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Query: UNIPROT:P01189 (
beta-endorphin
)
21,003
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Pituitary apoplexy is characterized by a wide spectrum of clinical features. A quite rare case of painless thyroiditis, hypopituitarism and central diabetes insipidus (DI) followed by pituitary apoplexy was presented. A 61-year-old woman was admitted to our hospital in May, 1986 because of marked general malaise, polydipsia and weight loss which became progressively worse. Four months earlier she had experienced episodes of abrupt onset of severe headache associated with nausea and blurring vision. Physical examinations revealed a fine tremor, dry skin and nervousness. The thyroid gland was not palpable. Visual fields were intact. Her blood pressure was 105/64 mmHg with variable tachycardia. The routine laboratory studies were normal or negative except for hypoalbuminemia, hypocholesterolemia and hypernatremia. Erythrocyte sedimentation rate was 12 mm/hr. An impairment in
corticotropin
secretion was suspected from the low plasma cortisol and the low urinary excretion of 17-OHCS and the sufficient response to ACTH. Basal levels of GH and gonadotropin were also low, and responses to the stimulation tests (Insulin-stress, L-DOPA, and LH-RH) were all blunted. Brain computed tomographic scan and magnetic resonance imaging demonstrated a suprasellar mass that, after infusion, developed peripheral ring-like enhancement and large hyperintense pituitary mass, respectively. A diagnosis of pituitary apoplexy with anterior pituitary failure was made. However, the initial levels of thyroid hormones showed elevated as follows: Free T3 7.6 pg/ml, Free T4 3.3 ng/dl and T3-resin uptake 41.1%. TSH responses to TRH were all suppressed. TSH receptor antibody (TBII) was negative. Both antithyroglobulin and antimicrosomal antibodies were repeatedly positive. A thyroid scan with 99mTc revealed no uptake in the thyroid area. These findings led us to the diagnosis of "painless autoimmune thyroiditis". She had become hypothyroid without any medication. At that time radioactive 99mTc and 123I uptakes increased significantly. When hydrocortisone was substituted, daily urine output abruptly increased to about 10 liters with low osmolality, and the presence of DI was suspected. This diagnosis was confirmed by water deprivation and hypertonic saline infusion tests and subsequent pitressin test. She is currently quite well on L-thyroxine, hydrocortisone and desmopressin (1988). This association with pituitary apoplexy must be a rare occurrence, as a literature search has failed to find a similar case. The pathogenetic trigger of "painless thyroiditis" in this case may be responsible for some immunological change due to secondary
adrenal insufficiency
after pituitary apoplexy.
...
PMID:[An unusual association of transient resolving thyrotoxicosis due to painless thyroiditis, hypopituitarism and central diabetes insipidus associated with spontaneous pituitary apoplexy]. 230 57
A 43-year-old woman with isolated ACTH deficiency in association with transient thyrotoxicosis is reported. The initial evaluation revealed that plasma ACTH and cortisol did not respond to
corticotropin
-releasing hormone (CRH) in the presence of hyperthyroxinemia and hyperprolactinemia. During the replacement therapy with dexamethasone, she developed transient hypothyroxinemia with persistent hyperprolactinemia. Although thyroid open biopsy did not show any evidence of autoimmune thyroiditis or subacute thyroiditis, the data appear to provide other evidence of a possible relationship between acute
adrenal insufficiency
and transient thyroid dysfunction.
...
PMID:Isolated ACTH deficiency associated with transient thyrotoxicosis and hyperprolactinemia. 255 45
We describe a patient with type I diabetes mellitus and hypothyroidism who developed frank adrenocortical insufficiency while receiving a high-dose ketoconazole therapy for keratitis caused by Acanthamoeba species. While impaired cortisol responses to
corticotropin
and mildly symptomatic
hypoadrenalism
have been described previously with ketoconazole therapy, to our knowledge, this case represents the first documented article of an actual adrenal crisis associated with this drug. Two reasons are postulated for the development of this complication in our patient: high-dose ketoconazole therapy given in divided doses during the day, and a possibly impaired central response to stress because of hypothyroidism. Our article points to the need to monitor patients treated with high-dose ketoconazole for
adrenal insufficiency
, particularly if associated illnesses are present that may impair an adequate stress response.
...
PMID:Adrenal crisis in the setting of high-dose ketoconazole therapy. 270 31
Corticotropin
deficiency may occur after pituitary surgery, and, if unrecognized and untreated, it can be fatal. In this study the insulin tolerance test was used to assess hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal reserve five to seven days after pituitary surgery, and postoperative morning serum cortisol concentration was compared with the insulin tolerance test for predicting
corticotropin
deficiency. In 35 patients with pituitary tumors studied prospectively, 27 had normal insulin tolerance test results five to seven days after pituitary surgery; in these patients, the morning serum cortisol concentration two to three days after surgery was 250 nmol/L (9 micrograms/dL) or greater. Eight patients had subnormal insulin tolerance test results or clinical evidence of
adrenal insufficiency
; the morning serum cortisol concentration in these patients was 80 nmol/L (3 micrograms/dL) or less. Postoperative
adrenal insufficiency
was transient (one to three months) in five of these eight patients. We retrospectively identified 45 patients whose postoperative morning serum cortisol values were 200 nmol/L (7 micrograms/dL) or greater; none of these patients had clinical evidence of
adrenal insufficiency
. We conclude that a morning serum cortisol level obtained two to three days after surgery and 24 hours after the discontinuation of hydrocortisone accurately predicts postoperative
corticotropin
reserve.
...
PMID:Rapid assessment of corticotropin reserve after pituitary surgery. 282 32
The purpose of this study was to assess the glucocorticoid agonist activity of the antiprogestin steroid RU-486 by examining its ability to exert a glucocorticoid-like negative feedback effect on pituitary adrenocorticotropic hormone secretion. 10 patients with nonpituitary Cushing's syndrome, from whom cortisol therapy had been withheld for 36 hours, were given an oral dose of either a placebo, cortisol, or 20mg/kg of RU-480. 2 hours later, they were given an intravenous injection of lug/Kg of ovine
corticotropin
-releasing hormone. Blood samples were taken 15 minutes before the injection, at the time of the injection, and 15, 30, 60, 90, 120, and 180 minutes afterwards to measure adrenocorticotropic hormone and cortisol levels. Blood samples from the patients who received the RU-486 showed that RU-486 had suppressed the ovine
corticotropin
-releasing hormone-stimulated secretion of adrenocorticotropic hormone. However, the RU-486-induced suppression of the secretion of adrenocorticotropic hormone was only 80% that of the suppression induced by .1 mg/kg of cortisol, i.e., RU-486 had only 1/250 the glucocorticoid agonist effect of cortisol. RU-486, therefore, is a partial glucocorticoid agonist, but the effect is not of sufficient magnitude to prevent
adrenal insufficiency
in patients with nonpituitary Cushing's syndrome.
...
PMID:The antiglucocorticoid and antiprogestin steroid RU 486 suppresses the adrenocorticotropin response to ovine corticotropin releasing hormone in man. 282 6
We report on a brother and sister with
adrenal insufficiency
due to isolated
adrenocorticotropin
hormone deficiency discovered in the neonatal period. The first-born, a male infant, died; pathological findings suggested bilateral adrenal hypoplasia transmitted as an autosomal recessive trait. Plasma estriol levels were assayed during the mother's next pregnancy. The prenatal diagnosis allowed immediate and effective management of the second affected child. The supplementary evidence from the endocrine findings, unavailable on her brother, enabled us to make a diagnosis of isolated central ACTH deficiency. As the defect was found in infants of both sexes in the same family, it is in all likelihood transmitted as an autosomal recessive trait. We consider it important for genetic counselling to perform autopsies on all newborn infants whose death has no apparent cause. Maternal plasma estriol assays during pregnancy can help diagnose fetal
adrenal insufficiency
, whether the defect is central or adrenal.
...
PMID:Isolated familial adrenocorticotropin deficiency: prenatal diagnosis by maternal plasma estriol assay. 283 Jul 87
Two amenorrheic women presenting clinical signs of
adrenal insufficiency
were shown to have isolated
corticotropin
deficiency (ICD). LH and FSH were normally responsive to GnRH. The occurrence of this disease during the postpartum and the presence of autoantibodies against corticotropic cells in one case may indicate that ICD was a sequela of an autoimmune hypophysitis. The presence of amenorrhea, while the gonadotroph was not damaged, and the reappearance of ovulatory menstrual cycles under the sole effect of hydrocortisone replacement therapy suggest that cortisol deficiency may by itself alter the gonadal function.
...
PMID:Recovery of ovulatory menstrual cycles under hydrocortisone in two amenorrheic women with isolated corticotropin deficiency. 284 Mar 82
We describe a woman who developed
adrenal insufficiency
after removal of an apparently nonfunctional adrenal adenoma. She displayed no stigmata of Cushing's syndrome and had normal plasma and urinary cortisol levels. A second patient without clinical findings of Cushing's syndrome also had normal basal steroid levels. This patient displayed partial suppressibility with dexamethasone, had low-normal levels of serum
corticotropin
, and excreted a low concentration of urinary 17-ketosteroids. She also developed mild
adrenal insufficiency
after the operation. We believe the adrenal adenomas in these patients secreted enough cortisol to suppress the contralateral adrenal gland but not enough hormone to elevate basal steroid levels. Therefore, we suggest that all patients with adrenal masses be studied with the overnight dexamethasone suppression test rather than basal steroid hormone measurements to detect low levels of autonomous cortisol secretion. In addition, patients with adrenal masses that are not removed surgically should have serial adrenal function tests performed.
...
PMID:Adrenal insufficiency after operative removal of apparently nonfunctioning adrenal adenomas. 291 87
Ovine and human
corticotropin
-releasing factors (CRF) have similar potencies in causing
adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH)
and cortisol secretion in normal humans. Using long-acting ovine CRF (1 microgram/kg body weight as an intravenous bolus), we tested patients with Cushing's syndrome,
adrenal insufficiency
, and psychiatric conditions with mild hypercortisolism. Over 95% of hypercortisolemic patients with a pituitary adenoma responded with increases in plasma ACTH and cortisol concentrations; patients with the ectopic ACTH syndrome had no ACTH or cortisol responses; patients with ACTH-independent hypercortisolism of adrenal origin had low or undetectable plasma ACTH concentrations before and after CRF without any cortisol response. The differences in responses of patients with
adrenal insufficiency
of primary, pituitary, or suprapituitary type likewise suggest value of the CFR test in their differential diagnosis. The responses in the psychiatric patients should permit differentiation between Cushing's syndrome and hypercortisolism of psychiatric origin.
...
PMID:NIH conference. Clinical applications of corticotropin-releasing factor. 298 7
Six patients with Cushing's disease and three with Cushing's syndrome due to an adrenal adenoma were monitored after their adenomectomy with the
corticotropin
-releasing hormone test to evaluate the progress of recovery of their pituitary adrenal function. Before surgery the patients with Cushing's disease showed either high, normal or low responses of plasma ACTH and cortisol to 100 micrograms synthetic ovine
corticotropin
-releasing hormone (CRH) administered intravenously, whereas all three patients with Cushing's syndrome due to an adrenal adenoma showed no response of plasma ACTH or cortisol to CRH. One or two months after surgery, the patients who had Cushing's disease had low levels of basal plasma ACTH and cortisol and their responses to CRH were extremely low. However, the same patients were tested later, it was found that their responses to CRH gradually increased and reached normal ranges approximately within one year after tumor removal, which coincided with the overall improvement in their clinical signs and symptoms due to
adrenal insufficiency
. In contrast, the recovery of the pituitary adrenal function in patients who had Cushing's syndrome due to an adrenal adenoma was not complete even one year after surgery. Thus the corticotropin-releasing factor test is a useful criteria to evaluate the recovery of the pituitary adrenal function in these patients after surgery, since the responses of plasma ACTH and cortisol to the administered CRH are parallel with the improvements in clinical signs and symptoms due to
adrenal insufficiency
in patients with Cushing's disease.
...
PMID:The use of the corticotropin-releasing hormone test to monitor the recovery of patients with Cushing's disease or Cushing's syndrome due to an adrenal adenoma after adenomectomy. 299 Aug 81
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