Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0020538 (hypertension)
170,190 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Plasma 16 beta-hydroxydehydroepiandrosterone (16 beta-OH-DHEA) levels were measured by radioimmunoassay in normal and pathological conditions in man. 16 beta-OH-DHEA levels in normal subjects rose sharply during adolescence and then declined slowly throughout adult life: 192 pg/ml age 7-11, 395 pg/ml age 15-19, 330 pg/ml age 20-39, 261 pg/ml age 40-59, and 124 pg/ml over 60-years-old. No marked difference was seen between male and female subjects. 16 beta OH-DHEA rose significantly (p less than .01) during adrenocorticotropin (ACTH) stimulation, declined (p less than .005) during dexamethasome suppression and during gonadal suppression, rose (p less than .05) during gonadal stimulation and following administration of WIN 24540, an inhibitor of 3 beta-o1-dehydrogenase (p less than .005). 16 beta-OH-DHEA levels in adrenal venous blood were higher than in inferior vena cava blood but the levels in hepatic venous blood were not higher than in arterial blood. These results indicate that 16 beta-OH-DHEA is secreted directly by the adrenal cortex and probably the gonads. 16 beta-OH-DHEA levels were elevated in normal pregnant women, pregnant women with toxemia and in patients with Cushing's disease, ectopic ACTH-producing tumor and congenital adrenal hyperplasia but not in patients with low-renin essential hypertension.
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PMID:Plasma 16 beta-hydroxydehydroepiandrosterone in normal and pathological conditions in man. 18 75

This is a case report of a 43 years old phaenotypic female (karyotype 46 XY) with congenital adrenal hyperplasia and male pseudohermaphroditism presenting with severe hypertension and hypokalaemic alkalosis. Evaluation of the steroid biosynthesis of the adrenals as well as of the intraabdominal testes demonstrated a severe degree of 17-alpha-hydroxylase deficiency in this patient. This defect was associated by a complete lack of deoxycortisol and cortisol as well as of testicular testosterone synthesis, and by an overproduction of DOC and corticosterone. Sruvival of the patient in spite of severe cortisol deficiency was due to the glucocorticoid activity of corticosterone. This compound and DOC account also -- due to their mineralocorticoid properties -- for the hypertensive state of this male pseudohermaphrodite.
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PMID:Hypergonadotrophic male pseudohermaphroditism due to complete 17-alpha-hyroxylase deficiency. 91 71

Late-onset congenital adrenal hyperplasia is a cause of a spectrum of clinical manifestations of postnatal androgen excess. In these cases, ACTH stimulation test with measurement of 17-Hydroxyprogesterone (17OHP) is usually done to assess 21-hydroxylase (21-OH) deficiency. Determination of the 11-deoxycortisol (S) and the S to cortisol ratio is rarely done, so that 11 beta-hydroxylase (11-OH) deficiency seems unusual. We systematically investigated this biosynthetic defect among women complaining of hyperandrogenism (n = 519) and, comparing the patient's hormonal responses to ACTH with those of 31 normal women, found 29 11-OH deficiency (5.6%): this is the largest group ever reported. S was elevated only 9 times, so that using this single determination, diagnosis of 20 enzymatic defects would not have been made. Only three of the patients (10%) had hypertension, even though the pathway of aldosterone was involved in 33% of cases (criteria: elevation of the ratio desoxycorticosterone to corticosterone). We also described one new patient with both 11-OH and 3-beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase deficiencies. The patho-physiology is particularly interesting in these cases. It is concluded that the single research for 21-OH deficiency is inadequate among women complaining of hyperandrogenism: the screening for 11-OH deficiency should be made, even if blood pressure is normal.
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PMID:[Adrenal enzymatic block with late-onset caused by 11-hydroxylase deficiency. Apropos of 29 cases]. 134 Jun 85

We have studied a family (12 members) with 3 patients (2 adult females and 1 pubertal-aged genotypic male) affected by congenital adrenal hyperplasia due to 17-alpha-hydroxylase deficiency, all of whom presented as phenotypically female subjects with lack of sexual development and with hypokalemic hypertension. The baseline hormonal pattern revealed low glucocorticoid levels (17-hydroxyprogesterone, plasma and urinary cortisol, cortisol secretion rate), as well as androgen (testosterone and dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate) and estrogen (17-beta-estradiol) levels, since the defect is present at both adrenal and gonadal levels. As a consequence ACTH, LH, and FSH concentrations were high. Otherwise steroids not requiring 17-alpha-hydroxylation, such as deoxycorticosterone, corticosterone and their 18-hydroxylated compounds, were secreted in excess with the exception of aldosterone whose levels were undetectable; baseline plasma renin activity levels were suppressed. Short-term dexamethasone treatment normalized potassium and reduced blood pressure and the abnormal mineralocorticoid levels. During chronic ACTH suppression with low doses of glucocorticoids (8 years), electrolyte disturbances were corrected, blood pressure was normalized in 2 cases but only reduced in the third; plasma renin activity returned to normal range within four years in all the patients, while urinary aldosterone was normalized only after 8 years of therapy and became partially responsive to posture, ACTH, angiotensin II, and furosemide. The other mineralocorticoids were reduced but remained above the normal range. The HLA-genotyping in all the family members revealed that the gene responsible for 17-alpha-hydroxylase deficiency was not linked to the HLA system. Measurement of plasma steroids (deoxycorticosterone, corticosterone, aldosterone) in this family revealed that the heterozygotes were different from the control population only in their ACTH-stimulated corticosterone levels.
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PMID:17-alpha-hydroxylase deficiency in three siblings: short- and long-term studies. 164 17

Adrenocortical scintigraphy with iodine 131-19-iodocholesterol or selenium 75-6-selenomethylcholesterol was performed in 94 patients with proven or suspected adrenal disease. According to the final diagnosis, 36 patients suffered from primary aldosteronism, 33 from Cushing's syndrome, 8 from low renin hypertension, 6 from nonfunctioning adrenal tumour, 4 from simple obesity, 3 from adrenal metastases, 1 from congenital adrenal hyperplasia, 1 from virilizing adrenal adenoma, 1 from extraadrenal phaeochromocytoma, 1 from ganglioneuroma. Surgical confirmation of the diagnosis was obtained in most cases. With a few exceptions, the scintigraphy results were consistent with the final diagnosis. The two tracers were equally effective adrenal scanning agents. Tracer concentration was measured in a number of surgical specimens, mostly from patients given selenocholesterol. This measurement in surgical samples has not been reported in previous studies with this agent. The results provided a direct validation of uptake measurements in vivo. The data, collected over a 17-year period, demonstrate that despite the advent of new imaging techniques, adrenal scintigraphy that gives both functional and morphologic information still has an important role in the diagnosis of adrenal disease.
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PMID:Clinical experience with the adrenal scanning agents iodine 131-19-iodocholesterol and selenium 75-6-selenomethylcholesterol. 174 5

Cases of sexual immaturity and male pseudohermaphroditism due to disorders such as androgen resistance, 5 alpha-reductase deficiency, cholesterol desmolase deficiency, 3 beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase deficiency, and testicular and ovary dysgenesis can easily be distinguished from 17 alpha-OHD. None of these disturbances result in hypertension. In the only other form of juvenile hypertension due to congenital adrenal hyperplasia, 11 beta-OHD, androgen excess leads to female pseudohermaphroditism and precocious puberty in the male patient. Patients with dexamethasone-suppressible hyperaldosteronism present with no sexual abnormalities. A diagnosis of 17 alpha-OHD can be readily assumed in the female patient with primary amenorrhea, hypertension, and hypokalemia. The absence of aldosterone, a measurement that is readily available, establishes this diagnosis even without the measurement of DOC.
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PMID:17 alpha-hydroxylation deficiency. 187 98

While hypertension is observed in only two of the three major subtypes of congenital adrenal hyperplasia (CAH), 11 beta- and 17 alpha-hydroxylase deficiencies, deoxycorticosterone (DOC) production is increased in all. The elevated zona fasciculata (ZF) DOC produces mineralocorticoid hypertension with suppressed renin and reduced potassium concentrations. The DOC levels in 21-hydroxylase deficiency are in part produced by renin stimulation of the Zona glomerulosa (ZG) along with aldosterone. Assessment of the mineralocorticoid hormones of the ZF and ZF (17-deoxy steroids) provides additional unique characteristics of each subtype. Dissociation of DOC from cortisol is not unique to CAH. This dissociation is seen in other disorders and contrived conditions. There is a strong suggestion of a non-ACTH regulator of 17-deoxy steroids (DOC) that may contribute significantly to DOC production in general and effect DOC levels in CAH.
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PMID:Mineralocorticoids in congenital adrenal hyperplasia. 195 51

A case of cortical blindness developed in an infant who suffered from congenital adrenal hyperplasia and was hospitalized for enteritis is reported. The severe but transient hypertension recorded raises the possibility that the increased doses of steroid administered may have contributed to the pathogenesis of visual impairment.
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PMID:Sudden cortical blindness following transient enhancement of steroids administered in congenital adrenal hyperplasia (case report). 231 81

Studies in three families (A, B, and C) revealed five patients with congenital adrenal hyperplasia (CAH) due to partial and combined 21- and 11 beta-hydroxylase deficiency. One patient (A-11 1), a 23-yr-old severely virilized chromosomal female, was reared as a male, and two females (B-11 2 and C-1) complained only of hirsutism, acne, and menstrual abnormalities. Patients A-11 2 and B-11 8 (17 1/2 and 10 yr old) were asymptomatic and detected by finding an HLA genotype identical to that of their respectively affected brother and sister. Three patients (A-11 1, A-11 2, and C-1) had moderate hypertension. In spite of the wide range of clinical manifestations, all individuals had elevated androgen levels, while cortisol secretion was severely impaired only in A-11 2. 21-Hydroxylase deficiency was diagnosed on the basis of markedly increased plasma and urinary levels of 17-hydroxyprogesterone (17-OHP) and 21-deoxycortisol and their respective urinary metabolites pregnanetriol and pregnanetriolone. PRA was elevated in three patients, while urinary aldosterone was normal or increased. 11 beta-Hydroxylase deficiency was diagnosed on the basis of increased 11-deoxycortisol and deoxycorticosterone in plasma and tetrahydro-11-deoxycortisol and deoxycorticosterone in urine, particularly after ACTH administration. In contrast to classical 11 beta-hydroxylase deficiency CAH, urinary 18-hydroxycorticosterone and 18-hydroxy-11-deoxycorticosterone were normal or elevated. The nature and mechanism of a combined enzymatic defect are unknown. The coincidental presence in a single individual of the mutant genes for both 21- and 11 beta-hydroxylase deficiency CAH is very unlikely to occur. Two alternative hypotheses may explain our findings. One is the existence of a genetically inherited abnormal (or aberrant) 11 beta-hydroxylase, whose affinity for its normal substrate is changed for an abnormal one (17-OHP). As a result, 11 beta-hydroxylation of 11-deoxycortisol is deficient while 17-OHP 11 beta-hydroxylation is markedly enhanced. Thus, both 11-deoxycortisol and 21-deoxycortisol as well as their urinary metabolites accumulate. The ability for 18-hydroxylation, however, remains normal. In this case, 21-hydroxylase is not deficient, yet 21-deoxycortisol cannot be further hydroxylated to cortisol, since this steroid is not a suitable substrate for the enzyme. Such a disorder may represent a new allelic variant of 11 beta-hydroxylase deficiency CAH, which, similar to 21-hydroxylase deficiency, is completely linked to the HLA complex.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Combined 21- and 11 beta-hydroxylase deficiency in familial congenital adrenal hyperplasia. 298 4

Hormonal measurements in maternal urine and amniotic fluid (AF) during pregnancy and/or at delivery correctly predicted the postnatal diagnosis of 11 beta-hydroxylase deficiency congenital adrenal hyperplasia (11 beta-OH deficiency CAH) in 7 fetuses at risk. In the 4 affected ones, maternal urinary tetrahydro-11-deoxycortisol (THS) excretion was high during the first trimester [0.3-2.2 mg/day (1.1-7.7 mumol/day)] and rose further during the third trimester [0.5-3.5 mg/day (1.8-12.3 mumol/day)] compared to urinary THS excretion in 20 normal pregnancies of the same gestational age (P less than 0.01). In 1 mother, dexamethasone administration (2 mg/day for 72 h) greatly reduced urinary THS excretion (and plasma steroid levels). Urinary THS excretion was low after delivery in these mothers, in normal pregnancies, and in parents of affected individuals [less than 0.05 mg/day (less than 0.08 mumol/day); P = NS]. However, 2 of the 3 heterozygous mothers who carried nonaffected fetuses excreted moderately increased amounts of THS during pregnancy, ranging from 0.15-0.26 mg/day (0.53-0.91 mumol/day), significantly higher than normal (P less than 0.01). Although urinary THS excretion in these mothers was similar to that in 2 mothers with affected fetuses early in pregnancy, urinary THS excretion was higher in mothers with affected compared to those with nonaffected fetuses after the first trimester (P less than 0.01). AF THS and 11-deoxycortisol concentrations were markedly elevated in pregnancies with affected fetuses (P less than 0.01), but normal in nonaffected ones. AF delta 4-androstenedione levels were high in 2 pregnancies and borderline elevated in a third. Although the AF tetrahydrocortisol and tetrahydrocortisone levels were always within the normal range, the AF THS to tetrahydrocortisol plus tetrahydrocortisone ratio was significantly elevated in all pregnancies with affected fetuses (2.8-5.5; P less than 0.01) and normal in nonaffected ones (0.48-1.2; P = NS) compared to that in 160 normal pregnancies [0.64 +/- 0.34 (+/- SD)]. AF 17-hydroxyprogesterone, testosterone, and 11-deoxycorticosterone levels were normal in all pregnancies. Maternal plasma 11-deoxycortisol and delta 4-androstenedione concentrations, determined sequentially throughout gestation, were variable and did not contribute to prenatal diagnosis. All affected infants were born hyperpigmented, 2 were large for gestational age, and the female was severely virilized. In the first week of life 2 males developed severe hypertension with seizures and adrenal insufficiency, respectively.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:11 Beta-hydroxylase deficiency congenital adrenal hyperplasia: update of prenatal diagnosis. 334 60


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