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Query: UMLS:C0037315 (
sleep apnea
)
8,000
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A 60-year-old woman with acromegaly associated with
sleep apnea
was treated with the
somatostatin
analogue SMS 201-995 (Sandoz) for several months. Growth hormone levels were normalized and a rapid improvement in
sleep apnea
was controlled with polygraphic nocturnal monitoring. Hypophysectomy seems to have variable effects on
sleep apnea
in acromegaly. The origin of obstructive apnea in acromegaly is therefore unclear.
...
PMID:[Long-term effects of treatment with SMS 201-995 on sleep apnea syndrome associated with acromegaly]. 261 48
Two acromegalic patients suffering from severe obstructive
sleep apnoea
syndrome were treated with the long-acting
somatostatin
analogue octreotide. Daytime sleepiness and fatigue improved within a few days. Repeat sleep studies performed after octreotide treatment revealed more confluent sleep with a shorter duration of
sleep apnoea
. Nocturnal hypoxaemia improved in one patient. Octreotide might be an effective noninvasive treatment for
sleep apnoea
of acromegaly.
...
PMID:Improvement of sleep apnoea due to acromegaly during short-term treatment with octreotide. 804 24
We report experiences in 3 patients with acromegaly while using the
somatostatin
analogue octreotide. In case 1, a 44 year old male developed pneumococcal meningitis 3 months after having transphenoidal surgery for a pituitary tumour. This occurred with the re-emergence of communication between the surgical tract and the C.S.F. In case 2 a 52 year old male with insulin resistant diabetes mellitus requiring 240 units/day, with greatly elevated growth hormone concentrations was able to stop insulin within 5 days of starting octreotide. In case 3, a 52 year old male with
sleep apnoea
syndrome, respiratory failure and resistant heart failure made a dramatic improvement which is maintained 2 years later. All cases were associated with substantial falls in growth hormone and insulin like growth factor-1 concentrations.
...
PMID:Experiences with octreotide in acromegaly. 844 80
Fifty healthy, normotensive individuals (34 women) with a mean age of 44.3 +/- 13.2 yr and a mean body mass index of 27.1 +/- 5.4 kg/m2 were tested for the presence or absence of insulin resistance and sleep-disordered breathing. The hypothesis of this investigation was that insulin resistance is associated with sleep-disordered breathing. In vivo insulin action with determination of steady-state plasma glucose (SSPG) and insulin was measured using simultaneous intravenous infusion of
somatostatin
, glucose, and insulin via a Harvard pump. Determination of sleep-disordered breathing was performed through clinical assessment and portable nocturnal monitoring using a validated
sleep apnea
recorder. Individuals with > or = 10 hypoxic respiratory events per hour of sleep were significantly more insulin-resistant than subjects without sleep-breathing disorders. After adjusting the relationship between insulin resistance and sleep-disordered breathing for potential confounding variables, it was found that this relationship was entirely dependent on body mass.
...
PMID:Insulin resistance and sleep-disordered breathing in healthy humans. 868 Jun 75
The treatment of acromegaly and hyperprolactinaemia has been improved by the availability of effective and well-tolerated slow-release
somatostatin
analogues and dopamine agonists with long-lasting activity, such as cabergoline. The use of these drugs has extended the possibility of treatment to patients who would have responded poorly to the previously available compounds, such as octreotide or bromocriptine, and to those who were intolerant to pharmacotherapy. Moreover, the improvement in the management of acromegaly has enabled the reversal, at least partly, of cardiomyopathy and
sleep apnoea
, two important risk factors for morbidity and mortality in these patients.
...
PMID:Growth-hormone and prolactin excess. 980 8
Recently, the medical approach to patients with secreting and clinically non-functioning pituitary adenomas has received great impulse thanks to the availability of new, selective and long-lasting compounds with dopaminergic activity, such as cabergoline, and of
somatostatin
analogues provided in slow-release formulations, such as lanreotide and octreotide long acting release (LAR). In particular, the use of cabergoline has induced control of hyperprolactinaemia and tumour shrinkage in the great majority of patients with micro- and macroprolactinomas. Cabergoline treatment restores fertility both in women and men, and partially improves osteoporosis, one of the major complications of hyperprolactinaemia. In acromegaly, disease control (growth hormone [GH] <2.5-1.0 microg/l as a fasting or glucose-suppressed value, respectively, together with age-normalised insulin-like growth factor [IGF]-I) is achievable in more than half of patients receiving treatment with lanreotide or octreotide-LAR. Improvement in cardiomyopathy,
sleep apnoea
and arthropathy has been reported during GH/IGF-I suppression after pharmacotherapy. A synthetic GH analogue, B2036-PEG, that antagonises endogenous GH binding to its receptor-binding sites and a GH-releasing hormone antagonist that blocks the effect of this releasing factor on the hypothalamus and pituitary are presently under investigation in acromegaly. Preliminary studies have clearly demonstrated the effectiveness of the GH receptor antagonist in suppressing IGF-I levels in acromegalic patients previously unresponsive to
somatostatin
analogues. Beneficial effects of subcutaneous octreotide and lanreotide have also been reported in adenomas secreting thyroid-stimulating hormone, while the results of treatment with dopamine agonists or
somatostatin
analogues remain disappointing in patients with clinically non-functioning adenomas. In these patients the possibility of visualising in vivo the expression of D(2) receptors using specific radiotracers such as (123)I-methoxybenzamide has allowed selection of patients likely to respond to cabergoline. Scant effects of pharmacotherapy have also been reported in patients with adenomas secreting adrenocorticotropic hormone. However, some preliminary data suggest a potential use of cabergoline in combination with ketoconazole, or alone, in selected cases of Cushing's disease or Nelson's syndrome.
...
PMID:New medical approaches in pituitary adenomas. 1097 Nov 10
Acromegaly is a chronic disorder invariably caused by a growth hormone (GH)-secreting pituitary tumour and is characterised by disabling symptoms (sweating, arthralgia, headache, paraesthesiae, fatigue), significant comorbidities (diabetes mellitus, hypertension,
sleep apnoea
), and premature mortality. Symptomatic control can be achieved by lowering insulin-like growth factor-I (IGF-I) concentrations to within the age-adjusted normal range, and survival can be improved to match that of the general population. However, even with optimal surgery and current medical therapies (dopamine agonists,
somatostatin
analogues), 30% to 50% of patients do not achieve target concentrations of IGF-I and GH. Pegvisomant is a new GH-receptor antagonist that blocks GH activity by inhibiting functional dimerisation of GH-receptors. Given as subcutaneous injections at dosages of 10 mg, 15 mg, or 20 mg/day for 3 Months, pegvisomant normalised serum IGF-I concentrations in, respectively, 54%, 81%, and 89% of acromegalic patients. Moreover, long-term pegvisomant therapy normalised IGF-I concentrations in 97% of patients treated for 12 Months or longer, with no evidence of tachyphylaxis. Pegvisomant is the most effective medical therapy, reported to date, in terms of normalisation of circulating IGF-I concentrations. In addition, pegvisomant appears to be safe and well tolerated. Although additional long-term studies are required to further assess safety, the introduction of this innovative treatment should allow for optimal disease control in patients with acromegaly.
...
PMID:Pegvisomant: an advance in clinical efficacy in acromegaly. 1267 Feb 98
It is well accepted that mortality in acromegaly is increased because of cardiovascular and respiratory diseases while neoplastic complications account less to mortality. Amongst different cardiovascular complications the most frequent is biventricular hypertrophy, which occurs independently of hypertension and metabolic complications that, in turn, aggravate the cardiomyopathy. Diastolic and systolic dysfunction develops in a variable number of patients, depending on age and disease duration. Other cardiac disorders, such as arrhythmias, valve disease, hypertension, atherosclerosis and endothelial dysfunction have been less characterized but all appear to be present in acromegaly, depicting the so called "acromegalic cardiomyopathy". The best characterized respiratory disease is the
sleep apnea
. Ventilatory dysfunction recognizes bony changes of thoracic cage and lung overgrowth as relevant pathogenetic factors. Earlier evidences that patients with acromegaly have an increased risk of developing malignancies have become more realistic in recent years. Most studies have reported an increased risk of colonic polyps, which more frequently recur in patients not controlled after treatment. Malignancies in other organs have also been described, but less convincingly than at the gastrointestinal level and are not a main cause of mortality. Bone changes are also feature of the disease. They involve theoretically all bones and, particularly, the appendicular and the axial skeleton. Patients with long-standing disease are more prone to develop degenerative changes. Control of acromegaly by surgery or pharmacotherapy, especially by
somatostatin
analogs, improves cardiovascular morbidity and
sleep apnea
. There is still no demonstration that improvement of different complications corresponds a reduction in mortality.
...
PMID:Severe systemic complications of acromegaly. 1611 80
Acromegaly is an acquired disorder related to excessive production of growth hormone (GH) and characterized by progressive somatic disfigurement (mainly involving the face and extremities) and systemic manifestations. The prevalence is estimated at 1:140,000-250,000. It is most often diagnosed in middle-aged adults (average age 40 years, men and women equally affected). Due to insidious onset and slow progression, acromegaly is often diagnosed four to more than ten years after its onset. The main clinical features are broadened extremities (hands and feet), widened thickened and stubby fingers, and thickened soft tissue. The facial aspect is characteristic and includes a widened and thickened nose, prominent cheekbones, forehead bulges, thick lips and marked facial lines. The forehead and overlying skin is thickened, sometimes leading to frontal bossing. There is a tendency towards mandibular overgrowth with prognathism, maxillary widening, tooth separation and jaw malocclusion. The disease also has rheumatologic, cardiovascular, respiratory and metabolic consequences which determine its prognosis. In the majority of cases, acromegaly is related to a pituitary adenoma, either purely GH-secreting (60%) or mixed. In very rare cases, acromegaly is due to ectopic secretion of growth-hormone-releasing hormone (GHRH) responsible for pituitary hyperplasia. The clinical diagnosis is confirmed biochemically by an increased serum GH concentration following an oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT) and by detection of increased levels of insulin-like growth factor-I (IGF-I). Assessment of tumor volume and extension is based on imaging studies. Echocardiography and
sleep apnea
testing are used to determine the clinical impact of acromegaly. Treatment is aimed at correcting (or preventing) tumor compression by excising the disease-causing lesion, and at reducing GH and IGF-I levels to normal values. Transsphenoidal surgery is often the first-line treatment. When surgery fails to correct GH/IGF-I hypersecretion, medical treatment with
somatostatin
analogs and/or radiotherapy can be used. The GH antagonist (pegvisomant) is used in patients that are resistant to
somatostatin
analogs. Adequate hormonal disease control is achieved in most cases, allowing a life expectancy similar to that of the general population. However, even if patients are cured or well-controlled, sequelae (joint pain, deformities and altered quality of life) often remain.
...
PMID:Acromegaly. 1857 66
The approach to a patient with acromegaly and persistent disease after surgery requires a complex diagnostic assessment. Acromegaly is a chronic and insidious disease that is associated with multisystem comorbidities, including cardiovascular disease, hypertension,
sleep apnea syndrome
, colon polyposis, arthropathy, and metabolic complications including glucose intolerance and type 2 diabetes mellitus. Patients also have a variety of signs and symptoms, including headache, arthralgias, carpal tunnel syndrome, sweating, fatigue, and psychological issues that impact significantly on quality of life. The recommended approach to the evaluation of the postoperative patient includes a biochemical assessment, with measurement of serum IGF-I along with a glucose-suppressed GH value, radiological assessment to determine location of residual tumor and presence of mass effects, a physical examination for evidence of skeletal and soft tissue overgrowth and related signs of acromegaly, and a thorough clinical assessment for the presence of comorbidities. Repeat surgery is indicated if there is residual tumor that is surgically accessible and there may be a chance for surgical cure, or if there are persistent mass effects upon the optic chiasm. Otherwise, medical therapy is indicated, utilizing
somatostatin
analogs, dopamine agonists, and pegvisomant, a GH receptor antagonist. Radiation therapy is usually relegated to situations where medical therapy is ineffective or poorly tolerated or where patients would prefer not to sustain the cost of long-term medical therapy. The choice of therapy requires close dialog among endocrinologists, neurosurgeons, radiation therapists, and neuroophthalmologists for optimal care of patients.
...
PMID:Approach to the patient with persistent acromegaly after pituitary surgery. 2082 64
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