Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0029089 (ophthalmoplegia)
3,338 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

29 out of 39 patients bilaterally adrenalectomized for pituitary-dependent Cushing's syndrome between 1958 and 1979 have been followed up at regular intervals. ACTH-producing pituitary adenomas were detected and removed in 9 of them up to 1981. In 4 additional patients an enlarged sella turcica was already found at the time they had Cushing's syndrome, and therefore they were first treated by pituitary surgery or radiotherapy. In the adrenalectomized patients hyperpigmentation was the major clinical symptoms of the adenoma. Only in three instances did extrasellar growth of the adenoma cause ophthalmoplegia or narrowing of the visual fields. The existence of intrasellar ACTH-producing microadenomas in 5 additional patients seems highly probable in view of hyperpigmentation, excessively elevated plasma ACTH concentrations and radiological evidence of sella deformations. These observations indicate that in patients adrenalectomized for pituitary-dependent Cushing's syndrome ACTH-producing adenomas are more common than previously assumed. Moreover, according to recent reports, ACTH-producing microadenomas are frequently found in pituitary-dependent Cushing's syndrome and are assumed by many clinical endocrinologists to be the primary cause of this disease. Therefore, bilateral adrenalectomy is no longer the undisputed therapy of first choice and it is necessary in each individual case to consider carefully whether an attempt to remove selectively an ACTH-producing pituitary adenoma by microsurgery might not be preferable.
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PMID:[Incidence and clinical manifestation of ACTH-producing pituitary adenoma after bilateral adrenalectomy for Cushing's syndrome (Nelson syndrome)]. 729 59

We recently described an infantile onset spinocerebellar ataxia (IOSCA) in 19 Finnish patients. The classification of hereditary ataxias of unknown etiology is difficult because of the heterogeneity of these diseases. The clinical course of IOSCA is homogeneous. Ataxia, muscle hypotonia, athetosis, and loss of deep tendon reflexes in the legs appeared around the age of 1 year. Ophthalmoplegia and deafness were found by school-age, and sensory axonal neuropathy and optic atrophy by adolescence. An acute crisis with epilepsy was a late manifestation. The female patients had hypogonadism. In order to define the type of hypogonadism and to exclude other endocrine defects we measured serum concentrations of SHBG, DHEAS, prolactine, testosterone/estradiol, FSH and LH in postpubertal patients. ACTH, hCG and GnRH tests were performed to both pre- and postpubertal patients. Growth was analysed, and the brain and pituitary region were examined with magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). The estradiol values were low and FSH and LH values were high in the female patients, which indicates that the hypogonadism was of the hypergonadotropic type. The growth of the female patients was steady without a significant pubertal growth acceleration. The growth and pubertal development of the male patients were normal. The adrenal cortical and thyroidea functions were normal in all patients.
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PMID:Primary hypogonadism in females with infantile onset spinocerebellar ataxia. 855 18

The objective of this article is to review clinical outcomes in patients presenting with pituitary apoplexy and compare the results of conservative and surgical management. It took the form of a retrospective review of 30 patients (23M, 7F; age range: 17-86 years) with pituitary apoplexy diagnosed between 1988 and 2004. Presenting features included headache in 27 patients, 'collapse' in three and vomiting in 14. Complete blindness occurred in four patients, monocular blindness in two, decreased visual acuity in 12, visual field loss in 10 and ophthalmoplegia in 15. Only five had no initial visual deficit. CT was the initial mode of imaging in 22 patients: three such scans were initially reported as 'normal' and a further 10 as pituitary tumour only, with no haemorrhage. Ten patients proceeded to early pituitary surgery and 20 were managed conservatively. There was one death 24 days after admission in a patient with multiple co-morbidities. Of the six patients with blindness, three (two conservatively treated) regained partial vision. Of the remaining 19 patients with visual deficits, 10 (two surgically treated) recovered fully and eight (four surgically treated) partly so. At latest follow-up the following pituitary hormone deficiencies were identified: ACTH 19; TSH 20; testosterone 18; ADH (diabetes insipidus) eight. Later recurrence of a pituitary adenoma was observed in seven cases (including six of the 10 surgically treated patients). There was no evidence that those patients managed surgically had a better outcome. Early neurosurgical intervention may not be required in most patients presenting with pituitary apoplexy.
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PMID:Pituitary apoplexy: retrospective review of 30 patients--is surgical intervention always necessary? 1743 89

Pituitary blastoma, a recently described tumor of the neonatal pituitary, exhibits differentiation to Rathke epithelium and adenohypophysial cells of folliculostellate and secretory type, a reflection of arrested pituitary development and unchecked proliferation (Scheithauer et al. in Acta Neuropathol 116(6):657-666, 2008). Herein, we report the pathologic features of three additional cases, all ACTH-producing. One involved a 9-month-old male presenting with progressive right ophthalmoplegia, MRI findings of a large suprasellar mass with cavernous sinus invasion, and elevated plasma ACTH levels. The second was nonfunctioning and occurred in a 13-month-old female with right third nerve palsy. The third had been previously published as a "pituitary adenoma" in a 2-year-old female (Min et al. in Pathol Int 57(9):600-605, 2007). The subtotally resected tumors were subject to histochemical, immunohistochemical and, in two cases, ultrastructural study. Histologically, the complex tumors consisted of glands of varying from rosettes to glandular structures resembling Rathke epithelium, small undifferentiated-appearing cells (blastema), and large secretory cells. Mucin-producing goblet cells were noted in case 3. Cell proliferation was high in two cases and low in case 3. Immunoreactivity of the secretory cells included synaptophysin, chromogranin, various keratins and, to a lesser extent, ACTH and beta endorphin. MGMT immunolabeling was 40-60%. Mitotic activity was moderate to high in cases 1 and 2 and was low in case 3. The same was true for MIB-1 labeling. Germ cell markers were lacking in all cases. One tumor ultrastructurally consisted of three cell populations including (a) small, polyhedral, primitive-appearing cells (blastema) with scant cytoplasm, abundant glycogen and few organelles, (b) folliculostellate cells and (c) large corticotroph cells containing rough endoplasmic reticulum, golgi membranes, spherical, 150-400 nm secretory granules and occasional perinuclear, intermediate filament bundles. A second example (case 3) lacked a blastema and glandular component. The clinical and morphologic features of our three cases were those of pituitary blastoma. The finding of cellular elements of adenohypophysial development is consistent with a diagnosis of pituitary blastoma and aligns it with blastomas of other organs. It also suggests an underlying specific genetic abnormality. Marked variations in cellular proliferative activity suggest blastomas occur in low- and higher-grade form. Variable MGMT reactivity suggests an incomplete response to temozolomide therapy. Literature regarding similar morphologically complex, infantile, Cushing disease-associated lesions is briefly reviewed.
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PMID:Pituitary blastoma: a unique embryonal tumor. 2180 93