in all cases, while MR images were obtained in 48 cases using a spin-echo pulse sequence. The relative density of the masses, bony changes and calcification were evaluated on CT, and on MR images, signal intensity of the masses relative to the normal gray matter, contrast enhancement and extension/contour were evaluated. Although no single feature appeared to be specific to the masses, detection of calcification on CT, identification of the normal pituitary gland as deformed or displaced on T1-weighted images, signal intensity on T2-weighted images, and extension of the masses seemed to be useful and should be examined in terms of their ability to assist in differential diagnosis. Finally, accommodative classification of sphenoidal masses primarily based on presumed origin or mode of extension was attempted.
...
PMID:[CT and MR imaging findings of sphenoidal masses]. 807 65
The most common indication for the use of radiation therapy in the treatment of benign central nervous system disease is for the treatment of benign brain tumors, such as meningioma, pituitary adenoma, acoustic neuroma, arteriovenous malformation, and
craniopharyngioma
. Other less common benign intracranial tumors treated with radiation include chordoma, pilocytic astrocytoma, pineocytoma, choroid-plexus papilloma, hemangioblastoma, and temporal bone chemodectomas. Benign conditions, such as
histiocytosis X
, trigeminal neuralgia, and epilepsy, are also amenable to radiation treatment. There have also been reports of radiosurgery being used for the treatment of movement disorders and psychiatric disturbances, such as obsessive-compulsive and anxiety disorders. For benign brain tumors, radiation therapy as either primary or adjuvant therapy plays an integral role in improving local control. In the treatment of trigeminal neuralgia, epilepsy, tremor, and some psychiatric disturbances, radiosurgery may help ameliorate or eliminate some symptoms. Patients with benign central nervous system disease are expected to live a long time. As such, treatment should be highly conformal and based on three-dimensional planning using magnetic resonance imaging, computed tomography, or both. It is critical that damage to normal brain be minimized.
...
PMID:Radiation therapy for benign central nervous system disease. 1009 4
Central diabetes insipidus (DI) can be the outcome of a number of diseases that affect the hypothalamic-neurohypophyseal axis. The causes of the condition can be classified as traumatic, inflammatory, or neoplastic. Traumatic causes include postoperative sella or transection of the pituitary stalk, while infectious or inflammatory causes include meningitis, lymphocytic hypophysitis, and granulomatous inflammations such as sarcoidosis and Wegener's granulomatosis. Various neoplastic conditions such as germinoma,
Langerhans cell histiocytosis
, metastasis, leukemic infiltration, lymphoma, teratoma, pituitary adenoma,
craniopharyngioma
, Rathke cleft cyst, hypothalamic glioma, and meningioma are also causes of central DI. In affected patients, careful analysis of these MR imaging features and correlation with the clinical manifestations can allow a more specific diagnosis, which is essential for treatment.
...
PMID:MR imaging of central diabetes insipidus: a pictorial essay. 1175 30
We evaluated the GH-releasing effect of GHRH plus arginine (ARG) in 36 patients (22 males and 14 females) with acquired GH deficiency including idiopathic inflammatory pituitary stalk thickness (n = 15),
Langerhans cell histiocytosis
(
LCH
) affecting the hypothalamic-pituitary area (n = 11), and
craniopharyngioma
(n = 10). All of the patients (mean age, 9.6 +/- 3.1 yr; range, 5.6-20.8) showed GH response less than 10 microg/liter after 2 pharmacological stimuli and were tested with GHRH plus ARG at a mean age of 11.2 +/- 4.1 yr. Twenty-nine patients had vasopressin deficiency, 10 had TSH deficiency, 8 had gonadotropin deficiency, and 4 had ACTH deficiency. The median peak GH response to insulin test was 2.1 microg/liter (range, 1.1-2.9), whereas it was 1.5 microg/liter (range, 1.3-2.4) after ARG. The median peak GH response to insulin was significantly lower in the patients with
craniopharyngioma
(1.4 microg/liter; range, 0.8-1.7) than in the patients with idiopathic pituitary stalk thickness (2.2 microg/liter; range, 1.0-2.4) or with
LCH
(2.6 microg/liter; range 2.0-4.3, P = 0.02). The median peak GH response to ARG was significantly lower in the patients with idiopathic inflammatory pituitary stalk thickness (1.3 microg/liter; range, 0.8-1.8) than in those with
craniopharyngioma
(1.5 microg/liter; range, 1.1-1.6) or with
LCH
(2.8 microg/liter; range, 1.9-3.2, P = 0.00007). The median peak GH response after GHRH plus ARG was significantly lower in the overall patient population (8.3 microg/liter; range, 4.4-28.4) than in the age-matched controls (49.8 microg/liter; range, 39.9-81.6, P < 0.00001). The median peak GH response was significantly lower in the patients with
craniopharyngioma
(4.6 microg/liter; range, 3.6-6.3) than in those with
LCH
(8.9 microg/liter; range, 4.4-28.4) or with idiopathic pituitary stalk thickness (12.6 microg/liter, range, 6.4-24, P = 0.07). Ten patients had a GH response of more than 20 microg/liter after GHRH plus ARG. There was a trend toward a decrease in peak GH response to GHRH plus ARG (r = -0.57, P = 0.06) as patient age increased. For cut-off values of 20 microg/liter, the sensitivity of GHRH plus ARG was 75% (95% CI, 57.8-87.9%) and the specificity was 96.4% (95% CI, 89.9-99.2%); whereas, for cut-off values of 24.2 microg/liter, sensitivity was 86.1% (95% CI, 70.5-95.3%), and specificity was 95.2% (95% CI, 88.2-98.7%). The median IGF-I level did not differ between the children with idiopathic pituitary stalk thickness (57 microg/liter; range, 46-68), those with
LCH
(55 microg/liter; range, 34-63), and those with
craniopharyngioma
(41 microg/liter; range, 39-49). The present study confirmed the diagnostic potential of the GHRH-plus-ARG test in children with acquired GH deficiency caused by hypothalamic-pituitary lesion. It stimulates GH secretion to a greater extent in those patients with GH deficiency with primary involvement of the hypothalamic area, e.g. patients with idiopathic pituitary stalk thickness or
LCH
, than in those with both hypothalamic and pituitary lesion, as in
craniopharyngioma
. In some patients, the GHRH-plus-ARG test stimulates GH response to a so-called: normal value, suggesting that pituitary responsiveness to GHRH plus ARG may fail to recognize acquired GHD. Finally, the number of pituitary hormone deficits and the patient's age affect the GH response to GHRH plus ARG.
...
PMID:GHRH plus arginine in the diagnosis of acquired GH deficiency of childhood-onset. 1205 Feb 43
Diabetes insipidus is a heterogeneous condition characterized by polyuria and polydipsia caused by a lack of secretion of vasopressin, its physiological suppression following excessive water intake, or kidney resistance to its action. In many patients, it is caused by the destruction or degeneration of the neurons that originate in the supraoptic and paraventricular nuclei of the hypothalamus. Known causes of these lesions include: germinoma or
craniopharyngioma
;
Langerhans cell histiocytosis
and sarcoidosis of the central nervous system; local inflammatory, autoimmune or vascular diseases; trauma following surgery or accident; and, rarely, genetic defects in vasopressin biosynthesis inherited as autosomal dominant or X-linked recessive traits. Thirty to fifty percent of cases are considered idiopathic. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) allows identification of the posterior pituitary hyperintensity and of hypothalamic-pituitary abnormalities. Thickening of the pituitary stalk is the second most common finding on MRI scans in several local inflammatory pathologies and autoimmune diseases or germinoma, but it is not specific to any single subtype. A progressive increase in the size of the anterior pituitary gland should alert physicians to the possibility that a germinoma is present, whereas a decrease can suggest the presence of an inflammatory or autoimmune process. Most children with acquired central diabetes insipidus and a thickened pituitary stalk have anterior pituitary hormone deficiencies during follow-up. Biopsy of enlarged pituitary stalk should be reserved for patients with a hypothalamic-pituitary mass and progressive thickening of the pituitary stalk, since spontaneous recovery may occur.
...
PMID:Diabetes insipidus. 1256 20
Diabetes insipidus is a heterogeneous condition characterised by polyuria and polydipsia caused by a lack of secretion of vasopressin, its physiological suppression following excessive water intake, or kidney resistance to its action. The clinical and laboratory diagnosis is confirmed by standard tests, but recent advances in molecular biology and imaging techniques have shed new light on the pathophysiology of this disease. In many patients, central diabetes insipidus is caused by a germinoma or
craniopharyngioma
;
Langerhans' cell histiocytosis
and sarcoidosis of the central nervous system; local inflammatory, autoimmune or vascular diseases; trauma from surgery or accident; and, rarely, genetic defects in vasopressin biosynthesis inherited as autosomal dominant or X-linked recessive traits. Thirty to fifty percent of cases are considered idiopathic. Tumour-associated central diabetes insipidus is uncommon in children younger than 5 years old. Biopsy of enlarged pituitary stalk should be reserved for patients with hypothalamic-pituitary mass and progressive thickening of the pituitary stalk since spontaneous recovery may occur. Molecular biology in selected patients may identify those with apparently idiopathic diabetes insipidus carrying the vasopressin-neurophysin II gene mutation.
...
PMID:Current perspective on the pathogenesis of central diabetes insipidus. 1612 39
Central diabetes insipidus is the end result of a number of different diseases that affect the hypothalamic-neurohypophyseal system. In many patients, especially children and young adults, it is caused by the destruction or degeneration of neurons that originate in the supraoptic and paraventricular nuclei of the hypothalamus. The known causes of these lesions include germinoma or
craniopharyngioma
;
Langerhans cell histiocytosis
; local inflammatory, autoimmune or vascular diseases; trauma resulting from surgery or an accident; sarcoidosis; metastases; and midline cerebral and cranial malformations. In rare cases, genetic defects in AVP synthesis that are inherited as autosomal dominant, autosomal recessive or X-linked recessive traits are the underlying cause. Accurate diagnostic differentiation is essential for both safe and effective disease management. Proper etiological diagnosis can be achieved via a series of steps that start with clinical observations and then progress, as needed, to more sophisticated methods. Indeed, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) represents the examination method of choice for evaluating hypothalamic-pituitary-related endocrine diseases due to its ability to provide strongly-contrasted high-resolution multi-planar and spatial images. Specifically, MRI allows a detailed and precise anatomical study of the pituitary gland by differentiating between the anterior and posterior pituitary lobes. MRI identification of pituitary hyperintensity in the posterior part of the sella, now considered to be a clear marker of neurohypophyseal functional integrity, together with careful analysis of pituitary stalk shape and size, have provided the most striking recent findings contributing to the diagnosis and understanding of some forms of 'idiopathic' central diabetes insipidus.
...
PMID:The diagnosis of children with central diabetes insipidus. 1745 Oct 74
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