Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P01189 (beta-endorphin)
21,003 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Octreotide may act on non-growth hormone-, non-thyroid-stimulating hormone, and non-prolactin-secreting adenomas. Its efficacy was reported in some corticotropin-secreting adenomas from Nelson's syndrome and from Cushing's disease. In gonadotropin-secreting adenomas, octreotide was shown to be effective in two of eight cases. In nonfunctioning adenomas, visual improvement was observed with octreotide in 14 of 23 cases in a French multicenter study. Among the 33 patients whose tumor volume was checked, shrinkage occurred in seven, but an increase in tumor volume was observed in another seven patients. Mechanism(s) and prediction of efficacy of octreotide remain to be documented.
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PMID:The role of octreotide (Sandostatin) in non-growth hormone-, non-thyroid-stimulating hormone-, and non-prolactin-secreting adenomas. 132 96

The hallmark of ACTH oversecretion in Cushing's disease is its partial resistance to the normal suppressive effect of glucocorticoids. Because ACTH secretion by the pituitary tumor is not normally restrained ACTH is overproduced with subsequent chronic hypercortisolism. Since peripheral tissues have retained their normal sensitivity to the action of cortisol they appropriately develop the features of Cushing's disease. The question of whether a collection of corticotroph cells, eventually arranged in an adenomatous-like fashion, is a primary pituitary event or is corticotropin-releasing factor driven has had no response so far. Clonal composition of such lesions has been determined by X chromosome inactivation using DNA probes which detect multiallelic polymorphism in females. A monoclonal pattern is found in all macroadenomas. ACTH is co-secreted with other peptide fragments derived from their common polypeptide precursor, proopiomelanocortin (POMC). As a rule POMC processing in pituitary tumors is qualitatively unaltered: plasma values of the N-terminal fragment, the joining peptide, the beta- and gamma-lipotropins, and beta-endorphin all are valid alternate markers of the tumor activity. Tumor POMC peptides including ACTH and its phosphorylated form usually show no peculiar or unexpected molecular forms in contrast with what is often found when POMC expression occurs in a non-pituitary tumor.
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PMID:Unrestrained production of proopiomelanocortin (POMC) and its peptide fragments by pituitary corticotroph adenomas in Cushing's disease. 132 71

Cushing's Disease is often associated with a depressive syndrome, with mood, vegetative, and cognitive abnormalities of variable severity. In 11 patients with (pituitary ACTH-dependent) Cushing's disease (10 women, 1 man), we studied the relationship between severity of the depressive syndrome and concordance of changes in ACTH and beta-lipotropin/beta-endorphin (beta-LPH/beta-E) levels at baseline and in response to metyrapone and dexamethasone. For each condition, blood samples were drawn at 0800h, 1200h, 1600h, and 2200h. Six patients were categorized as mildly depressed (mean [+/- SD] depressed mood score = 0.17 +/- 0.4; modified Hamilton Depression scale score = 7.6 +/- 4.5) and five as severely depressed (mean depressed mood score = 2.4 +/- 0.5; modified Hamilton Depression scale score = 15 +/- 5.6) (p < 0.05). ACTH and beta-LPH/beta-E were measured by radioimmunoassay. For each experimental condition, changes in levels were scored as concordant if the two peptides moved in parallel between sampling points. There was a relationship between greater severity of depression and more frequent discordant changes in ACTH and beta-LPH/beta-E levels: The six patients with mild depression exhibited 23 concordant and 3 discordant change patterns, while the five patients with severe depression showed 8 concordant and 15 discordant patterns. The mean percentage of concordant patterns per patient differed significantly between the two groups (mildly depressed = 90.0 +/- 16.7; severely depressed = 34.6 +/- 8.7 (p < 0.001). When each study condition was examined separately, differences in the frequency of concordance between the groups reached significance during the post-metyrapone phase and with 8.0 mg dexamethasone administration.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Discordant changes in plasma ACTH and beta-lipotropin/beta-endorphin levels in Cushing's disease patients with depression. 133 6

Aim of the present study was the evaluation of ACTH and beta-endorphin-like-immunoreactivity (beta-ELI) in the inferior petrosal sinuses (IPS's) and in the peripheral blood of patients with Cushing's disease (Group 1), with GH- or PRL-secreting adenomas or nontumoral hyperprolactinemia (Group 2). These patients had undergone selective and bilateral simultaneous IPS sampling for diagnostic purposes or for neurosurgical indications. In the patients of Group 1, ACTH and beta-ELI levels were higher in the IPS ipsilateral than in the contralateral to the adenoma and in the periphery (p < 0.001). In the patients of Group 2 ACTH and beta-ELI levels were higher in the IPS's than in the peripheral blood (p < 0.001) and, in the 9 patients with GH- or PRL-secreting adenomas, they were higher in the IPS ipsilateral than in the contralateral to the adenoma and in the periphery (p < 0.05). A significant correlation exists between ACTH and beta-ELI in the periphery (p < 0.01; r = 0.72), in the IPS ipsilateral (p < 0.05; r = 0.54) and contralateral (p < 0.01; r = 0.66) to the adenoma in Group 1, but not in Group 2. In conclusion, higher beta-ELI levels were detected in the IPS's than in the peripheral blood not only in patients with Cushing's disease but also in those with other pituitary diseases not involving ACTH secretion. The absence of correlation between ACTH and beta-ELI in patients not bearing Cushing's disease suggests that in these conditions corticotrophs release ACTH and beta-endorphin in an independent manner.
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PMID:Adrenocorticotropic hormone and beta-endorphin concentrations in the inferior petrosal sinuses in Cushing's disease and other pituitary diseases. 133 6

We have measured alpha-MSH in plasma of normal subjects and subjects with various diseases of the pituitary-adrenocortical system using a radioimmunoassay with a sensitivity of 1.2 pmol/l. No alpha-MSH could be detected in plasma of normal subjects (n = 6), in plasma of patients with Addison's disease (n = 3), Nelson's syndrome (n = 2), bromocriptine responsive (n = 2) and unresponsive (n = 5) Cushing's disease and in plasma of psychiatric patients on chronic treatment with the dopamine antagonist haloperidol (n = 5). Plasma alpha-MSH remained undetectable in 2 patients with Cushing's disease after iv injection of 60 micrograms/kg haloperidol. In contrast, alpha-MSH was detectable in plasma of normal dogs (n = 2) and dogs with pituitary dependent hyperadrenocorticism (n = 2), whereas the iv injection of halo peridol was associated with a rise of plasma alpha-MSH. Thus we are unable to detect circulating alpha-MSH in man despite the use of a sensitive radioimmunoassay.
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PMID:Absence of detectable immunoreactive alpha melanocyte stimulating hormone in plasma in various types of Cushing's disease. 164 12

Determining the cause of Cushing's disease and correcting the abnormality presents a continuing challenge to the clinician despite remarkable advances in diagnostic and therapeutic techniques. We present seven cases to illustrate 1) the classic disorder cured by pituitary adenomectomy; 2) persistence of the disease after adenomectomy; 3) Cushing's disease manifesting in the puerperium and remitting with dopamine agonist therapy; 4) a patient whose disease relapsed at least five times during 20 years of treatment by adrenalectomy, pituitary radiation, mitotane, and pituitary adenomectomy; 5) the Nelson syndrome; 6) the ectopic adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) syndrome in a patient with dexamethasone suppressible urinary cortisol who had a pituitary adenoma which stained positively for ACTH but who was not cured by total hypophysectomy; and 7) a patient whose ACTH-secreting tumor proved fatal despite repeated surgical, radiologic and pharmacologic measures.
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PMID:Cushing's disease: dilemmas of diagnosis and management. 164 7

The composition and blood concentration of free aminoacids and other aminocompounds were investigated using automatic aminoacid analysis by a physiological program in 12 patients with diagnosed corticotropin secreting hypophyseal disease (Itsenko-Cushing disease) before and 1-3 years after proton "hypophysectomy". Imbalance of components of the glucose-alanine cycle, expressed in hypoalaninemia and raised concentration of aminoacids with a bifurcated lateral chain, was detected against a background of marked hypercorticotropinemia and hypercorticolism. Single irradiation of the pituitary gland with a proton beam at absorbed doses of 100-120 Gy in the maximum of a deep field resulted in remission and normalization of aminograms of blood plasma (suggesting pathogenicity of proton-beam therapy) for 6-12 mos. The authors discussed probable mechanisms of the interrelationship of protein-amino-acid and carbohydrate metabolic derangements and their correlation with a type of changes in the hormonal balance.
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PMID:[The effect of proton therapy on the protein-amino acid metabolism in Itsenko-Cushing disease]. 165 73

A rate-sensitive fast-feedback inhibition of stress-induced corticotropin secretion by glucocorticoids is well documented in rats. Studies in patients with Cushing's disease or adrenal insufficiency have also supported the existence of fast feedback in humans. However, few studies exist in normal healthy subjects or depressed patients. This study compared fast-feedback inhibition of beta-endorphin/beta-lipotropin secretion by hydrocortisone in 16 control subjects and 16 depressed patients. A fast-feedback effect of hydrocortisone on beta-endorphin/beta-lipotropin secretion during the hour of the hydrocortisone infusion was demonstrated in control subjects. Depressed patients demonstrated no increase in beta-endorphin/beta-lipotropin concentrations during the infusion. These data suggest a decreased sensitivity to glucocorticoid fast feedback in depressed patients and complement existing studies demonstrating decreased sensitivity to proportional feedback by dexamethasone in depressed patients. We believe the data presented herein are the first demonstration that abnormal feedback occurs at the level of the brain rather than pituitary in depressed patients.
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PMID:Loss of glucocorticoid fast feedback in depression. 838 66

We studied four patients with adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH)-independent hypercortisolism due to bilateral massive enlargement of the adrenal glands. The combined weight of the adrenal glands ranged from 69 to 149 g and the adrenal cortex was replaced in three of four patients by multiple nodules ranging from microscopic to 4 cm in diameter. One patient had massive diffuse enlargement. All patients had low or undetectable levels of serum ACTH, absence of petrosal sinus to peripheral gradients of ACTH in bilateral samples from the inferior petrosal sinuses before and after stimulation by corticotropin releasing hormone, and absence of an adenoma on MR imaging of the pituitary gland. The marked degree of adrenocortical enlargement and absence of ACTH dependency separates this massive macronodular disease from the more common ACTH-dependent macronodular hyperplasia encountered in older patients with pituitary-dependent Cushing disease. All patients required bilateral adrenalectomy to control hypercortisolism. We present the spectrum of nodular adrenal disease associated with hypercortisolism and a differential diagnosis based on morphologic criteria.
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PMID:CT and MR imaging of massive macronodular adrenocortical disease: a rare cause of autonomous primary adrenal hypercortisolism. 165 80

A 36-year-old man with depression, Cushingoid features and hypogonadism was found to have simultaneous pituitary-dependent Cushing's disease and marked elevation of serum prolactin (PRL). CT-scan revealed a macroadenoma with suprasellar extension. Transphenoidal surgery cured the patient's Cushing's disease, but failed to correct his hyperprolactinemia, which was controlled by subsequent bromocriptine therapy. Immunostaining of the pituitary tumor was positive for PRL as well as for ACTH, and ACTH-related peptides beta-lipotropin and beta-endorphin in two distinct tumor cell lines. This pituitary tumor is one of the few mixed PRL- and ACTH-secreting tumors documented by immunostaining. It is the second reported in a macroadenoma, in which PRL-secreting tumoral cells are much more abundant than ACTH-secreting cells.
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PMID:Cushing's disease and hyperprolactinemia due to a mixed ACTH- and prolactin-secreting pituitary macroadenoma. 165 8


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