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Query: UMLS:C0020505 (hyperphagia)
6,116 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

In the horse, a syndrome of hirsutism, hyperglycemia, glucosuria, polydipsia, polyuria, polyphagia, and progressive debilitation has been recognized. Most often the syndrome has been associated with adenomas of the pars intermedia of the pituitary and bilateral adrenal hyperplasia or nodular hyperplasia involving primarily the zona fasciculata. Previously, the syndrome has been ascribed to compression of the hypothalamus by an expanding but functionally inactive pituitary neoplasm. In the present case, with RIA determination of plasma ACTH concentrations, the syndrome was ascribed to pituitary ACTH-dependent hyperadrenocorticism and likened to human Cushing's disease.
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PMID:A case of pituitary adrenocorticotropin-dependent Cushing's syndrome in the horse. 22 13

This paper describes four cats with hyperadrenocorticism. Cat 1 showed polydipsia and polyphagia. Diabetes mellitus was initially diagnosed. As the animal appeared to be insulin resistant, pituitary and adrenocortical function tests were performed and the diagnosis of hyperadrenocorticism was made. Resistance to the high-dose dexamethasone suppression test was noticed in this cat. Pathological examination revealed a pituitary chromophobe adenoma. Cat 2 presented with diabetes mellitus, which was treated with insulin. The animal had a pendulous abdomen and its coat was in a poor condition. The low-dose dexamethasone suppression test demonstrated hyperadrenocorticism. Necropsy findings of pituitary tumour and hyperplasia of the adrenal cortex confirmed the diagnosis. Cat 3 showed clinical abnormalities indicative of hyperadrenocorticism, for instance, muscle weakness, alopecia, multiple abscesses. The diagnosis of hyperadrenocorticism was confirmed by the results of the lowe-dose dexamethasone suppression test. Pathological examination revealed an adrenocortical carcinoma. Cat 4 presented with polydipsia. The cause of this symptom was not found initially. One and a half years later additional symptoms, such as nephritis and polyphagia developed. Hyperadrenocorticism was diagnosed because of a palpable mass cranial to the left kidney. The diagnosis was confirmed by the results of the lowe-dose dexamethasone suppression test and the necropsy findings.
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PMID:Hyperadrenocorticism in four cats. 141 43

CRH has been shown to produce increased locomotion, arousal, and anorexia in experimental animals. A deficiency of CRH in patients with seasonal affective disorder could contribute to the characteristic lethargy, hypersomnia, and hyperphagia characteristic of this illness. To test this hypothesis, we studied basal plasma ACTH and cortisol levels and their responses to ovine CRH in controls and depressed patients with seasonal affective disorder before and after light treatment. Untreated seasonal affective disorder patients showed normal basal plasma cortisol and ACTH levels, but their responses to CRH tended to be delayed and were significantly reduced. When patients were studied after 9 days of light treatment, a significant increase in plasma ACTH and cortisol responses to CRH was observed. Our findings in untreated patients with seasonal affective disorder are similar to those in patients with Cushing's disease 2 weeks after transsphenoidal hypophysectomy, who uniformly show sustained suppression of their CRH neuron because of long-standing hypercortisolism. This findings suggest that the CRH neuron of patients with seasonal affective disorder is hypofunctional. We postulate that the clinical symptomatology in patients with seasonal affective disorder could reflect deficient activity of this important arousal-producing system.
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PMID:Abnormal pituitary-adrenal responses to corticotropin-releasing hormone in patients with seasonal affective disorder: clinical and pathophysiological implications. 185 Nov 85

Pituitary-dependent hyperadrenocorticism was diagnosed in a 9-year-old, male castrated cat that had polyuria, polyphagia, pendulous abdomen, truncal hair loss, congestive heart failure, and insulin-resistant diabetes mellitus. Results of pituitary-adrenal function testing revealed inadequate serum cortisol suppression following dexamethasone administration, exaggerated serum cortisol responses after exogenous ACTH stimulation, and high plasma ACTH concentrations. The pathologic findings of bilateral adrenocortical hyperplasia and a pituitary adenoma that immunostained well for ACTH-related peptides confirmed pituitary-dependent hyperadrenocorticism.
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PMID:Pituitary-dependent hyperadrenocorticism in a cat. 301 73

Concurrent diabetes mellitus and hyperadrenocorticism were diagnosed in 30 dogs over a 2-year period. Clinical signs included polyuria, hepatomegaly, polyphagia, abdominal distension, truncal alopecia, anorexia, and vomiting. Because of the similar clinical and laboratory findings for hyperadrenocorticism and diabetes mellitus, hyperadrenocorticism was initially overlooked in some dogs. Insulin resistance, characterized by high daily insulin requirements, developed in the diabetic dogs with untreated hyperadrenocorticism. Therapy with o,p'-DDD resulted in precipitous declines in insulin requirements. By lowering the dosage of o,p'-DDD and supplementing with glucocorticoids during the o,p'-DDD loading period, serious hypoglycemia was avoided. Control of coexisting hyperadrenocorticism lessened the severity of the diabetes mellitus, but insulin therapy remained a necessity in all dogs.
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PMID:Diagnosis and management of concurrent diabetes mellitus and hyperadrenocorticism in thirty dogs. 700 30

Hypercortisolism in depression seems to preferentially reflect activation of hypothalamic CRH secretion. Although it has been postulated that this hypercortisolism is an epiphenomenon of the pain and stress of major depression, our data showing preferential participation of AVP in the hypercortisolism of chronic inflammatory disease suggest specificity for the pathophysiology of hypercortisolism in depression. Our findings that imipramine causes a down-regulation of the HPA axis in experimental animals and healthy controls support an intrinsic role for CRH in the pathophysiology of melancholia and in the mechanism of action of psychotropic agents. Our data suggest that hypercortisolism is not the only form of HPA dysregulation in major depression. In a series of studies, commencing in patients with Cushing's disease, and extending to hyperimmune fatigue states such as chronic fatigue syndrome and examples of atypical depression such as seasonal affective disorder, we have advanced data suggesting hypofunction of hypothalamic CRH neurons. These data raise the question that the hyperphagia, hypersomnia, and fatigue associated with syndromes of atypical depression could reflect a central deficiency of a potent arousal-producing anorexogenic neuropeptide. In the light of data presented elsewhere in this symposium regarding the role of a hypofunctioning hypothalamic CRH neuron in susceptibility to inflammatory disease, these data also raise the question of a common pathophysiological mechanism in syndromes associated both with inflammatory manifestations and atypical depressive symptoms. This concept of hypofunctioning of hypothalamic CRH neurons in these disorders also raises the question of novel forms of neuropharmacological intervention in both inflammatory diseases and atypical depressive syndromes.
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PMID:Corticotropin releasing hormone in the pathophysiology of melancholic and atypical depression and in the mechanism of action of antidepressant drugs. 859 44

Serum leptin concentrations and the levels of ob mRNA in adipocytes in obese humans are elevated. Hyperphagia and obesity are characteristics of hypercortisolism. We have therefore asked whether or not leptin levels were elevated in very obese children, and whether or not dexamethasone would increase leptin levels in obese children. A single dose dexamethasone suppression test was performed in ten obese children (5 girls, 5 boys; age 6 to 16 yrs, mean 12 +/- 1, median 12 yrs) to rule out hypercortisolism. Body mass index (BMI) in the ten children was calculated to be 27-45 kg/m2. Venous blood was sampled before dexamethasone was given in the evening and at 9.00 a.m. the following morning. Endogenous cortisol production was suppressed in all patients. Leptin levels, as measured by a newly developed specific radioimmunoassay, were 31.6 +/- 12.9 microg/l, range 19.2-59.9 microg/l before dexamethasone and 39.9 +/- 16.5 microg/l, range 26.3-80.3 microg/l after dexamethasone in the obese children (ANOVA, p = 0.01). Simple regression analysis revealed that serum levels correlated significantly with body mass index (r = 0.82, p < 0.001). Non-obese children (BMI < 27 kg/m2) had leptin levels between 0.1 and 33.3 microg/l, median 2.2 microg/l (N = 713). Girls (5.5 +/- 4.6 microg/l) (N = 401) had significantly higher leptin levels than boys (1.7 +/- 2.1 microg/l (N = 312) (p < 0.0001). We conclude that 1) high serum leptin concentrations are present in obese children. 2) A single dose of dexamethasone significantly increases the high leptin serum levels in these children. We hypothesize that glucocorticosteroids up-regulate leptin levels in the human.
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PMID:High leptin concentrations in serum of very obese children are further stimulated by dexamethasone. 901 47

An unusual combination of three endocrinopathies found in one dog is described. A six-year-old, spayed female, mixed-breed dog presented with polyuria, polydipsia, polyphagia, and weight loss. She was diagnosed with diabetes mellitus but was suspected of having insulin resistance and was diagnosed subsequently with hyperadrenocorticism. Persistent hypercholesterolemia led to the suspicion and eventual diagnosis of hypothyroidism. The dog has responded well to medical therapy, and her clinical signs and biochemical changes have resolved. A literature search did not identify a similar-reported polyendocrinopathy.
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PMID:Diabetes mellitus, hyperadrenocorticism, and hypothyroidism in a dog. 959 Apr 47

The cardinal clinical manifestations of major depression with melancholic features include sustained anxiety and dread for the future as well as evidence of physiological hyperarousal (e.g., sustained hyperactivity of the two principal effectors of the stress response, the corticotropin-releasing-hormone, or CRH, system, and the locus ceruleus-norepinephrine, or LC-NE, system). Sustained stress system activation in melancholic depression is thought to confer both behavioral arousal as well as the hypercortisolism, sympathetic nervous system activation, and inhibition of programs for growth and reproduction that consistently occur in this disorder. Data also suggest that activation of the CRH and LC systems in melancholia are involved in the long-term medical consequences of depression such as premature coronary artery disease and osteoporosis, the two-three-fold preponderance of females in the incidence of major depression, and the mechanism of action of antidepressant drugs. In addition, recent data reveal important bidirectional interactions between stress-system hormonal factors in depression and neural substrates implicated in many discrete behavioral alterations in depression (e.g., the medial prefrontal cortex, important in shifting affect based on internal and external cues, the mesolimbic dopaminergic reward system, and the amygdala fear system). We have also advanced data indicating that the hypersomnia, hyperphagia, lethargy, fatigue, and relative apathy of the syndrome of atypical depression are associated with concomitant hypofunctioning of the CRH and LC-NE systems. These data indicate the need for an entirely different therapeutic strategy than that used in melancholia for the treatment of atypical depression, and they suggest that this subtype of major depression will be associated with its own unique repertoire of long-term medical consequences.
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PMID:The endocrinology of melancholic and atypical depression: relation to neurocircuitry and somatic consequences. 989 54

Ten dogs with pituitary-dependent hyperadrenocorticism (PDH) received 2 mg/kg of L-Deprenyl once daily for 6 months. Monthly patient assessment consisted of evaluation of the owner's daily observation protocol, a standardized owner questionnaire, physical examination, CBC, biochemical profile, determination of the urine cortisol/creatinine ratio (UC/C), low-dose dexamethasone suppression (LDDS) test, corticotropin releasing hormone (CRH) test, and adrenal ultrasonography. At the beginning and the end of the study, an adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) stimulation test and computed tomography also were performed. Two dogs developed neurologic signs and 2 dogs developed acute pancreatitis. An increase in activity, decrease in polyphagia, and decrease in panting were reported by 6, 4, and 2 owners, respectively. Seven owners believed that water intake decreased, but this was confirmed in only 3 dogs. Water intake increased in 2 dogs and remained unchanged in 5 dogs. The condition of the hair coat and skin improved in 2 dogs, worsened in 3, and remained unchanged in 5. Urine specific gravity, urine osmolality, ACTH test results, UC/C, and adrenal gland size did not change significantly throughout the study. In 4 of 8 dogs, LDDS was abnormal at the start of the study but normal at the end of the study, and in 2 dogs, the opposite occurred. Marked individual variation was noted in the CRH test, with a tendency for smaller increases in ACTH toward the end of the study. A marked increase in hypophyseal tumor size occured in 4 dogs. Treatment with L-Deprenyl resulted in improvement, deterioration, and stagnation of clinical signs in 2, 4, and 4 dogs, respectively. The results of this study indicate that L-Deprenyl cannot be recommended as the sole treatment for canine PDH.
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PMID:The efficacy of L-Deprenyl in dogs with pituitary-dependent hyperadrenocorticism. 1044 18


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