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Query: UNIPROT:P01185 (
vasopressin
)
23,126
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
An evaluation of a new 3 h metyrapone test is presented. The test consists of one oral dose of metyrapone given at 08.00-09.00 hours, and determination of plasma deoxycortisol from a single capillary blood sample taken 3 h later. The test has been assessed in children and adolescents in conjunction with a 5 day metyrapone test, insulin test,
vasopressin
test, and ACTH test in forty-five reference subjects, in thirty-six hypopituitary subjects with normal or deficient ACTH secretion, in three subjects with primary adrenocortical disease and in ten subjects prior to and after pharmacological prednisone medication. During the first hour after metyrapone the plasma cortisol level decreased to almost the low level maintained for the rest of the 3 h period. The plasma deoxycortisol concentration was basally less than or equal to 35 nmol/l and increased continuously during the 3 h period to the mean level of 299 (95% confidence interval 133-669) nmol/l in the reference subjects. The new test proved to be as accurate as the insulin test in detecting
ACTH deficiency
. No significant rise was observed in the plasma somatotrophin (GH) level in those children who had a normal GH response to insulin hypoglycaemia.
...
PMID:Evaluation of 3 hour metyrapone test in children and adolescents. 19 59
A 42-year-old man and a 51-year-old woman with a positive history of weakness and gastrointestinal complaints were shown to have low basal plasma cortisol and ACTH levels, and low daily urinary excretion of free cortisol. An empty sella was found in patient no. 1, while patient no. 2 was hypothyroid. Both patients showed a normal plasma cortisol response to ACTH and an increment in plasma ACTH and lipotropin levels after ovine CRH (oCRH), lysine
vasopressin
(LVP) and oCRH-LVP stimulation tests. These studies clearly report an isolated idiopathic
ACTH deficiency
due to a deficit in CRH in two adult subjects.
...
PMID:Isolated adrenocorticotropic hormone deficiency secondary to hypothalamic deficit of corticotropin releasing hormone. 131 44
Two hundred and forty-one cases of isolated
ACTH deficiency
have been reported in Japan since 1969. Pituitary hormone responsiveness to stimulation tests before and after hydrocortisone supplementation was investigated in these cases. Plasma ACTH level showed no or little change in response to lysine
vasopressin
, metyrapone, CRF or insulin-induced hypoglycemia in 97.3-100% of the cases. Serum GH level changed little or not at all in response to GRF, insulin-induced hypoglycemia, glucagon, 1-dopa and arginine in 26.9, 29.3, 40.0, 50.0 and 56.1%, respectively. Serum TSH and prolactin (PRL) levels showed hyperresponse to TRH in 34.7 and 35.6%, respectively. After hydrocortisone therapy, GH secretion was more responsive than before therapy in 78.9% of the cases. After supplementation, TSH level was less responsive to TRH stimulation than before therapy in 59.3% of the cases. After hydrocortisone supplementation, TSH response to TRH decreased in 75% of ACTH-deficient patients without primary hypothyroidism but did not decrease in more than half of those with primary hypothyroidism. TSH response to TRH decreased after supplementation in 76.5% of the patients with TSH hyperresponsiveness before therapy, and increased after therapy in 66.7% of those with normal TSH responses before therapy. After supplementation, PRL response to TRH was less than that before therapy in 43.5% of ACTH--deficient patients, and greater than that before therapy in 30.4%. PRL response to TRH decreased after therapy in 66.7% of the patients with PRL hyperresponsiveness before therapy, and increased in 63.6% of those with normal PRL response before therapy. Primary hypothyroidism and Hashimoto's thyroiditis were complicated in 21.6 and 11.6%, respectively, of the 241 patients with isolated
ACTH deficiency
. In patients who had TSH hyperresponsiveness and/or high basal TSH levels and PRL hyperresponsiveness and/or high basal PRL levels, primary hypothyroidism was complicated in 58.4 and 42.3%, respectively. Hashimoto's thyroiditis was complicated in 29.8 and 20.5%, respectively, of these patients. Pituitary cell antibody (PCA) was detected in 36.6% of ACTH-deficient patients who were examined. Pituitary cell surface antibody (PCSA) to AtT-20 cells and GH3 cells was detected in 50.0 and 28.0% of the examined cases, respectively. The prevalence of PCA and PCSA did not differ between TSH-hyperresponsive patients and those with normal TSH basal levels and response, whereas PCA and PCSA were significantly more prevalent in PRL-hyperresponsive patients than in those with normal PRL levels and response. An empty sella was found in 30.2% of the examined case.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Hyperresponsiveness of TSH and prolactin and impaired responsiveness of GH in Japanese patients with isolated ACTH deficiency]. 133 97
We describe 2 patients presenting with severe chronic hyponatremia in whom clinical and biochemical features strongly suggested the syndrome of inappropriate
antidiuretic hormone
secretion (SIADH). Both, however, were proven to have a primary pituitary deficiency of corticotropin. Their short synacthen tests were only mildly abnormal but associated with low basal ACTH levels. The diagnosis of
ACTH deficiency
was made more convincingly by their dramatic response to glucocorticoid replacement therapy. In patients in whom no cause for SIADH can be found, a trial of maintenance cortisol therapy is warranted to exclude this eminently treatable condition.
...
PMID:Corticotropin deficiency: a rare cause of hyponatremia mimicking SIADH. 164 96
We found symptomatic hyponatremia in four elderly patients in which serum sodium (Na) levels ranged from 101 to 122 mEq/l. All 4 patients had low levels of plasma adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH), serum cortisol, and urinary excretion of 17-OHCS, and poor responses of ACTH to exogenous insulin and
antidiuretic hormone
(
ADH
). Other pituitary hormones were all normal. They were therefore diagnosed as having isolated
ACTH deficiency
. Plasma
ADH
was relatively high despite hypoosmolality which was associated with the hyponatremia. Water loading test revealed impaired water excretion and poor suppression of plasma
ADH
. Replacement with 20-30 mg hydrocortisone completely restored the serum Na level and restored the plasma
ADH
level to the normal range in all 4 patients. Other factors such as decreased glomerular filtration, enhanced urinary Na loss and decreased Na intake were also included. These results indicate that there is marked hyponatremia and that in the presence of hypoosmolality the sustained secretion of
ADH
is the key factor in causing the impaired water excretion and hyponatremia in isolated
ACTH deficiency
.
...
PMID:Role of antidiuretic hormone in hyponatremia in patients with isolated adrenocorticotropic hormone deficiency. 166 14
A 62-year-old man was admitted because of nausea and vomiting. Severe hyponatremia with renal sodium loss was found. Endocrinological studies revealed that the patient had isolated adrenocorticotropin (ACTH) deficiency and secondary adrenocortical insufficiency. Furthermore, an inappropriate secretion of
antidiuretic hormone
(
ADH
) in relation to the low plasma osmolality was observed at an early stage of hyponatremia. Hydrocortisone therapy effectively corrected his hyponatremia. Following the correction of hyponatremia, the value of free water clearance increased and the level of the plasma ADH decreased. Thus, the present case indicates that
ACTH deficiency
can cause the syndrome of inappropriate secretion of
ADH
.
...
PMID:Inappropriate secretion of antidiuretic hormone in isolated adrenocorticotropin deficiency. 185 May 79
A 44-yr-old man with hypocortisolism was shown to have an undetectable basal plasma ACTH level and absent or subnormal ACTH and beta-lipotropin responses to provocative testing with insulin,
vasopressin
, and CRH. Endocrine function after glucocorticoid replacement was otherwise normal, thus establishing the diagnosis of isolated
ACTH deficiency
. This patient's serum was tested immunohistochemically for the presence of an antipituitary antibody by indirect immunofluorescence of rat pituitary tissue. Positive immunostaining was observed in stellate-shaped cells in the anterior and intermediate lobes. Immunopositive cells were shown by immunoelectron microscopy to have ultrastructural characteristics of corticotrophs. Immunoreactivity was concentrated in secretory granules 120-170 nm in diameter. In a double immunolabeling procedure, staining by the patient's serum was shown to colocalize with rabbit antiserum to ACTH, but not with antisera to PRL, GH, beta TSH, or beta LH. Immunoabsorption of the patient's serum with ACTH-(1-24), ACTH-(1-39), gamma MSH, corticotropin-like intermediate lobe peptide, beta-endorphin, or beta-lipotropin failed to diminish immunolabeling in the pituitary. We conclude that the antipituitary antibody in this patient's serum shows immunohistochemical specificity for a rat corticotroph antigen located in secretory granules that is neither ACTH nor any of the proopiomelanocortin (POMC)-derived peptides tested. The autoantigen could be a cell-specific granular factor involved in the posttranslational processing of POMC or secretion of ACTH. We postulate that an autoimmune process may account for this patient's disease, and that his antipituitary antibody could play a pathogenic role by either inhibiting a POMC-processing enzyme or initiating an antibody-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity reaction, resulting in the selective destruction of corticotrophs.
...
PMID:Isolated adrenocorticotropin deficiency associated with an autoantibody to a corticotroph antigen that is not adrenocorticotropin or other proopiomelanocortin-derived peptides. 215 84
Ten patients with secondary hypoadrenalism have been tested with corticotropin releasing hormone (CRH) and lysine-
vasopressin
(LVP). One patient had isolated
ACTH deficiency
; 9 had deficiency of other pituitary hormones attributable to a primary pituitary disease in 3 and to an hypothalamic disorder in 6. After CRH administration, a definite increase in plasma ACTH was observed in all 6 patients with hypothalamic disorder. No response was elicited in the 3 patients with pituitary disease and in the patient with isolated
ACTH deficiency
. In the responsive patients. ACTH showed a delayed and prolonged pattern of response. Lysine-
vasopressin
administration produced an increase in plasma ACTH in 4 of the 6 hypothalamic patients and no response in those with pituitary disease and in the patient with isolated
ACTH deficiency
. These findings suggest that CRH represents a reliable test in differentiating hypothalamic from pituitary adrenal failure; LVP appeared a less sensitive diagnostic test.
...
PMID:CRH and lysine-vasopressin stimulation tests in the diagnosis of hypoadrenalism secondary to hypothalamic or pituitary disorders. 216 50
To examine the functioning of the hypothalamo-pituitary-adrenocortical axis in secondary adrenocortical insufficiency, we administered 100 micrograms synthetic human CRH, iv, plus 10 U lysine-8-
vasopressin
(LVP), im, three times daily for 3 consecutive days. The changes in plasma ACTH and cortisol levels during the administration and the response to an insulin tolerance test (ITT) conducted before and after the administration were determined. In three patients with isolated
ACTH deficiency
, basal plasma ACTH and cortisol levels were undetectablly low, and there was no response noted in the ITT or during CRH-LVP administration throughout the observation period. In four patients with adrenocortical insufficiency who had undergone successful transsphenoidal microadenomectomy for Cushing's disease and in six patients who had undergone curative unilateral adrenalectomy for Cushing's syndrome, basal plasma ACTH levels were low, but responded considerably to both stimulation tests. Along with the 3 days of CRH-LVP stimulation, however, neither the peak nor the time-integrated ACTH response was significantly enhanced, because of the variability of the responses among the patients. Compared with the ACTH response on the last day of CRH-LVP stimulation, the subsequent ITT tended to induce a lower ACTH response in the post-Cushing's disease patients and a higher response in the post-Cushing's syndrome patients. Regarding the plasma cortisol levels, the basal, peak, and integrated responses tended to increase daily during CRH-LVP administration. Conversely, the ITT after repetitive CRH-LVP administration induced a higher cortisol response than the test before CRH-LVP administration in the post-Cushing's disease patients. No serious complications were noted in any of the patients during or after the treatment. The present findings indicate that 1) repetitive administration of CRH in combination with LVP is a safe and valuable provocation test to examine the pituitary ACTH reserve and the integrity of the pituitary-adrenocortical axis; 2) isolated
ACTH deficiency
is usually due to a defect at the pituitary level; 3) with respect to adrenocortical responsiveness, post-Cushing's disease patients show a better accumulation of the provocative effect than do post-Cushing's syndrome patients; and 4) both hypothalamic and pituitary dysfunction are responsible for adrenal hypofunction in patients after hypercortisolemia, but post-Cushing's syndrome patients (especially those with a short period of hypercortisolemia) appeared to have less impairment of hypothalamic ACTH-releasing activity than post-Cushing's disease patients.
...
PMID:Effects of repetitive administration of corticotropin-releasing hormone combined with lysine vasopressin on plasma adrenocorticotropin and cortisol levels in secondary adrenocortical insufficiency. 217 83
Severe hyponatremia occurs in some patients with untreated hypopituitarism, but it is not known whether such hyponatremia is caused by the hypersecretion of
vasopressin
(
antidiuretic hormone
). This report describes severe, symptomatic hyponatremia in five women 59 to 83 years old (serum sodium, 111 to 118 mmol per liter) who presented with hypopituitarism (which had been previously undiagnosed in four). Plasma
vasopressin
was inappropriately high (1.3 to 25.8 pmol per liter [1.4 to 28 ng per liter]) in relation to plasma osmolality (236 to 260 mOsm per kilogram of body weight). All five patients had normal renal function and no signs of dehydration or volume depletion. The hyponatremia was resolved within a few days after the institution of hydrocortisone therapy, after infusion of normotonic or hypertonic saline had been found to be less effective. When four of the patients were later restudied while receiving maintenance hydrocortisone treatment, the relation between plasma
vasopressin
and osmolality was normal. We conclude that
ACTH deficiency
may cause the syndrome of inappropriate secretion of
antidiuretic hormone
. The beneficial effect of hydrocortisone is probably exerted through the suppression of
vasopressin
secretion.
...
PMID:Hyponatremia and inappropriate secretion of vasopressin (antidiuretic hormone) in patients with hypopituitarism. 276 90
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