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Query: UMLS:C0039730 (
thalassemia
)
10,305
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Patients with severe
thalassaemia
major suffer endocrine and other abnormalities before their eventual death from iron overload due to repeated blood transfusions. The endocrine status of 31 thalassaemic patients aged 2-5 to 23 years was investigated. Exact data were available on the rate and duration of blood transfusion in all of them and in many the liver iron concentration was also known. Although the patients were euthyroid, the mean serum thyroxine level was significantly lower, and the mean thyrotrophic hormone level significantly higher, compared with the values found in normal children. Forty oral glucose tolerance tests with simultaneous insulin levels were performed in 19 children, of whom 5 developed symptomatic diabetes and one had impaired tolerance. Previous tests on all 6 patients were available and some showed raised insulin levels possibly due to insulin resistance. 2 patients had clinical hypoparathyroidism and are described. The parathyroid hormone levels determined by radioimmunoassay in 25 patients were below the mean for the age group in all and outside the reference range in 16. Nonfasting plasma calcium levels were not reduced. Puberty was delayed in some patients. Concentrations of luteinizing hormone (LH) and
follicle-stimulating hormone
(
FSH
) measured in urine from 7 girls and 5 boys showed considerable variation. In the boys there was an overall tendency for
FSH
and LH excretion to be low with regard to age, but with respect to puberty rating
FSH
exretions were normal or low and LH normal or raised. The girls showed a tendency for LH but not
FSH
excretion to be raised in relation to puberty rating. The severity of the endocrine changes was related to the degree of iron loading and is discussed in relation to previous work in which the iron loading has rarely been accurately indicated nor parathyroid status assessed.
...
PMID:Hormonal changes in thalassaemia major. 100 88
The aim of the study was to find endocrinological parameters for the effectiveness of both, s.c. desferrioxamine therapy and a blood transfusion regimen, in 5 girls with homozygous beta-
thalassemia
treated in this way over 12-18 months. Physiologically, a sleep-dependent rhythm of
follicle-stimulating hormone
(
FSH
) and luteinizing hormone (LH) secretion is detectable during early to mid puberty. Girls with homozygous beta-
thalassemia
develop persistant hypogonadotropic hypogonadism in the course of untreated hypothalamo-pituitary hemosiderosis and do not show this rhythm. All our patients developed a sleep-dependent gonadotropin rhythm, increased estradiol concentrations as well as secondary sex characteristics, including menarche in one girl. The occurence of sleep-dependent gonadotropin rhythms in previously hypogonadotropic girls emphasizes the effectiveness of s.c. desferrioxamine therapy of hypothalamo-pituitary hemosiderosis in combination with a blood transfusion regimen.
...
PMID:[Puberty-specific gonadotropin rhythm in girls with homozygous beta-thalassemia during continuous subcutaneous desferrioxamine infusions and a simultaneous blood transfusion regimen]. 640 32
The objective of this paper was to assess the ability of gonadotropin administration to induce ovarian steroidogenesis, follicle maturation and ovulation in hypogonadal women affected by beta-
thalassemia
. Thirteen hypogonadal thalassemic women underwent a test with gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH), with estimation of serum
follicle-stimulating hormone
(
FSH
) and luteinizing hormone (LH) levels. They were then administered human menopausal gonadotropin (hMG) for a period ranging from 11 to 15 days with a total dose variable from 3,300 to 4,200 IU. In each patient, the initial dosage of 300 IU daily, adopted for the first 9 days, was modified subsequently according to the ovarian morphology, as shown by serial echographic examinations and by serum estradiol levels. In those patients in whom a dominant follicle was evidenced and the occurrence of pregnancy could be excluded, induction of ovulation was attempted by administration of 10,000 IU of human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG). All patients displayed a reduced LH and
FSH
rise in response to GnRH. Upon hMG administration, they exhibited echographic evidence of follicular growth with a clear-cut increase of serum estradiol, which peaked between the 9th and the 16th day from the start of treatment. In two out of three patients in whom a dominant follicle developed, ovulation was induced successfully by hCG injection, as shown by the increase of serum progesterone and by the ultrasonographic demonstration of a corpus luteum. This study has shown that, by proper pharmacological stimulation, the steroidogenic function of the gonads and even ovulation can be reinstated in hypogonadal thalassemic women.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Induction of follicle maturation and ovulation by gonadotropin administration in women with beta-thalassemia. 780 43
In order to clarify whether the damage in gonadotropin secretion due to iron overload in patients with beta-
thalassemia
is of pituitary or hypothalamic origin, 14 euthyroid patients (8 females and 6 males, age 15-24 years) affected by beta-thalassemia major with hypogonadotropic hypogonadism were studied. Luteinizing-hormone (LH),
follicle-stimulating hormone
(
FSH
) and free alpha-subunit (FAS) were measured during LH-releasing hormone (LH-RH) stimulation test, and thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH), prolactin (PRL) and FAS during thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH) stimulation test. During LH-RH stimulation, the mean basal LH,
FSH
and FAS levels were similar to those found in normal prepubertal children, but the peak values were lower than those found in such children. Also during TRH stimulation, the mean peak values of FAS were lower than those of normal prepubertal children, but the TSH response was normal. The lack of response of gonadotropins and FAS to LH-RH cannot exclude hypothalamic failure; however, the normal response of TSH to TRH, in spite of the poor response of FAS, indicates that the origin of hypogonadotropic hypogonadism is the pituitary damage concerning not only the gonadotroph but also the thyrotroph cells.
...
PMID:Impaired response of free alpha-subunits after luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone and thyrotropin-releasing hormone stimulations in beta-thalassemia major. 831 6
Homozygous transfusion-dependent beta-
thalassemia
patients manifest cardiac, hepatic, endocrine, and metabolic disorders attributable to chronic anoxia and iron overload. Short stature, delayed sexual maturation, diabetes mellitus, hypothyroidism, hypoparathyroidism, and metabolic bone disease can and should be diagnosed as early as possible so that the intervention can be fruitful. Primary or secondary amenorrhea is due primarily to pituitary gonadotrope hemosiderosis, as attested by pathology data and the demonstration in vivo of nonstimulable
follicle-stimulating hormone
and luteinizing hormone release and secretion after the exogenous administration of gonadotropin-releasing hormone or its agonistic analogs. Ovulation can be achieved with the use of exogenous gonadotropins provided that the ovary has no siderosis (as seen in neglected patients) or damage induced by drugs used for bone marrow transplantation. Once pregnancy is achieved, it should be considered high risk and be dealt with or cared for by an expert team to ensure a successful outcome.
...
PMID:Reproductive health in patients with beta-thalassemia. 895 76
Preserving fertility, preventing early menopause, and predicting reproductive ability have become crucial for many adult thalassemia major females. Luteinizing hormone/
follicle-stimulating hormone
(LH/FSH) and estradiol, commonly used for assessment of fertility potential in
thalassemia
, have a poor predictive value. Current reproductive practice uses markers of ovarian reserve testing, which were not yet studied in
thalassemia
women. We explored the relationship between liver iron concentration (LIC) and fertility status in 26 females (mean 30 years old). Seventeen (65%) of them experienced primary or secondary amenorrhea. Levels of LH/FSH and estradiol were low or undetectable in 48% and 35% of patients, respectively and did not correlate with age, presence of amenorrhea, and LIC. This further addresses the need for utilization of current available methods for assessment of fertility capacity in
thalassemia
, which will also allow future correlation with pituitary iron measures by MRI as well as early intervention for fertility preservation.
...
PMID:Fertility potential in thalassemia major women: current findings and future diagnostic tools. 2071 97
To evaluate the impact of
thalassemia
carrier status on the response to controlled ovarian stimulation (COS) and outcome of intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI). Seventy couples that both carried a mutation attributed to
thalassemia
(PGD group) and 57 couples in which only the father was a
thalassemia
carrier (CON group) were enrolled. All female subjects received long protocol GnRH agonist stimulation and received equivalent doses of recombinant
follicle-stimulating hormone
and the number of retrieved oocytes and utilisable embryos did not differ significantly. The endometrial thickness at human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG) administration day and the number of transferable embryos was lower in the PGD groups. However, pregnancy outcomes, including the clinical pregnancy rate and ongoing pregnancy rate, did not differ significantly between the two groups per cycle. Ovarian response to COS is not impaired by maternal
thalassemia
carrier status and embryo biopsy did not impair preimplantation embryo development or pregnancy outcomes.
...
PMID:Does thalassemia influence ovarian response? An analysis of 127 cycles involving pre-implantation genetic diagnosis of thalassemia in southern China. 2717 14