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Query: UMLS:C0020538 (hypertension)
170,190 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We report a 45-year-old woman with Cushing's syndrome showing reversible pituitary dysfunction. Left adrenal tumor was incidentally discovered by a screening examination of abdominal computed tomography. Although this patient lacked typical Cushingoid features except hypertension and leg edema, endocrine examinations revealed moderate suppression of plasma ACTH (~6.3 pg/ml) with relatively high levels of serum cortisol (~22.9 microg/dl) without normal circadian rhythm. Plasma ACTH failed to respond to either CRH or metyrapone, and dexamethasone failed to suppress her daily steroid production. Surgical removal of left adrenocortical adenoma and 6-month replacement of hydrocortisone have ameliorated both ACTH and cortisol responses to CRH loading test. Postoperative responses of TSH and GH to TRH and GRH, respectively, were two fold higher than the preoperative levels. In contrast, basal and TRH-induced levels of serum PRL were decreased after surgery although both the basal and stimulated PRL levels were markedly high before surgery. In addition, gonadotropin response to GnRH examined in the same ovarian cycle was decreased in accordance with an increase in serum estradiol and progesterone levels after surgery. Improvement of hypercortisolemia even in a moderate case of Cushing's syndrome not only ameliorates hypertension, obesity and glucose intolerance, but also restores the accompanying dysfunctions of anterior pituitary, suggesting the clinical importance of early discovery and treatment of functioning adrenocortical incidentalomas.
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PMID:Reversible pituitary dysfunction in a patient with Cushing's syndrome discovered as adrenal incidentaloma. 1511 71

There is increasing evidence that early life stressors may program blood pressure control mechanisms such that the risk for cardiovascular disease in later life is increased. In the present investigation, the effect of repeated restraint/heat stress during the two-week period immediately after weaning on baroreflex function was determined and the contribution of brain angiotensin II (ANG II) to the changes was assessed in young, conscious, freely moving Sprague Dawley rats. In rats two weeks post weaning, basal MAP was significantly higher and basal HR significantly lower than rats tested immediately after weaning. This change in the operating point of HR was not accompanied by any changes in baroreflex function. Treatment with chronic icv infusion of losartan, an AT1 receptor antagonist, during the two-week period prevented the changes in basal MAP and HR. Chronic stress during the two weeks post weaning, whether due to surgical implantation of icv cannulae or due to restraint/heat stress, significantly shifted the set-point of the baroreflex function to a higher pressure. Chronic icv infusion of losartan during the period prevented these effects (at least in the case of stress due to the presence of icv cannulae) suggesting a role for brain ANG II in the change. Changes in the expression of CRH mRNA in the paraventricular nucleus could not explain the stress-related change in baroreflex function. If the rightward shift in the baroreflex persists into adulthood, it could increase the susceptibility to cardiovascular diseases such as hypertension.
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PMID:Effect of chronic stress on the cardiac baroreflex in the post-weanling rat. 1526 64

The hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis plays important roles in maintaining alertness and modulating sleep. Dysfunction of this axis at any level (CRH receptor, glucocorticoid receptor, or mineralocorticoid receptor) can disrupt sleep. Herein, we review normal sleep, normal HPA axis physiology and circadian rhythm, the effects of the HPA axis on sleep, as well as the effects of sleep on the HPA axis. We also discuss the potential role of CRH in circadian-dependent alerting, aside from its role in the stress response. Two clinically relevant sleep disorders with likely HPA axis dysfunction, insomnia and obstructive sleep apnea, are discussed. In insomnia, we discuss how HPA axis hyperactivity may be partially causal to the clinical syndrome. In obstructive sleep apnea, we discuss how HPA axis hyperactivity may be a consequence of the disorder and contribute to secondary pathology such as insulin resistance, hypertension, depression, and insomnia. Mechanisms by which cortisol can affect slow wave sleep are discussed, as is the role the HPA axis plays in secondary effects of primary sleep disorders.
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PMID:On the interactions of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis and sleep: normal HPA axis activity and circadian rhythm, exemplary sleep disorders. 1572 14

The present case involves a 47-yr-old woman with Cushing's disease due to pituitary macroadenoma. The patient had suffered from hypertension and obesity for two yr. Her serum cortisol levels were moderately elevated throughout the observation period, and dexamethasone failed to suppress the cortisol secretion. Plasma ACTH levels were markedly high (>100 pg/ml) and did not respond to CRH provocation. Gel filtration analysis of the patient's plasma detected the existence of big ACTH molecules, which eluted with a peak of authentic 1-39 ACTH. Cranial magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) revealed a 3 cm pituitary tumor occupying the sellar region and right cavernous sinus with diffuse enhancement by gadolinium. The pituitary mass was removed by transsphenoidal surgery, and was pathologically identified as compatible to ACTH-producing pituitary adenoma by immunohistochemistry. RT-PCR analysis of total cellular RNA extracted from the resected adenoma revealed a relatively high expression level of dopamine D2 receptor (D2R) mRNA. Therefore, a long-acting D2R agonist, cabergoline (0.25 to 0.5 mg/week), was administered for the remnant adenoma, which gradually reduced ACTH levels in 90 days. In addition, cranial MRI exhibited shrinkage of the remnant pituitary mass after a 6-month treatment with cabergoline. This case demonstrates the efficacy of cabergoline to treat Cushing's disease caused by pituitary macroadenoma secreting aberrant ACTH molecules.
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PMID:Effect of cabergoline treatment on Cushing's disease caused by aberrant adrenocorticotropin-secreting macroadenoma. 1575 38

Chronically elevated cortisol levels have been associated with elevated blood pressure, brain atrophy, and cognitive impairments. In this cross-sectional exploratory study, we assessed whether hypertension was related to hypothalamo-pituitary-adrenal axis hyperactivity and whether this may in part explain prefrontal brain atrophy and cognitive impairments in this population. We studied 27 patients with hypertension and 27 normotensive control subjects. Glucocorticoid feedback was assessed using the combined dexamethasone-CRH test. All participants completed a neuropsychological battery and received brain magnetic resonance imaging for volumetric measurement of frontal and medial temporal lobe regions. Hypertension was significantly associated with impaired glucocorticoid feedback control after statistically controlling for age, gender, and body mass index (P = 0.01). Hypertensive patients also showed a trend toward reductions in frontal lobe volume (P = 0.09) and had significantly lower scores in one of two tests of executive function (P = 0.03). Significant correlations were observed between hypothalamo-pituitary-adrenal hyperactivity and frontal lobe atrophy. Our data indicate that impaired glucocorticoid feedback control may partly account for the prefrontal volume reductions present in patients with hypertension. Future studies assessing the impact of hypertension on the brain should include cortisol assessments.
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PMID:Hypertension and hypothalamo-pituitary-adrenal axis hyperactivity affect frontal lobe integrity. 1578 10

We report the case of 19-year-old woman with cyclical Cushing's disease, in whom plasma adrenocorticotropin (ACTH) was secreted periodically after her first pregnancy. Since the 33rd week of pregnancy, hypertension and proteinuria became clinically remarkable. She gave normal birth at 36th week of pregnancy; however she continued to gain body weight even after delivery and developed typical Cushingoid features. Her ACTH secretion lacked normal daily fluctuation but exhibited periodic change during 1-year observation, showing 119 pg/ml, 34.6 pg/ml and 115 pg/ml at the 4th, 7th and 13th months after delivery. Plasma ACTH levels were increased by corticotropin releasing hormone and metyrapone, while low-dose dexamethasone suppressed cortisol secretion. Gel filtration analysis of the patient's plasma detected big ACTH molecules being eluted with a peak of authentic 1-39 ACTH. Cranial magnetic resonance imaging revealed a 1-cm pituitary mass in right cavernous sinus. The pituitary tumor was removed by transsphenoidal surgery at 13th month after delivery and was pathologically compatible with ACTH-producing pituitary adenoma by immunohistochemistry. This case includes clinically rare subsets of Cushing's syndrome showing periodic ACTH secretion and aberrant ACTH molecules.
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PMID:Periodic secretion of adrenocorticotropin in a patient with Cushing's disease manifested during pregnancy. 1600 22

A 39-year-old woman who presented with typical Cushingoid appearance (moon facies, central obesity, purpura) was admitted to our hospital because of pulmonary infection. She was found to have hypertension, severe hypokalemia, and metabolic alkalosis. Endocrine data revealed elevated plasma levels of ACTH and cortisol with lack of circadian rhythm, non-suppressibility to high-dose dexamethasone, and hyperresponsiveness to CRH stimulation. Although no pituitary mass was detected by MRI of the brain, inferior petrosal sinus sampling showed a step-up of central to peripheral ACTH levels; these data are consistent with the diagnosis of Cushing's disease. She was successfully treated with metyrapone to control hypercortisolemia. Ten months later, a mass was detected in the ethmoid sinus, which was surgically removed. After resection of the ethmoid sinus tumor, her Cushingoid features and hypercortisolemia disappeared, but recurred after enlargement of a second mass in the maxillary sinus. After resection of the maxillary sinus tumor, her hypercortisolemia subsided. Histologically, the tumor tissues from both the ethmoid and maxillary sinus were identical and consistent with the diagnosis of olfactory neuroblastoma. Immunohistochemically, the immunoreactivities of ACTH and POMC were positive in the cytoplasm of tumor cells, and immunoreactive ACTH was demonstrated in both tumor tissues. Thus, this is the second rare case with ectopic ACTH syndrome caused by olfactory neuroblastoma thus far reported.
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PMID:Olfactory neuroblastoma causing ectopic ACTH syndrome. 1641 Jun 58

Glucocorticoids are proposed to act as intermediary factors that transcribe the developmental programming sequelae of maternal nutrient restriction (NR). Periconceptional under-nutrition of sheep markedly activates fetal hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis activity leading to preterm birth, while transient undernutrition during late gestation in sheep programs adult HPA axis function. To date, no study has examined resting or stimulated HPA axis function in young adult offspring following a periconceptional nutritional challenge. In the present study, 20 ewes were either periconceptionally undernourished (50% metabolisable energy requirements from days 1 to 30 gestation; NR, n = 8) or fed to control levels (100% requirement; controls, n = 12) to term (147 days gestation). Ewes were blood sampled remotely at 2 and 30 days using automated blood sampling equipment. Thereafter, offspring (controls, n = 6/6 males/females; NR, n = 4/4 males/females) were reared to 1 year of age and on separate days received either an i.v. corticotrophin-releasing hormone (CRH; 0.5 microg/kg) and vasopressin (AVP; 0.1 microg/kg) challenge or a synthetic ACTH i.v. bolus (Synacthen; 1.25 microg/kg), and blood samples were taken (manually and remotely) at appropriate intervals for measurement of plasma ACTH and cortisol accordingly. Resting plasma cortisol, assessed remotely, was similar in ewes during undernutrition (control 18.3 +/- 1.4 vs NR 23.4 +/- 1.9 nmol/l) and in offspring at 4 months of age (control male 17.6 +/- 2.9; control female 17.2 +/- 0.4, NR male 16.5 +/- 3.1, NR female 21.7 +/- 4.0 nmol/l). At 12 months of age, however, resting plasma cortisol was significantly increased in NR females (control male 28.0 +/- 1.5, control female 32.9 +/- 9, NR male 32 +/- 7, NR female 53 +/- 10 nmol/l, F 5.7, P = 0.02) despite no difference in plasma ACTH concentration. There was an interaction between nutritional group and gender for both the pituitary and adrenal responses to CRH and AVP, i.e. for controls, females exhibited increased plasma ACTH or cortisol relative to males but for NR this trend was either not present or reversed. The adrenocortical response to synthetic ACTH was gender-dependent only, being greater in female offspring. Combined CRH and AVP provoked a transient hypertension and marked bradycardia in all animals, irrespective of dietary group or gender and could be effectively reproduced by an AVP bolus alone. In conclusion, the present study has shown that periconceptional undernutrition of sheep has only a minor influence on HPA axis function in their young adult offspring when considered alongside the effect of gender per se.
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PMID:Effect of periconceptional undernutrition and gender on hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis function in young adult sheep. 1689 55

A 54-year-old man with type 2 diabetes was referred to our hospital for endocrine evaluation of acromegaly. Physical examination showed typical acromegalic features without Cushingoid features. Magnetic resonance imaging of the brain revealed the presence of a pituitary macroadenoma. Basal plasma levels of GH and insulin-like growth factor-I under fasting hyperglycemia (202 mg/dl) were markedly elevated. Plasma GH levels paradoxically increased after stimulation with TRH and LH-RH, and decreased after bromocriptine and octreotide administration. Endocrine examination of the hypothalamo-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis showed a lack of circadian rhythm of ACTH and cortisol, non-suppressibility to low-dose (1 mg), but suppressibility to high-dose (8 mg) dexamethasone, and normal response to CRH stimulation. The tumor resected by transsphenoidal surgery was histopathologically consistent with the diagnosis of eosinophilic adenoma: positive immunoreactivities of GH, PRL and ACTH were demonstrated, but negative immunoreactivities of prohormone convertase (PC) 1/3 by immunohistochemical method. After surgery, plasma GH and IGF-I levels decreased along with normalization of HPA axis. Metabolic co-morbidities such as diabetes and hypertension disappeared after removal of the pituitary tumor. This is a very rare case of GH-producing pituitary adenoma causing typical acromegaly with concomitant production of ACTH causing subclinical Cushing's disease.
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PMID:A Case of acromegaly associated with subclinical Cushing's disease. 1692 23

The management of adrenalomas should include the following: 1. A detailed history and physical examination to detect subtle evidence of hormonal hypersecretion or the possibility of metastatic carcinoma. 2. Hormonal studies: Short dexamethasone suppression test (2 mg of dexamethasone) followed by a high-dose dexamethasone suppression test (8 mg), CRH assay and analysis of the diurnal cortisol rhythm if serum cortisol value post dexamethasone is greater than 3 microg/dL, 24-hour (or spot) urinary catecholamine metabolites (metanephrine and normetanephrine), In the hypertensive or normotensive patient with serum potassium less than 3.9 nmol/L, the upright aldosterone level to plasma renin activity (PRA) ratio. 3. Additional studies, such as: Glucose tolerance test, Bone mineral density evaluation, Body composition and fat distribution by DEXA (Dual energy X-Ray absorptiometry). The role of FNA is limited. It may be helpful only in the patient with coexistent extradrenal carcinoma to confirm adrenal metastasis. Although genetic and molecular biology studies do not have wide clinical application, they should be encouraged and supported. Once all of these data are collected, the recommendations are: 1. All clearly nonfunctioning adrenalomas that are not suspicious for malignancy in asymptomatic patients should be observed for several years, mainly with hormonal studies, until their secretory and benign nature is confirmed. 2. All patients with adrenalomas and evidence of subclinical function, suspicion for malignancy (using size, imaging, FNA and molecular biology criteria) and symptoms, such as hypertension, obesity, impaired glucose tolerance, central fat deposition and reduced bone mineral density, should undergo laparoscopic adrenalectomy. The age, the overall medical condition and the anxiety of the patient should also be considered in the decision to operate on a patient with an adrenaloma.
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PMID:Adrenal incidentaloma (adrenaloma). 1700 98


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