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)

Two girls, one with septo-optic dysplasia and the other with posttraumatic brain damage, had the unusual combination of human growth hormone, thyrotropin, adrenocorticotrophic hormone, and vasopressin deficiencies that were associated with sexual precocity in one patient and early sexual maturation in the second patient, and of adult follicle-stimulating hormone and luteinizing hormone concentrations. At autopsy, the first patient had optic nerve aplasia, a normal pituitary gland, and some disorganization of myelinated fibers in the hypothalamus. The second patient had a normal thyrotropin and prolactin response to thyrotropin-releasing hormone, plus hyperphagia, deranged thirst mechanism, and temperature instability. These findings suggest that the lesion may be a defective hypothalamic regulation of pituitary hormone secretion. Congenital or traumatic hypothalamic-pituitary lesions may not affect all releasing factors or trophic hormones in a similar fashion.
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PMID:Sexual precocity with hypothalamic hypopituitarism. 22 32

A 32-year-old man developed panhypopituitarism and diabetes insipidus shortly after sustaining a head injury. Hormonal investigation showed that basal prolactin levels were moderately elevated the first two years after the accident, but later returned to normal. There was no rise in prolactin after administration on chlorpromazine, and the response to thyrotropin-releasing hormone was attenuated. Basal luteinizing hormone and follicle-stimulating hormone levels were low and there was no change after administration of luteinizing-hormone-releasing hormone. There was also no growth hormone elevation following arginine infusion. On the other hand, there was a normal but delayed elevation of thyrotropin in response to thyrotropin-releasing hormone. Appropriate stimulation tests showed normal responsiveness of the thyroid, adrenals and testes. These findings are compatible with an injury to the pituitary stalk, damaging the neurohypophyseal tract and affecting the blood supply to the pituitary gland.
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PMID:Pituitary insufficiency following head injury. 35 6

A patient with an enlarged, asymmetric sella turcica and visual field defects suggestive of a pituitary or parasellar tumor underwent extensive roentgenographic and pituitary function studies. No abnormalities in pituitary luteinizing hormone, follicle-stimulating hormone, thyroid-stimulating hormone, ACTH, prolactin or vasopressin secretion were detected. Growth hormone secretion was provoked by arginine infusion but not by hypoglycemia. Pneumoencephalography revealed air in the sella turcica, and no evidence of tumor. Thus, an enlarged sella turcica in a patient with visual field defects but normal pituitary function may suggest the presence of an "empty sella syndrome."
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PMID:Primary empty sella syndrome with visual field defects. 93 63

Twelve patients (10 women and 2 men) with a primary empty sella turcica were studied. Endocrine function tests were performed as follows: growth hormone (GH) was measured after insulin-induced-hypoglycaemia, luteinizing hormone (LH) and follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) after LH-releasing hormone, thyrotrophin (TSH) and prolactin after thyrotrophin-releasing hormone; pituitary reserve of adrenocorticotrophin (ACTH) was determined by measurement of plasma cortisol after lysine-vasopressin and 11 deoxycortisol after metyrapone. Five of the patients (group A) had no endocrine disturbance. Seven patients (group B) had a hypothalamo-pituitary disorder. Two of them had panhypopituitarism which appeared in one case after meningoencephalitis and in the other after a severe cranial trauma. In two cases an amenorrhoea-galactorrhoea syndrome with increased prolactin level (68 and 230 ng/ml) led to a diagnosis of a prolactin producing adenoma, which was confirmed by surgery. Finally three cases of amenorrhoeagalactorrhoea, with normal prolactin level, and/or diabetes insipidus remained unexplained. However, no causal relationship could be demonstrated between the pituitary disturbance and the "empty sella". Primary empty sella turcica is therefore a neuroanatomical and neuroradiological entity with no endocrine implication. A pituitary disorder might suggest a microadenoma or an incidentally associated disease.
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PMID:The primary empty sella an endocrine study on 12 cases. 98 92

A new hypothesis is presented for the first time to explain the etiology of osteoporosis. Prostaglandins (E2 and F2 alpha) at precise concentrations, have been observed to be involved in bone formation. A close association exists between levels of prostaglandins (E2 and F2 alpha) demonstrated in the neonatal mouse leading to bone formation, with estimated prostaglandins (E2 and F2 alpha) concentrations reported in man. Several hormones (vasopressin, oxytocin, luteinizing hormone, follicle-stimulating hormone, cortisol, estradiol, and testosterone) can indirectly affect prostaglandin formation leading to reduced bone formation. The association between these hormones and prostaglandins (E2 and F2 alpha) explains the physiological mechanism whereby estradiol can be effective for the treatment of osteoporosis. This association also explains the etiology of lumbar spondylitis/spondylodynia, reasons for complaints of increased pain in wet cold weather among arthritics and a multitude of other events. Mechanisms related to this interaction between various hormones and the effect of prostaglandins (E2 and F2 alpha) on bone formation are discussed.
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PMID:New clues into the etiology of osteoporosis: the effects of prostaglandins (E2 and F2 alpha) on bone. 132 11

Changes in the level of antidiuretic hormone (ADH), adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH), somatotropic hormone (STH), follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH), luteinizing hormone (LH), thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH), prolactin (PL), thyroxin (T4), triiodothyronine (T3) and thyroxine-binding globulin (TBG) have been assessed before and during multiorgan excision in 22 donors with brain death. A progressing decrease in ADH blood supply and changes in ACTH, STH, FSH and PL content have been recorded. No regularities have been observed in LH level changes. TSH and thyroid hormone changes were in most cases characterized by a gradual decrease in their plasma levels. A drop in T3 concentration observed at the initial stage of the study was most pronounced with practically normal T4 and TBG values, that also decreased by the moment of heart excision. It has been concluded that brain death is accompanied by a considerable neuroendocrine disfunction and a marked syndrome of low T3 content.
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PMID:[Neuroendocrine disorders in brain-dead donors at the time of multiorgan harvesting]. 152 55

We evaluated six patients in whom a diagnosis of Sheehan's syndrome had been made. The plasma levels of the following hormones were measured: basal thyroxine (T4), estradiol and cortisol; and also follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH), luteinizing hormone (LH), growth hormone (GH), thyrotropin (TSH), prolactin (PRL) and adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH), basally and after acute challenge with LH releasing hormone (LHRH), GRF (1-29)NH2 or insulin hypoglycemia, TSH releasing hormone (TRH) and lysine-8-vasopressin, respectively. Two patients underwent chronic LHRH stimulation by pulsatile subcutaneous administration with infusion pump. In 4 cases, computed tomography (CT) was performed although cranial X-ray study was normal. A severe and generalized pituitary involvement was found in all patients, 3 of whom had diabetes mellitus. Probably, more insidious cases go unnoticed. The presence of asymptomatic partial empty sella (ES) in all the CTs that were carried out raises the possibility that it is another evolutive feature of SS.
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PMID:[Relations between Sheehan's syndrome and empty sella turcica. A functional study apropos of 6 cases]. 217 69

We examined 8 normal subjects and 16 patients with non-functioning pituitary tumors with a combined anterior pituitary test to evaluate the clinical usefulness of the test. Diagnoses included 9 of chromophobe adenoma, 3 of craniopharyngioma, 2 of Rathke's cleft cyst, and 1 each of intrasellar cyst and tuberculum sella meningioma. All subjects received hypothalamic releasing hormones: 1 micrograms/kg corticotropin releasing hormone (CRH), 1 micrograms/kg growth hormone releasing hormone (GRH), 500 micrograms thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH), 100 micrograms luteinizing hormone releasing hormone (LH-RH), and a relatively small dose (5 mU/kg) of lysine vasopressin (LVP). In the normal subjects, the addition of LVP potentiated the secretion of adenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) induced by CRH, but had no significant effect on the secretion of other anterior pituitary hormones. In the combined test with 5 releasing hormones, the plasma ACTH and cortisol responses were not impaired in the majority of the patients before pituitary surgery. Serum thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH), prolactin (PRL) and follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) responses were not impaired in 82%, 70% and 67% of the patients, respectively, while the serum LH and GH responses were impaired in 67% and 73% of the patients, respectively. Following pituitary surgery, responses of these hormones to combined testing were similarly impaired in more than 75% of the patients. These results indicate that plasma ACTH, cortisol and serum TSH responses are fairly good before pituitary surgery but are impaired significantly after surgery. No subjects experienced any serious adverse effects related to the testing. These results suggest that combined testing with hypothalamic hormones is a convenient and useful method for evaluating pituitary function.
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PMID:Combined anterior pituitary function test using CRH, GRH, LH-RH, TRH and vasopressin in patients with non-functioning pituitary tumors. 220 Feb 36

Male rats were treated acutely with nicotine (4 x 2 mg/kg, 30-min time intervals, total treatment time 2 h) or exposed to cigarette smoke from 4 x 1 cigarette (30-min time intervals, total treatment time 2 h). Some rats were pretreated with the D1 dopamine (DA) receptor antagonist SCH 23390 (0.1-3.0 mg/kg, i.p.), or with the D2 DA receptor antagonists remoxipride and raclopride (1 mg/kg, i.p.), or with the 5-hydroxytryptamine 2 (5-HT2) receptor antagonist ketanserin (0.3 mg/kg, i.p.) 5 min before nicotine treatment or the acute intermittent exposure to cigarette smoke. Some rats were treated with the D1 DA receptor agonist SK&F 38393 (1-10 mg/kg, i.p.) 15 min, 30 min or 2 h before decapitation. Hypothalamic and pre-optic catecholamine (CA) levels were measured by quantitative histofluorimetry in discrete DA and noradrenaline (NA) nerve terminal systems. Serum thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH), prolactin, luteinizing hormone (LH), follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH), vasopressin, corticosterone and testosterone levels were determined by radioimmunoassay procedures. Nicotine treatment and to a minor degree also acute intermittent exposure to cigarette smoke produced a reduction in serum prolactin, LH and TSH but not in serum FSH, vasopressin and testosterone levels. Nicotine treatment also increased serum corticosterone levels. Pretreatment with the D1 DA receptor antagonist SCH 23390 (1-3 mg/kg) counteracted the lowering of serum LH, but not of prolactin and TSH levels induced by nicotine or exposure to cigarette smoke. SCH 23390 alone (1-3 mg/kg) increased serum TSH levels. Remoxipride, raclopride or ketanserin did not counteract any of the neuro-endocrine actions induced by nicotine treatment. However, ketanserin alone lowered serum prolactin levels. SK&F 38393 increased serum TSH, prolactin and LH levels. It was found that nicotine treatment and exposure to cigarette smoke with few exceptions produced a depletion of CA stores in NA and DA nerve terminals of the hypothalamus, pre-optic area and median eminence which was counteracted by SCH 23390 (1 mg/kg) but not by remoxipride, raclopride (1 mg/kg) or ketanserin (0.3 mg/kg). The results indicate that D1 but not D2 DA or 5-HT2 receptors may modulate the NA and DA release in the median eminence, the hypothalamus and the pre-optic area induced by nicotinic cholinoceptor activation. Furthermore, D1 DA receptors in the median eminence may at least in part mediate the inhibitory effects of nicotine on LH but not on TSH and prolactin secretion, although there appears to exist a D1 DA receptor in the median eminence which inhibits TSH secretion.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Involvement of D1 dopamine receptors in the nicotine-induced neuro-endocrine effects and depletion of diencephalic catecholamine stores in the male rat. 297 69

Ovarian hyperstimulation syndrome occurred after induction of ovulation with menotropins (follicle-stimulating hormone and luteinizing hormone) and implantation of an intrauterine pregnancy. Serial determinations of aldosterone, deoxycorticosterone, 17 beta-estradiol, progesterone, human chorionic gonadotropin, urinary and plasma electrolytes, and fluid balance were obtained. Plasma renin activity, aldosterone, deoxycorticosterone, and antidiuretic hormone rose markedly. Hydration for four days improved urinary output but also accelerated sodium and fluid retention. Subsequent restriction of salt and water stabilized the patient. Spontaneous abortion was followed by prompt diuresis without a change in therapy. Regression analysis of the authors' data, the clinical observations, and other data in the literature suggest that the ovarian hyperstimulation syndrome is produced by excessive secretion of an unknown hormone that regulates peritoneal fluid during the normal menstrual cycle, and that elevations of plasma renin, aldosterone, and antidiuretic hormone are secondary.
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PMID:Pathophysiology of the ovarian hyperstimulation syndrome. 392 8


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