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Query: UNIPROT:P01185 (
vasopressin
)
23,126
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The circulating levels of ACTH and alpha-melanocyte stimulating hormone (alpha-MSH) were measured in 9 patients with Nelson's syndrome after the administration of saline, ovine corticotrophin releasing factor (oCRF), bromocriptine or TRH. The concentrations of ACTH were grossly elevated and alpha-MSH levels ranged from undetectable to higher than the normal range. In seven of eight subjects there was a rapid corticotrophic response, but no change in the alpha-MSH level, following oCRF. This response was delayed in one subject. Following oCRF injection, the plasma oCRF profile was variable but circulating oCRF was detectable even at the end of the experiment in all cases. There was no significant change in circulating ACTH or alpha-MSH following either bromocriptine or TRH. Cultured tumour cells from one case of
Cushing's disease
showed a corticotrophic response but no change in alpha-MSH to oCRF and the response was enhanced by
vasopressin
. Bromocriptine added to the same tumour depressed ACTH secretion without affecting the output of alpha-MSH. The present data suggest that the tumours in these subjects are responsive to oCRF and arise from corticotrophs rather than melanotrophs.
...
PMID:The effect of ovine corticotrophin releasing factor (oCRF), bromocriptine and TRH on the secretion of ACTH and alpha-MSH in Nelson's syndrome and Cushing's disease. 302 73
CRH is a 41 amino acid peptide first isolated from ovine and subsequently from rat and human hypothalami. We have conducted a series of clinical studies with oCRH and hCRH in volunteers and patients with various disorders of hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal function. In volunteers, it was demonstrated that hCRH administration produced ACTH and cortisol responses which closely mimic naturalistically occurring secretory episodes. This data, as well as the demonstration that pulsatile hCRH can reestablish normal ACTH and cortisol secretion in patients with hypothalamic CRH deficiency, strongly argue that CRH is of physiological relevance to the human pituitary-adrenal axis. However, since the ACTH response to an insulin tolerance test is greater than the maximal ACTH response to CRH, other factors such as
vasopressin
may be relevant to stress-induced ACTH secretion in man. Following the demonstration that CRH seems to be of physiological relevance to human subjects, a CRH stimulation test was developed based on pharmacokinetic and dose response studies with oCRH and hCRH. Based on these data, which revealed that oCRH functions as a long-acting analogue of hCRH, and the demonstration that hormonal responses to CRH are greatest in the evening, patient groups with abnormalities of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis were tested with intravenous oCRH with a dose of 1 micrograms/kg given at 2000 hours. This CRH stimulation test has proved helpful in clarifying the pathophysiology of hypercortisolism in a variety of psychiatric disorders characterized by this endocrine abnormality. Thus, blunted ACTH responses in hypercortisolemic patients with depression, anorexia nervosa, and panic anxiety disorder indicate normality of the pituitary corticotroph in these patient subgroups. These data, along with the finding that a continuous infusion of CRH to normal volunteers, reproduces the pattern and magnitude of hypercortisolism in depression and anorexia nervosa, suggest that the hypercortisolism in these disorders represents a defect at or above the hypothalamus resulting in the hypersecretion of CRH. This hypothesis is particularly intriguing in light of the demonstration that CRH administration to experimental animals produces many of the physiological and behavioral responses classically associated with depression and anorexia nervosa, including hypercortisolism, hypothalamic hypogonadism, and decreases in libido and appetite. The CRH stimulation test has also helped to resolve one of the oldest endocrinological dilemmas, namely whether the hypercortisolism of depression and
Cushing's disease
share a common or dissimilar pathophysiological basis.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Corticotropin releasing hormone: relevance to normal physiology and to the pathophysiology and differential diagnosis of hypercortisolism and adrenal insufficiency. 303 86
Corticotropin-releasing factor (CRF), a 41 amino acid polypeptide, has been isolated from ovine hypothalamic extracts, sequenced, and synthesized. It has a high potency for stimulating the secretion of corticotropin-like and beta-endorphin-like immunoactive substances in vitro and in vivo in laboratory animals and humans. The high concentration of CRF-like immunoactivity in hypophyseal portal plasma supports the hypothesis that CRF is the physiological hypothalamic factor. Human and rat CRF (rCRF) also have been purified and synthesized. They have an 83% sequence homology with ovine CRF (oCRF). oCRF-like activity has been found in human hypothalamus, pituitary stalk, posterior pituitary, thalamus, cerebral cortex, cerebellum, pons, medulla oblongata, spinal cord and in the adrenal, lung, liver, stomach, duodenum and pancreas. oCRF-like activity also has been found in the human placenta and in tissues producing ectopic ACTH. The action of CRF can be potentiated by
vasopressin
, oxytocin, epinephrine, norepinephrine, VIP, and angiotensin II. Intracerebroventricular administration of CRF in the rat produces prolonged elevations of plasma epinephrine, norepinephrine, glucose and glucagon; elevates mean arterial pressure and heart rate; increases motor activity and exploration in familiar surroundings and oxygen consumption; and decreases feeding and sexual behavior. Testing with CRF has enabled the separation of patients with hypothalamic and pituitary adrenal insufficiency. The CRF stimulation test has been useful in distinguishing pituitary from ectopic causes of
Cushing's disease
. The distribution of CRF within and beyond the hypothalamus provides an anatomical context for the observation that CRF can simultaneously activate and coordinate metabolic, circulatory and behavioral responses that are adaptative in 'stressful' situations. CRF not only stimulates the pituitary-adrenal axis in man, but it also influences several aspects of CNS function which may be of relevance to psychiatric illnesses.
...
PMID:Corticotropin-releasing factor (CRF)--a review. 353 10
We report an 18-month-old girl with
Cushing's disease
caused by a large adenoma of the pituitary gland. Tumour size and extension were determined by X-ray, CT-scan and angiographic studies. The endocrinological findings were typical for this disease: elevated plasma levels of ACTH, cortisol, 17-Hydroxyprogesterone (17-OHP) and testosterone, elevated urinary excretion of 17-Ketosteroids (17-KS) and 17-Hydroxycorticoids (17-OHCS). Dexamethasone failed to suppress ACTH and cortisol plasma levels. TRH induced only a minimal TSH increase. Following LH-RH injection gonadotropin levels rose to pubertal values. The hGH response to insulin-induced hypoglycaemia was subnormal. After resection of the tumour the infant died because of non-treatable arrhythmia. Histological findings showed a non-differentiated adenoma with extension into the subarachnoid space and into nerve tissues. In vitro lysine-
vasopressin
(LVP) and
arginine-vasopressin
(
AVP
) exhibited only weak stimulatory effects on the ACTH secretion of the tumour cells.
...
PMID:Cushing's disease due to an unusually large adenoma of the pituitary gland in infancy. 398 21
Techniques are described in detail for a radioimmunoassay of plasma adrenocorticotropin (ACTH) that is capable of detecting hormone in unextracted normal human plasma at 1:5 dilution under the conditions described. The sensitivity of the assay is at the level of 1 mumug/ml (equivalent to 0.014 mU/100 ml). In normal subjects ACTH concentrations averaged 22 mumug/ml (equivalent to 0.308 mU/100 ml) plasma at 8-10 a.m. In a smaller group the concentrations averaged 9.6 mumug/ml (equivalent to 0.134 mU/100 ml) at 10-11 p.m. Although a circadian rhythm in normal subjects was not always well marked throughout the daytime hours, plasma ACTH usually fell to its lowest value in the late evening. In hospital patients who were not acutely ill, concentrations were infrequently above 100 mumug/ml in the morning and usually fell to significantly lower levels in the late evening. Severely ill hospital patients occasionally exhibited a.m. concentrations above 200 mumug/ml. In a group of subjects showing frequent spiking of plasma 17-OHCS concentrations throughout the day parallel spiking of plasma ACTH as well was generally observed.Metyrapone produced marked increases in plasma ACTH within 24 hr in all cases and generally within 3-6 hr except when started late in the day. Dexamethasone brought about a persistent reduction in plasma ACTH in a patient under continued treatment with metyrapone.Hypoglycemia, electroshock, surgery under general anesthesia, histalog and
vasopressin
administration were usually followed by significant increases in plasma ACTH concentration. Prior administration of dexamethasone blocked the response to hypoglycemia. Marked elevations in plasma ACTH were observed in patients with adrenal insufficiency off steroid therapy, in
Cushing's disease
after adrenalectomy even in the presence of persistent hypercortisolemia, and in some untreated patients with
Cushing's disease
. Umbilical cord blood contained higher plasma ACTH concentrations than maternal blood at delivery in seven of eight cases. After suppression of ACTH secretion by dexamethasone or cortisol. ACTH disappeared from plasma with half-times ranging from 22 min to 30 min in three cases studied.
...
PMID:Radioimmunoassay of ACTH in plasma. 430 80
In an unselected series of 185 patients with histologically confirmed bronchial carcinoma 16 had endocrine disturbances attributable to the tumour (excluding pulmonary osteoarthropathy). Of these, 11 patients had hypercalcaemia; three inappropriate secretion of
antidiuretic hormone
; one
Cushing's disease
; three hypertrophic osteoarthropathy; and one gynaecomastia.
Cushing's disease
and inappropriate antidiuresis are specifically associated with oat-cell tumours, and hypercalcaemia occurs most frequently with squamous carcinoma. A negative correlation exists between gynaecomastia and osteoarthropathy on the one hand and oat-cell carcinoma on the other.
...
PMID:Endocrine and metabolic disordes in bronchial carcinoma. 548 22
In 14 cases of ACTH-producing pituitary adenomas (8 cases of
Cushing's disease
and 6 cases of Nelson's syndrome) dispersed cells prepared from adenoma tissue were incubated in a superfusion or static incubation system and investigated for ACTH, beta-endorphin (beta-EP) and beta-lipoprotein (beta-LPH) production. Effects of cortisol and lysine
vasopressin
(LVP) were evaluated. During the superfusion a qualitatively parallel secretory pattern is obtained for all hormones. Quantitatively, however, the response to LVP stimulation is more pronounced for beta-endorphin-like immunoreactivity (beta-LPH/beta-EP-IR) causing ACTH/beta-LPH/beta-EP-IR ratios to change throughout single experiments. beta-EP/beta-LPH ratios, however, which were estimated by means of Sephadex G-50 gel chromatography at various key points of the superfusion, were constant for each tumor, although variable between different adenomas, ranging from 0.68 to 2.0. The results suggest neither a differential control for the secretion of the peptides investigated within individual tumors nor a direct effect of cortisol or LVP on pro-opiomelanocortin processing. Summarizing clinical data and in vitro findings such as secretory behavior or hormone ratios, we can find no characteristic differences between Nelson's syndrome and
Cushing's disease
.
...
PMID:In vitro secretion of pro-opiomelanocortin (POMC) derived peptides in human ACTH-producing pituitary adenomas: evaluation of hormone ratios in different functional states. 609 71
ACTH responsiveness in vitro to synthetic corticotropin-releasing factor (CRF), lysine-8-
vasopressin
, and cAMP was examined using superfusion of pituitary adenoma tissue and the nonadenomatous tissue from 16 patients with
Cushing's disease
. Sensitivity of adenomas to lysine-8-
vasopressin
and cAMP was similar to that of nonadenomatous tissues; however, sensitivity of adenomas to CRF was lower than that of nonadenomatous tissues in 7 of 16 patients. CRF-induced ACTH secretion from adenomas was inhibited by Ca2+-free medium in all instances and by dexamethasone and somatostatin in some. Angiotensins I and II stimulated ACTH secretion from both adenomas and nonadenomatous tissues, while angiotensin I-induced ACTH secretion was inhibited by angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor. These results suggest that the sensitivity of the pituitary corticotroph adenomas to CRF in some patients is low. This may be due to an abnormality of the step(s) before cAMP formation, such as the CRF receptor.
...
PMID:Effects of corticotropin-releasing factor and other materials on adrenocorticotropin secretion from pituitary glands of patients with Cushing's disease in vitro. 614 54
Pituitary adenomas were obtained from eight of nine patients with
Cushing's disease
, and the surrounding tissues as well were obtained from six of nine patients. ACTH, beta-lipotropin (beta-LPH), beta-endorphin, GH, TSH, LH, and PRL concentrations in these tissues were determined by RIA. Immunoreactive ACTH and beta-endorphin (beta-endorphin + beta-LPH) were present in high concentrations in all adenomas, and low concentrations were found in the surrounding tissues, except for one patient. As compared to levels seen in normal pituitary tissue, the GH concentration in the surrounding tissues was suppressed in five of six cases. TSH and LH concentrations were suppressed in four and three cases, respectively. The PRL concentration was not suppressed in any of the six patients studied. These four hormones were not detected in any adenoma. Plasma GH, TSH, and LH responses to various stimuli which were suppressed preoperatively returned to normal in most of the patients after adenomectomy. Basal plasma cortisol concentrations were normal or subnormal and were suppressed by the administration of 1 mg dexamethasone after adenomectomy, in contrast to the lack of such suppression preoperatively. ACTH and beta-endorphin secretion were stimulated by lysine-8-
vasopressin
and suppressed by dexamethasone and cyproheptadine in vitro.
...
PMID:Anterior pituitary hormones in plasma and pituitaries from patients with Cushing's disease. 625 28
Using a specific radioimmunoassay for gamma-melanotropin (gamma-MSH), one of the predicted fragments in the amino-terminal portion of the adrenocorticotropin(ACTH)-beta-lipotropin (beta-LPH) precursor, gamma-MSH-like immunoreactivity (gamma-MSH-LI) was detected in human plasma from 4 of 5 patients with Addison's disease and 2 of 3 patients with Nelson's syndrome. None of the normal subjects or patients with
Cushing's disease
showed detectable concentrations (more than 150 pg/ml) of gamma-MSH-LI. gamma-MSH-LI was secreted concomitantly with ACTH-like immunoreactivity (ACTH-LI) and beta-endorphin-like immunoreactivity (beta-endorphin-LI) in response to insulin-induced hypoglycemia and the administration of lysine-
vasopressin
. Conversely, intravenous injection of cortisol lowered plasma concentrations of gamma-MSH-LI concomitantly with those of ACTH-LI and beta-endorphin-LI. Gel chromatographic studies of the plasma extracts showed a single peak of gamma-MSH-LI near the elution position of human beta-LPH. These results suggest that gamma-MSH-LI in human plasma is present as a big form and that this big gamma-MSH is secreted concomitantly with ACTH and beta-endorphin.
...
PMID:Concomitant secretion of Y-MSH with ACTH and beta-endorphin in humans. 625 36
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