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Query: UNIPROT:P01185 (
vasopressin
)
23,126
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
8 children with
precocious puberty
were treated with cyproterone acetate (CPA). During treatment there were no definite clinical signs of depressed adrenocortical function. The plasma cortisol concentrations were grossly depressed and the diurnal cortisol rhythm was abolished. Two months after discontinuation of CPA treatment the adrenocortical function had greatly improved. The lysin-
vasopressin
stimulation test revealed in one child a normal, in another child an exaggerated ACTH response during CPA therapy. Fasting plasma ACTH concentrations were elevated compared with normal controls, but they were very low compared with patients with Addison's disease. The results suggest that CPA has a twofold effect leading to adrenocortical insufficiency: i.e., inhibition of cortisol secretion by the adrenals themselves and inhibition of ACTH secretion at the hypothalamopitiuitary level.
...
PMID:The effect of cyproterone acetate on adrenal cortical function in children with precocious puberty. 20 51
Optic nerve hypoplasia is a developmental anomaly of the retina and optic nerves in which there is a reduction in the number of ganglion cells in the retina and of their centripetal fibers projecting through the optic nerve to the lateral geniculate body. The condition may be unilateral or bilateral and is frequently misdiagnosed as optic atrophy. In about 25% of cases, bilateral optic nerve hypoplasia is associated with a variety of cerebral malformations of which the commonest single disturbance is absence of the septum pellucidum (septo-optic dysplasia). Cerebral malformations and their endocrine accompaniments are also seen, though less frequently, in unilateral hypoplasia. The endocrine disturbances that may accompany optic nerve hypoplasia include growth hormone deficiency, adrenal insufficiency, hypothyroidism, and disturbances of
antidiuretic hormone
production.
Precocious puberty
and hypogonadism have also been observed. The prognosis of optic nerve hypoplasia depends upon the severity of the changes in the optic nerves and especially the degree of associated cerebral malformation. The finding of optic nerve hypoplasia should lead to thorough ophthalmologic, neurologic, and endocrinologic evaluation of the patient.
...
PMID:Optic nerve hypoplasia: a review. 329 97
Hormonal disturbances caused by hypothalamic pathology can be treated effectively by target hormone replacement in the case of failure of glandotropic hormone secretion. Hyposomatotropism in children has to be substituted by parenteral administration of growth hormone. In addition gonadotropins respectively gonadotropin releasing factor have to be given in order to restore fertility in hypothalamic hypogonadism. Posterior pituitary failure can be adequately replaced by administration of analogues of
antidiuretic hormone
. Hypothalamic pathology causing hypersecretion of anterior pituitary hormones may also be accessable to medical treatment. This pertains particularly to hyperprolactinemia and
precocious puberty
. However, there is no medical therapy so far for hypothalamic disturbances leading to veterative dysfunction like disturbances of temperature regulation and control of thirst and polyphagia. In this situation symptomatic correction of the abnormality represents the only possibility to keep these patients alive.
...
PMID:Medical therapy of hypothalamic diseases. 399 50
We report an 8-year-old boy with a primary intrasellar mixed germ-cell tumor who underwent the trans-sphenoidal approach for tumor removal. Initially he suffered from diabetes insipidus.
Precocious puberty
and left abducens nerve palsy were also observed. Elevation of serum testosterone, beta-human chorionic gonadotropin (HCG), and alpha-fetoprotein (AFP) were found on admission. The histological study revealed mixed cellular types of tumor including germinoma, choriocarcinoma, embryonic cell carcinoma, and teratoma. Postoperative radiation to a total of 5000 cGy was performed. Adjuvant chemotherapy was administered before and after radiation. The boy was disease-free during a 6-month follow-up period. Follow-up magnetic resonance imaging showed no presence of tumor. The signs of
precocious puberty
disappeared, and the diabetes insipidus was easily controlled. The abducens nerve regained normal function. Serum HCG, AFP, and testosterone levels all returned to normal. Serum
antidiuretic hormone
increased to reach the lower limit of the normal range.
...
PMID:Primary intrasellar mixed germ-cell tumor with precocious puberty and diabetes insipidus. 908 1
Intractable epilepsy has replaced central
precocious puberty
(CPP) as the main indication for surgery in patients with hypothalamic hamartoma (HH). However, concern about endocrine complications and the paucity of published endocrine data may dissuade clinicians from recommending HH surgery. We report the preoperative endocrine status and postoperative endocrine findings of patients undergoing HH surgery at our centre. Twenty-nine patients aged 4-23 years (mean 10 years) underwent detailed clinical assessment and biochemical testing of the hypothalamic-pituitary axis before and after transcallosal resection of their HH. The perioperative evaluation included comprehensive evaluation of pubertal status, growth, weight, thyroid and adrenal function, and osmoregulation. Forty-five percent of patients had CPP at presentation and this was not altered by HH surgery. Asymptomatic deficiencies in thyroid hormone, growth hormone and cortisol response were identified in several patients prior to surgery, and biochemical CPP was present in four, clinically prepubertal children. Free thyroxine fell after surgery in the majority, and to clinically significant levels prompting treatment in 5 patients. Low growth hormone was present in 5/8 patients who had had previous HH surgery and in 6/29 following transcallosal surgery at our centre; short stature did not result during the period of follow-up. Hypernatraemia developed in most patients postoperatively with sodium >150 mmol/L seen in 16 (55%) patients; however, this was asymptomatic, not often associated with polyuria, and transient; no patient required ongoing
antidiuretic hormone
replacement. Appetite stimulation and early postoperative weight gain occurred in 45% patients, but resolved in half. Disturbance of endocrine function may be clinically silent and should be routinely evaluated prior to HH surgery for intractable epilepsy. Following surgery, hypernatraemia, low thyroxine, low growth hormone, and weight gain are the main endocrine problems encountered. Prior, unsuccessful surgery may be a risk factor for endocrinopathy. Except for weight gain in some patients, these postoperative endocrine disturbances appear to be transient, mild or asymptomatic, and easily treated where necessary. Long term follow-up of growth and sexual development in a large series of patients is required.
...
PMID:The endocrinology of hypothalamic hamartoma surgery for intractable epilepsy. 1497 93
Accurate investigation of the hypothalamic-pituitary area is required in pediatric patients for diagnosis of endocrine-related disorders. These disorders include hypopituitarism, growth failure, diencephalic syndrome, delayed puberty,
precocious puberty
, diabetes insipidus, syndrome of inappropriate
antidiuretic hormone
(SIADH) secretion, and hyperpituitarism. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is the modality of choice to visualize hypothalamic-pituitary axis and associated endocrinopathies. Neuroimaging can be normal or disclose abnormalities related to pituitary-hypothalamic axis like (i) congenital and developmental malformations; (ii) tumors; (iii) cystic lesions; and (iv) infectious and inflammatory conditions. Classical midline anomalies like septo-optic dysplasias or corpus callosum agenesis are commonly associated with pituitary endocrinopathies and also need careful evaluation. In this radiological review, we will discuss neuroendocrine disorders related to hypothalamic pituitary-axis.
...
PMID:Imaging of pediatric pituitary endocrinopathies. 2308 50