Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P01185 (vasopressin)
23,126 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Plasma ACTH (normal value: 0.16 plus or minus mU/100 ml) was measured in 116 patients with Cushing's syndrome, using a bioassay including dynamic tests and sequential determinations. In 10 patients with adrenal tumors ACTH levels were nondetectable (ND) or low, and usually nonstimulatable. In 10 patients with ectopic ACTH secretion high levels (0.42 plus or minus 0.07 mU/100 ml) were measured. The extracts of 6 tumors yielded an ACTH-like substance. Forty-three patients with Cushing's disease (without pituitary tumor) had, before treatment, a mean ACTH level of 0.18 plus or minus 0.01 mU/100 ml, accompanied by high levels of plasma cortisol (32.1 plus or minus 1.9 mug/100 ml). Irregular nycthemeral variations occurred. ACTH rose to 0.30 mU/100 ml after incomplete adrenalectomy (20 patients) and to 1.14 mU/100 ml after total adrenalectomy (21 patients). Dexamethasone (8 mg per day) suppressed ACTH levels. Metyrapone induced a normal ACTH rise, but at abnormal times. Lysine-vasopressin (LVP) induced an ACTH mean relative increase of 120% before, and of 140% after adrenalectomy (i.e., within the normal range). Six nonadrenalectomized patients with pituitary tumors showed similar abnormalities of ACTH regulation. However, the ACTH rise after LVP was above 500%. When pituitary tumors occurred after adrenalectomy (12 patients) the mean basal ACTH level was 18 mU/100 ml. Dexamethasone induced a 90% decrease, and LVP a 416% increase in ACTH levels. In 6 patients with nodular adrenal hyperplasia, ACTH was undetectable before treatment. After adrenalectomy, ACTH rose to 0.4 mU/100 ml (11 patients) and the increase after LVP was 90%. Five additional patients developed pituitary tumors. These data confirm the abnormalities of ACTH feedback regulation in Cushing's disease. However, even when pituitary tumors occur, ACTH levels can be altered by metyrapone, dexamethasone and LVP. This last test is of particular interest for the detection of pituitary tumors. The follow-up pattern of treated nodular adrenal hyperplasia appears to be very similar to that of Cushing's disease.
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PMID:Studies of ACTH secretion control in 116 cases of Cushing's syndrome. 16 70

The physiological regulation of the plasma corticosteroid concentration, measured by competitive protein-binding, was studied in female rhesus monkeys (M. mulatta) sedated with phencyclidine hydrochloride. Morning basal levels of plasma corticosteroids were found to be in the range 8-0-25-2 mug/100 ml, which is lower than that previously reported in this species. A circadian rhythm in plasma cortisol concentration was demonstrated. Prolonged sedation with phencyclidine was associated with a gradual increase in the plasma cortisol concentration. Synthetic alpha1-24 adrenocorticotrophic hormone given intravenously caused a rapid rise in plasma cortisol, the minimum effective dose was between 1 and 10 ng/kg body weight and the response was maximal after 1000 ng/kg. The administration of lysine-vasopressin and the induction of hypoglycaemia by insulin were both followed by an increase in the plasma corticosteroid concentration. Metyrapone caused a decline in plasma 11-hydroxycorticosteroids and a concomitant increase in total corticosteroids measured by competitive protein-binding. It is concluded that the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal system in the rhesus monkey functions in a manner which is qualitatively and quantitatively similar to that of man.
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PMID:Studies on plasma corticosteroids in the rhesus monkey (Macaca mulatta). 81 35

Renal clearances and plasma antidiuretic hormone (ADH), 17-hydroxycorticoids, and norepinephrine were measured in unrestrained dogs before and during exposure to ambient cold (minus 4 to + 4 degrees C). Some dogs were treated with an inhibitor of cortisol biosynthesis, Metopirone, either alone or combined with dexamethasone, a potent glucocorticoid suppressing ACTH release. Plasma ADH increased in the Metopirone-treated group (P smaller than 0.02) but changed little in other dogs. Plasma 17-hydroxycorticoids in untreated dogs rose from a control value of 14.4 plus or minus 1.9 (SE) to 1.82 plus or minus 1.2 mug/100 ml after 20 min of exposure (P smaller than 0.01), an increase comparable with that previously observed in restrained dogs. Plasma norepinephrine increased from 0.98 plus or minus 0.07 to 1.15 plus or minus 0.08 mug/liter (P smaller than 0.01) after 20 min of exposure. Urine flow, C-Cr, and C-PAH tended to increase spontaneously in nonexposed control dogs. Exposure to cold abolished or reversed this tendency, most distinctly in the Metopirone-dexamethasone group. The urine concentration, measured as T-c-H2O/C-Cr, did not change in cold, in contrast to a decrease previously observed in restrained dogs. The data do not support the key role of plasma cortisol elevation in the mechanism of urine-concentration defect in cold and demonstrate important differences between responses of restrained and unrestrained animals.
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PMID:Plasma hormone and renal function changes in unrestrained dogs exposed to cold. 111 60

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.
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PMID:Radioimmunoassay of ACTH in plasma. 430 80

The vasopressin test gave pathological results in 12 cases of optic atrophy and normal results in three cases. One of the patients with a pathological response had Leber's disease and three had tobacco-alcholic amblyopia, while in the rest the optic atrophy was of uncertain origin. In the cases with normal results the aetiology was also unclear. The Metopirone test was normal in 13 cases and pathological in only one case of optic atrophy. In three out of five patients with optic neuritis the vasopressin test gave pathological responses. The high frequency of pathological vasopressin tests in patients with optic lesions indicates a simultaneous disturbance of the hypothalamo-hypophyseal function. The background to this might be a disturbed vascular supply. The vasopressin test was of no help in diagnosing tumours as a cause of optic atrophy.
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PMID:Vasopressin test in cases of optic atrophy and optic neuritis. 555 97

The first half of this manuscript is devoted to a review of the methods used and the results obtained in the published measurements of the normal responses to tests of the three main types of hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenocortical (HPA) activity in man. These are, I, basal, unstressed activity leading to appropriate levels of total daily production of cortisol in the characteristic circadian pattern; II, responses to feedback stimulation of HPA activity by metyrapone administration; and III, responses to tests of the effects of stress on the HPA system including the effects of hypoglycemia, induced fever, vasopressin administration, and ACTH injections and infusions. The advantages and shortcomings of each type of procedure are discussed. The second half of this paper describes the authors' attempts to establish the limits of normality of standard and modified methods of evaluating the HPA system. The defined limits of normality have been used to assess the HPA function in 158 patients with known or suspected disorders of the HPA system. In normal controls, halfhourly plasma cortisol determinations established the normality of circadian and postprandial fluctuations and of mean plasma cortisol concentration, 6.2 +/- 0.3 (SEM) micrograms/dl, which were closely approximated by determinations every 6 h. Metyrapone, given in a dose of 500 mg every 2 h for 24 h increased urinary 17-OHCS excretion to 10.5-32.6 mg/day or to 1.7-7.8 times basal excretion rate. Increasing rates of insulin infusion disclosed significant relationships between resulting plasma glucose and cortisol concentrations. The slopes of the delta cortisol/delta glucose responses were similar after insulin infusions (0.46 +/- 0.05) and after insulin injections, 0.15 U/kg (0.43 +/- 0.09), and were always greater than 0.20 micrograms/mg. This index provides a useful objective measure of the normality of responses to hypoglycemic stress, 0.20-0.87 micrograms/mg. Adrenocortical responses to iv infusions of ACTH (cosyntropin 0.25 mg) may be equivocal at 2 h but are clear cut at 4, 6 and 8 h. Of 158 patients in whom hypopituitarism was known or suspected because of the presence of a pituitary tumor, acromegaly, hyperprolactinemia, or clinical features, HPA function was found to be entirely normal in 88 patients and partially or severely abnormal in the remaining 70 patients.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Normal and abnormal function of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenocortical system in man. 608 18

ACTH and lipotropins (beta- and gamma-LPH) are synthesized from a common precursor by the pituitary corticotropic cell. We have measured LPH plasma levels under physiological and pathological conditions and we have compared them with ACTH plasma levels in the same circumstances. Spontaneous variations (nycthemeral rhythm) in LPH, ACTH and cortisol plasma levels were parallel, while responses to Dexamethasone freination test and stress (Insulin induced hypoglycemia) or more specific stimulation (Metopirone, lysine-vasopressin) were parallel and superimposable. LPH levels were always higher than ACTH levels in two pathological circumstances: chronic renal failure and Cushing's syndromes with ectopic ACTH producing tumors. The determination of both ACTH and LPH levels assists the diagnosis of corticotropic insufficiency and etiologic investigation of Cushing's syndrome, after hypercorticolism had been established. Although unable to confirm the presence of corticotropic adenoma in patients with Cushing's disease, or the predict effectiveness of pituitary surgery, these determination bring good arguments for treated Cushing's diseases follow up.
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PMID:[ACTH, beta-endorphin and lipotropins: physiopathological studies in man (author's transl)]. 628 91

Treatment for the paraneoplastic syndrome associated with lung cancer was reviewed. The principle of the treatment of paraneoplastic syndrome is to control cancer as an underlying disease. Therefore, the standard therapy for Cushing's syndrome associated with lung cancer is surgical treatment if the tumor is operable. There is no standard therapy for Cushing's syndrome associated with advanced small-cell lung cancer. Metyrapone is used in combination with systemic chemotherapy. The effects of ketoconazole and octreotide are under investigation. To control hyponatremia due to the syndrome of inappropriate antidiuretic hormone secretion, fluid restriction is standard. When hyponatremia cannot be controlled with fluid restriction, demeclocycline can be used. For life-threatening hyponatremia, hypertonic saline with intravenous furosemide is administered under careful monitoring. Followed by hydration with saline, pamidronate is effective for the control of symptomatic hypercalcemia. Combined use of calcitonin facilitates rapid normalization of serum calcium for critically ill cases. Heparin is used for patients with recurrent episodes of thrombosis resulting from chronic disseminated intravascular coagulation, although the efficacy is controversial. Thrombocytes and coagulation factors are combined with heparin for patients with uncontrollable bleeding, although the efficacy is not established.
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PMID:[Paraneoplastic syndrome]. 936 21

With fewer than 200 reported cases, Cushing's syndrome (CS) in pregnancy remains a diagnostic and therapeutic challenge. In normal pregnancies, misleading signs may be observed such as striae or hypokalemia, while plasma cortisol and urinary free cortisol may rise up to 2- to 3-fold. While the dexamethasone suppression test is difficult to use, reference values for salivary cortisol appear valid. Apart from gestational hypertension, differential diagnosis includes pheochromocytoma and primary aldosteronism. The predominant cause is adrenal adenoma (sometimes without decreased ACTH), rather than Cushing's disease. There are considerable imaging pitfalls in Cushing's disease. Aberrant receptors may, in rare cases, lead to increased cortisol production during pregnancy in response to HCG, LHRH, glucagon, vasopressin or after a meal. Adrenocortical carcinoma (ACC) is rare and has poor prognosis. Active CS during pregnancy is associated with a high rate of maternal complications: hypertension or preeclampsia, diabetes, fractures; more rarely, cardiac failure, psychiatric disorders, infection and maternal death. Increased fetal morbidity includes prematurity, intrauterine growth retardation and less prevalently stillbirth, spontaneous abortion, intrauterine death and hypoadrenalism. Therapy is also challenging. Milder cases can be managed conservatively by controlling comorbidities. Pituitary or adrenal surgery should ideally be performed during the second trimester and patients should then be treated for adrenal insufficiency. Experience with anticortisolic drugs is limited. Metyrapone was found to allow control of hypercortisolism, with a risk of worsening hypertension. Cabergoline may be an alternative option. The use of other drugs is not advised because of potential teratogenicity and/or lack of information. Non-hormonal (mechanical) contraception is recommended until sustained biological remission is obtained.
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PMID:MANAGEMENT OF ENDOCRINE DISEASE: Management of Cushing's syndrome during pregnancy: solved and unsolved questions. 2952 33