Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0729233 (Thoracic)
6,478 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The authors studied 8 patients (4 males and 4 females) with Cushing's syndrome due to ectopic ACTH secretion. Chronological age ranged from 15 to 45 years and duration of the disease ranged from 3 to 48 months. All patients presented typical signs of Cushing's syndrome, blood hypertension, and four of them had hyperpigmentation of the skin. Five patients had fasting hyperglycemia and all patients but one had serum hypokalemia (serum K = 2.2 to 3.9mEq/l). The circadian rhythm of cortisol was absent in all patients and basal cortisol levels were elevated in all patients but one. Basal ACTH levels evaluated in 7 patients were elevated in 6 (29 to 1050 pg/ml-MRC). One patient presented normal depression of urinary 17-OH after two days of dexamethasone and normal increase of urinary 17-OH and serum 11-dexycortisol after methyrapone. Four patients had carcinoid tumor (3 thymic and 1 bronchial), two had pancreatic islets cell tumors, one had bilateral pheochromocytoma and medular carcinoma of the thyroid, and one had oat cell carcinoma of the lung and medular carcinoma of the thyroid. Thoracic X-rays identified the ectopic ACTH secretion tumor in four cases, all confirmed by CT scan. Abdominal CT showed a difuse enlargement of the adrenals in seven cases and bilateral nodules in one case (pheochromocytomas). Six patients died within 3 years of the diagnosis. The authors concluded that clinical and hormonal findings could mislead the findings of ACTH ectopic secretion and Cushing's disease, and suggest that thoracic X-rays and CT scans of the skull, thorax, and abdome should be done in all cases of Cushing's syndrome.
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PMID:[Cushing syndrome due to ectopic ACTH secretion]. 255 51

In the etiological diagnosis of ACTH-dependent Cushing's syndrome, it may be difficult to distinguish pituitary disease from ectopic ACTH production, specially when this is due to a benign neuroendocrine tumor. We describe a patient with partial dexamethasone suppression consistent with Cushing's disease, an absent response to CRH suggesting ectopic ACTH production and an atypical, apparent circadian rhythm. Bilateral cavernous sinus catheterization suggested a nonpituitary source of ACTH and, in the search of an ectopic tumor, somatostatin receptor scintigraphy, abdominal CT scan, and duodenopancreatic endoscopic echography were performed and failed to reveal any abnormality. Thoracic CT scan disclosed a tiny right lung nodule that showed a definite tracer uptake on MIBG scintigraphy. After resection, the nodule proved to be an 8-mm typical pulmonary carcinoid, with positive immunostaining for the classical neuroendocrine markers and for ACTH, and showing tissue expression of the POMC gene. However, the CRH receptor gene was not expressed, explaining the absent CRH response in vivo, whereas the V3 vasopressin receptor gene was expressed in the tumor tissue. The latter feature appears to be characteristic of benign carcinoids and may contribute to explaining the CRH-independent circadian rhythm observed in this case.
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PMID:Ectopic ACTH Cushing's syndrome: V3 vasopressin receptor but not CRH receptor gene expression in a pulmonary carcinoid tumor. 983 45