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Query: UMLS:C0028754 (
obesity
)
124,988
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Hyperprolactinemia and prolactinoma in patients with long-term primary hypothyroidism have been recognized for decades. We report a case of 57-year-old female patient with lingual thyroid and cretinism who had a high serum prolactin level (greater than 200 ng/ml) and a
pituitary tumor
with suprasellar and parasellar extension. The tumor regressed to a size undetectable by CT scan after 2 years of thyroid hormone replacement therapy, but complete normalization of the hyperprolactinemia required additional bromocriptine therapy. This patient showed generalized short metacarpal and phalangeal bones, calcification of the basal ganglia and dentate nuclei bilaterally, and subcutaneous calcification at both gluteal regions, while serum calcium, phosphorus and c-PTH levels were all normal. Thus in addition to short stature, brachydactyly, a round face, and
obesity
, which are related to hypothyroidism, she also presented features uniquely mimicking the Albright's hereditary osteodystrophy seen in patients with pseudohypoparathyroidism and pseudopseudohypoparathyroidism. Since she had no family history of pseudohypoparathyroidism and had a normal level of Gs alpha protein on the membrane of the red blood cells, there is no evidence of pseudopseudohypoparathyroidism. The cause of the ectopic calcification remains unknown.
...
PMID:Intracranial calcification and brachydactyly mimicking Albright's hereditary osteodystrophy in an adult patient with lingual thyroid and prolactinoma-like lesion. 167 15
The nomenclature of human diabetes mellitus (DM) has been revised, and this classification has been accepted throughout the medical world and literature. The major categories of diabetes are: insulin-dependent DM, type I or IDDM; noninsulin-dependent DM, type II or NIDDM; secondary DM or type S; impaired glucose tolerance, IGT; gestational diabetes; and previous abnormality of glucose tolerance, PrevAGT. A review of the literature has shown that over half of the documented diabetic dogs, with a single medical diagnosis, appear to be type I, IDDM, with a substantial proportion being type S, and the remainder being type II, NIDDM.
Obesity
is frequently associated with IGT and NIDDM. Diabetic cats most commonly have pancreatic islet destruction associated with pancreatic amyloidosis; they are insulin deficient, IDDM. The commonest causes of secondary diabetes in dogs are pancreatic damage, hyperadrenocorticism and hypersomatotropism secondary to persistent progesterone influence. Progestogen therapy is the most frequently reported cause of secondary diabetes in cats. Diabetes in horses is type S, usually secondary to a functional
pituitary tumor
but occasionally following chronic pancreatitis. The blood glucose ranges for normal, IGT and diabetic animals, and the normal serum insulin values of various species is tabulated.
...
PMID:Definition of diabetes mellitus. 351 69
Four female patients were found to have microadenomas and high prolactin levels, but the symptoms of the syndrome varied among the patients. Three of four patients had overt galactorrhea,
obesity
, and amenorrhea. One patient was postmenopausal, and another showed menstrual irregularities. Two patients sought medical attention for headaches, and one for visual disturbances. Two patients previously had used psychotropic drugs, and two patients used birth control pills. When tested, all patients had high serum prolactin levels, abnormal sellar tomograms, and the presence of microadenoma of the pituitary was confirmed by computerized tomography.Because of the high incidence of
pituitary tumor
among these four patients, this study suggests that a complete workup should be done for patients having galactorrhea, amenorrhea, and
obesity
as a syndrome or as separate entities.
...
PMID:Syndrome of galactorrhea, amenorrhea, and obesity as possible indicators of prolactinoma: a case study approach. 380 93
The empty sella results from an extension of the subarachnoid space into an intrasellar position with subsequent remodeling of the sella turcica and the flattening of the pituitary gland. The sella turcica is usually enlarged causing the greatest diagnostic difficulty to distinguish it from a
pituitary tumor
. The most patients with this syndrome usually have normal pituitary function, while about 30% have varying degrees of hypopituitarism. The Authors describe a case report of a man with primary empty sella syndrome come to the medical observation for
obesity
and hyperglyccemia. The endocrine evaluation performed (TRH test, GN-RH test, T3, T4, FT3, FT4, Arginine test, metyrapone test) were normal. OGTT shows a maturity onset diabetes (glycemia = 160 mg%). This rare clinical association is not well understood. Probably this diabetes is to the interruption of the normal hypothalamo-pituitary neurovascular connection.
...
PMID:[The primary empty sella syndrome. A case report study (author's transl)]. 747 Jan 79
The symptomatology associated with severe growth hormone (GH) deficiency in adult life is a real entity but unfortunately it is also nonspecific with extreme fatigue and
obesity
dominating the clinical picture. Quality of life (QOL) is a term widely used by clinicians, research scientists and policy-makers, though there is a lack of consensus over its definition. Most of the related literature lists aspects assumed to be components of QOL and most measures are based upon the assumption that QOL is related to the ability to function in certain domains of physical, social and environmental existence such as work, leisure pursuits, socializing, etc. Most published studies on QOL have utilized generic measures of health status which were developed more than 20 years ago, were not designed for clinical trials, and it is debatable whether all the questions are relevant to patients. Only the Nottingham Health Profile has content derived entirely from lay people as opposed to being written by professionals. This has led to the development of QOL measures specific for GH deficiency based on unstructured qualitative interviews (1-2 h), which, unfortunately, have been carried out in a relatively small number of patients. Furthermore, the disease-specific measures of QOL are not truly specific for GH deficiency, as the patient has in almost all cases had a
pituitary tumor
, undergone surgery and/or radiotherapy and is receiving other hormone therapy for additional pituitary hormone deficits. Should the ideal control population for comparison with the GH-deficient patient cohort be normal subjects or patients with chronic disorders? Placebo-controlled studies of GH therapy indicate a definite placebo effect contributing to the improvement in QOL in GH-deficient adults. QOL is generally stated to be less affected in young adults with childhood-onset GH deficiency compared with patients with adult-onset GH deficiency. How do we know? Do we have disease-specific measures applicable to the adolescent age group? In reality, many centres utilize reduced QOL as an indication for GH replacement. However, heavy reliance is placed on the subjective patient interview rather than objective use of a disease-specific questionnaire. Why? Because there is no questionnaire score (number) available to reflect degree of impairment of QOL at baseline or of improvement in QOL in response to GH therapy.
...
PMID:The use of self-rating questionnaires as a quantitative measure of quality of life in adult growth hormone deficiency. 1044 81
The present study reports a rare case of full-blown Cushing's disease several years after an episode of pituitary apoplexy. A 60 year-old woman complained of muscular weakness and generalized malaise. Ten years ago she had an episode of pituitary apoplexy. Diabetes mellitus was diagnosed at age 56, and thereafter she had been controlled her plasma glucose with diet therapy and oral hypoglycemic agents. She exhibited cushingoid feature of moon face and central
obesity
. Both plasma ACTH and serum cortisol levels were elevated to 170 pg/ml and 19.6 microg/dl, respectively. Dexamethasone suppression test showed that a large dose of 8 mg dexamethasone, but not a small dose of 2 mg, suppressed the pituitary-adrenocortical axis. CRH and methyrapone caused increases in plasma ACTH and serum cortisol levels. Brain T(1)-weighted magnetic resonance imaging depicted a low signal of
pituitary tumor
, which was not enhanced by gadolinium. The
pituitary tumor
was removed by transsphenoidal adenomectomy, and immunohistochemistry revealed an ACTH-producing adenoma. The evidence suggested the possibility that the two pituitary tumors with dormant period of several years were a recurrence of ACTH-producing tumors in the present patient.
...
PMID:Full-blown Cushing's disease after an episode of pituitary apoplexy. 1461 5
While depression is common in Cushing's syndrome from whatever cause (pituitary, adrenal, or ectopic adrenocorticotropic hormone-secreting tumor or hyperplasia, or exogenous administration of glucocorticoids) and hypercortisolemia is prevalent in major depression, any association between seasonal affective disorder and Cushing's syndrome is unknown. We present a case of seasonal bipolar disorder, gradually worsening for more than 9 years (1985-1994), accompanied by increasing osteoporosis, mild weight gain, and slight truncal
obesity
in a middle-aged woman. In January 1991, her seasonal affective disorder was successfully treated with light therapy, but in the following year, bipolar mood swings with a seasonal pattern emerged, which were refractory to light therapy and antidepressants but responsive to lithium. In August 1992, she became depressed despite a 1500-mg lithium daily dosage along with light therapy, and, in 1993, a diagnosis of Cushing's disease (Cushing's syndrome as a result of a pituitary adrenocorticotropic hormone-secreting tumor) was made. The
pituitary tumor
was removed in February 1994, and pituitary function was fully restored by 1996. While the symptoms of Cushing's syndrome subsided, her bipolar illness continued to require maintenance treatment with low doses of lithium but did not require light therapy.
...
PMID:A case of seasonal bipolar disorder exacerbated by Cushing's disease. 1572 34
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.
...
PMID:Effect of cabergoline treatment on Cushing's disease caused by aberrant adrenocorticotropin-secreting macroadenoma. 1575 38
A 49-year-old woman with hypertension,
obesity
and impaired glucose tolerance (IGT) was admitted for evaluation of pituitary incidentaloma. Although she presented no Cushingoid feature, endocrine examination of hypothalamo-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis showed elevated basal plasma ACTH and cortisol levels, their lack of circadian rhythm, non-suppressibility to low-dose (1 mg) dexamethasone, and responsiveness to CRH, suggesting autonomous ACTH secretion from a
pituitary tumor
. She underwent transsphenoidal surgery, and was diagnosed as chromophobe adenoma with positive ACTH immunoreactivity. Postoperatively, her abnormal HPA axis was resolved, along with improvement of hypertension,
obesity
and IGT. Thus, her metabolic comorbidities are likely due to subclinical Cushings disease.
...
PMID:Subclinical Cushings disease with amelioration of metabolic comorbidities after removal of pituitary tumor. 1713 24
Cushing disease caused by adrenocorticotropin (ACTH)-secreting pituitary adenomas leads to hypercortisolemia predisposing to diabetes, hypertension, osteoporosis, central
obesity
, cardiovascular morbidity, and increased mortality. There is no effective pituitary targeted pharmacotherapy for Cushing disease. Here, we generated germline transgenic zebrafish with overexpression of
pituitary tumor
transforming gene (PTTG/securin) targeted to the adenohypophyseal proopiomelanocortin (POMC) lineage, which recapitulated early features pathognomonic of corticotroph adenomas, including corticotroph expansion and partial glucocorticoid resistance. Adult Tg:Pomc-Pttg fish develop neoplastic coticotrophs and pituitary cyclin E up-regulation, as well as metabolic disturbances mimicking hypercortisolism caused by Cushing disease. Early development of corticotroph pathologies in Tg:Pomc-Pttg embryos facilitated drug testing in vivo. We identified a pharmacologic CDK2/cyclin E inhibitor, R-roscovitine (seliciclib; CYC202), which specifically reversed corticotroph expansion in live Tg:Pomc-Pttg embryos. We further validated that orally administered R-roscovitine suppresses ACTH and corticosterone levels, and also restrained tumor growth in a mouse model of ACTH-secreting pituitary adenomas. Molecular analyses in vitro and in vivo showed that R-roscovitine suppresses ACTH expression, induces corticotroph tumor cell senescence and cell cycle exit by up-regulating p27, p21 and p57, and downregulates cyclin E expression. The results suggest that use of selective CDK inhibitors could effectively target corticotroph tumor growth and hormone secretion.
...
PMID:Targeting zebrafish and murine pituitary corticotroph tumors with a cyclin-dependent kinase (CDK) inhibitor. 2153 83
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