Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0034186 (pyelonephritis)
6,144 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

In order to identify prolactin-producing tumours in human pituitary glands, 45 chromophobe adenomas, obtained from unselected necropsies, have been studied by various staining procedures including the immunoperoxidase technique for the demonstration of prolactin. The presence of immunoreactive prolactin was revealed in the cytoplasm of the tumour cells in six cases (13%), indicating that the occurrence of prolactin-producing adenomas is not rare. No correlations were established between tumours and clinical history. Two adenomas were detected in female and four in male patients. The age of the patients at necropsy ranged from 28 to 75 years. Three adenomas were associated with disseminated carcinoma, two with fatal liver disease, and one with diabetes mellitus, atherosclerosis, and pyelonephritis. Manifest endocrine symptoms were not disclosed, and endocrine investigations, including measurements of blood prolactin levels, were not undertaken. Thus, direct evidence is lacking as to whether or not these tumours were actively secreting prolactin. In the non-tumorous parts of the anterior lobes the number of prolactin cells was decreased in two cases, suggesting that prolactin released from the adenoma cells suppressed prolactin production in the non-tumorous pituitary. However, the number of prolactin cells of the non-tumorous adenohypophysis seemed to be unchanged in two and increased in another two cases. The present findings conclusively proved the existence of the prolactin-producing adenomas as a distinct entity. These tumours do not stain with acid or basic dyes, they are PAS or thionin negative, and do not contain immunoreactive growth hormone. Thus, by conventional staining procedures they are indistinguishable from other chromophobe adenoma types. Herlant's erythrosin and Brookes' carmoisine methods, claimed spedifically to stain prolactin cells, failed to provide reliable results, hence their use cannot be recommended in tumour identification. Immunoperoxidase staining of prolactin is the only technique which conclusively reveals the presence of immunoreactive prolactin in the cytoplasm of the tumour cells and permits diagnosis. It is proposed that this technique be introduced in pituitary morphological studies. Its application may lead to a better understanding of problems related to prolactin-producing tumours and their secretory activity.
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PMID:Localization of prolactin in chromophobe pituitary adenomas: study of human necropsy material by immunoperoxidase technique. 77 66

Insulin antagonism characterizes infection, but the mechanism is unknown. Previous studies have been performed during the acute catabolic stage of infection, and the resultant metabolic changes reflect this decreased food intake and weight loss. To delineate metabolic alterations due to infection itself, rats with pyelonephritis induced by tail-vein injection of 1 ml. of Streptococcus faecalis (10(9) bacteria per milliliter) were studied two weeks later during a period of near-normal weight gain and food intake. Fasting growth hormone concentrations (nanograms per milliliter) in the pyelonephritic rats were nearly five times normal (45.8 vs. 9.9). Intra-arterial glucose and insulin tolerance tests were impaired. Early glucose-induced insulin release was depressed. Fat pads from infected rats manifested higher basal lipolysis per cell. Glycerol-mediated gluconeogenesis by liver slices was decreased. This pathway was unaffected by insulin in infected rats but readily inhibited in control rats. The following metabolic parameters were similar in control and infected animals: (in vivo) fasting concentrations of plasma glucose, free fatty acids, triglycerides, total corticoids, creatinine, insulin, glucagon, molar ratios of insulin and glucagon, glucose and insulin responses to tolbutamide, and glucagon and free fatty acid suppression after glucose; (in vitro) glucose metabolism by muscle and fat, epinephrine- and theophylline-stimulated lipolysis and re-esterification by epididymal fat pads, fasting hepatic glycogen content, glucose production by liver slices with and without alanine. No plasma insulin antagonist was found in the infected rats. Metabolic alterations in infected rats can be demonstrated independently of the associated catabolism. Increased growth hormone secretion cannot explain all of these changes.
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PMID:Metabolic studies in the pyelonephritic rat. 117 60

Administration of progestins in the dog may result in overproduction of growth hormone, suppression of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenocortical axis, and insulin resistance. In this paper we present a comparison of the histological findings in control dogs and dogs treated with either medroxyprogesterone acetate (MPA) or proligestone (PROL). Depot preparations of MPA or PROL were administered (SC) at 3-week intervals in two groups of seven ovariohysterectomized beagle dogs, after which three dogs of each group were killed. After a 6-month period without hormone treatment during which recovery was studied, the remaining dogs received five additional injections at the same interval and were subsequently killed. Tissue samples of four intact female beagle dogs served as controls. Progestin treatment resulted in atrophy of the adrenal cortex. In both MPA- and PROL-treated dogs, the thickness of the combined zona fasciculata and reticularis was significantly smaller than in control animals. In the mammary glands of progestin-treated dogs there were well developed alveoli and normal ducts adjacent to foci of hyperplastic ductular epithelium. Five dogs in each treatment group had developed benign mammary tumours which varied from simple tubular and papillary adenomas to benign complex and mixed tumours, whereas no mammary tumours were observed in the control animals. In each treatment group, steroid-induced hepatopathy was observed in the liver of three dogs. Vacuolation of the cells of the islets of Langerhans and the epithelium of the intercalated ducts was present in two dogs of each treatment group and was only observed after the second series of progestin administrations. Incidental findings included chronic pyelonephritis, aspecific dermatitis, and mucinous dysplasia of the gall bladder. No abnormalities were found in sections of spleen, lung, brain, or pituitary gland. There were no significant differences in the frequencies of the various abnormalities between MPA- and PROL-treated dogs. Our findings correspond with the clinical and biochemical results after treatment of dogs with MPA and PROL. The high incidence of mammary tumours might be associated with our recent finding that in the dog progestins induce ectopic production of growth hormone in the mammary gland. The dog might be a good model for further studies on hormonally induced breast cancers.
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PMID:Comparison of the histological changes in the dog after treatment with the progestins medroxyprogesterone acetate and proligestone. 875 Dec 73

The goal of treatment of end-stage renal failure in pediatric patients is a functioning transplant. Due to the serious shortage of cadaver kidneys, we have to consider living related donor transplantation (tpl) more frequently. Certain features are characteristic of pediatric patients before transplantation: underlying disease (over 2/3 are congenital or hereditary), the form of dialysis (automated peritoneal dialysis at home in young children) and the frequent need for tube feeding and treatment with growth hormone. Patients weighing 10 kg or more can be given an adult kidney. Young recipients are at risk for vascular thrombosis and hence the CVP should be kept high to allow good circulation, and continuous heparinization (10 units per kg and hour) is advocated. Minor rejection episodes may be overlooked in the presence of a large graft in a small child. Bladder dysfunction is a problem in many children with obstructive uropathy. Later on, viral infections (CMV, EBV) may pose serious problems since most children have not previously been exposed to them. Further problems are pyelonephritis in the graft and recurrence of the underlying disease. Long-term results are very satisfactory in terms of survival and quality of life including later social integration.
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PMID:[Kidney transplantation in the child]. 928 31