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Query: UNIPROT:P01189 (
beta-endorphin
)
21,003
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Seven human
corticotropin
-secreting adenomas causing
Cushing's disease
or Nelson's syndrome were maintained in long-term culture. Pooled media from the individual adenomas were analyzed for the composition of their secretory products. From a radioimmunoassay (RIA) with 100% cross-reactivity for human
beta-endorphin
(beta h-EP) and beta-lipotropin (beta h-LPH), immunoreactive beta h-EP (IR X beta h-EP) was found to be the predominant secretory product after Sephadex G-50 analysis in 4 cases (40-80% of total IR), immunoreactive beta h-LPH (IR X beta h-LPH) predominated in 1 case, and both were equipresent in 2-cases. IR X beta h-EP was further purified by high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) and analyzed in 4 cases with ion-exchange chromatography on SP-Sephadex C-25 and a RIA which completely cross-reacts with beta h-EP, [N alpha-Ac]-beta h-EP, beta h-EP-(1-27) and [N alpha-Ac]-beta h-EP-(1-27). In all cases, the IR X beta h-EP was the main component (40-70%); the remaining IR material was attributable partially to [N alpha-Ac]-beta h-EP or other, less defined immunoreactive material. In 3 cases, enough IR X beta h-EP material was available for HPLC and to perform a radioreceptor assay using tritiated beta h-EP as primary ligand. The displacing potency of these preparations relative to synthetic beta h-EP was related to the content of the immunoreactive component eluting in the position of synthetic beta h-EP.
...
PMID:Characterization of immunoreactive beta-endorphin secreted from cultured human corticotropin-secreting adenomas. 298 66
Sampling of serum from the inferior petrosal sinus can provide important information about the source of elevated
adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH)
levels. This often leads to improved results of pituitary surgery for
Cushing disease
. The authors describe a successful catheterization technique and illustrate the venous anatomy of the inferior petrosal sinuses and basilar plexus.
...
PMID:Basilar venous plexus of the posterior fossa: a potential source of error in petrosal sinus sampling. 298 18
A case of atypical pituitary dependent
Cushing's disease
is reported. The patient presented with clinical symptoms similar to those of the ectopic ACTH syndrome; notably a marked hypokalaemic alkalosis, widely fluctuating plasma cortisol levels, greatly elevated plasma ACTH levels, and failure to suppress both plasma cortisol and ACTH levels following high dose oral dexamethasone. However, a large aggressive pituitary tumour was detected by skull X-ray and computed tomography. Removal of the pituitary tumour led to full remission of the patient's Cushing's syndrome.
Pro-opiomelanocortin
(
POMC
) related peptides in the plasma and tumour tissue extract of this patient have been characterized by gel-filtration and Concanavalin-A Sepharose affinity chromatography, indicating processing of
POMC
in a manner more usually associated with ectopic tumours.
...
PMID:A case of pituitary dependent Cushing's disease with clinical and biochemical features of the ectopic ACTH syndrome. 298 2
Nine normal volunteers received an intravenous bolus injection of 50, 100, and 200 micrograms ovine
Corticotropin
releasing factor. There was no dose response relationship between the injected oCRF dosage and stimulated ACTH,
beta-endorphin
, and cortisol secretion. When human synthetic CRF was injected (50 and 100 micrograms i.v.) no significant difference compared to the oCRF induced ACTH stimulation was observed. In contrast to the lacking relationship between the CRF dosage and the biological response there was a clearcut dose response relationship between the amount of oCRF injected and the CRF immunoreactivity measured 15 minutes after injection with a specific oCRF radioimmunoassay. No serious side effects were observed when the 100 micrograms CRF dosage was used as standard dose in the CRF test in patients with diseases of the hypothalamo-pituitary-adrenal axis. In patients with Cushing's syndrome the CRF test is helpful for the differential diagnosis (ACTH dependent
Cushing's disease
, autonomous cortisol secretion due to an adrenal adenoma or carcinoma, ectopic ACTH syndrome). In addition the CRF test is of prognostic value after surgical or neurosurgical therapy of Cushing's syndrome. Furthermore secondary adrenal failure after operative therapy can be documented by the CRF test. In patients on corticoid therapy the degree of suppression of CRF induced ACTH secretion correlated to the dosage and the duration of corticoid therapy. The main suppressive effect of corticoids on the hypothalamo-pituitary-adrenal axis seems to take place at the pituitary level. In patients with secondary adrenal failure the analysis of ACTH secretion after CRF administration allows the differential diagnosis between hypothalamic and pituitary ACTH hyposecretion. In conclusion the administration of oCRF has been shown to be a well tolerated and useful tool in the differential diagnosis of the causes of hyper- and hypofunction of the hypothalamo-pituitary-adrenal axis. Though there was only 10% cross reactivity with synthetic human CRF, CRF immunoreactivity could be detected in 53 out of 55 pregnant females. The results of measuring endogenous CRF levels in patients with diseases of the hypothalamo-pituitary-adrenal axis are preliminary but endogenous CRF levels measured by the heterologous oCRF radioimmunoassay, correlated well to the clinical situation and the ACTH-levels. These results have to be verified with a homologous hCRF radioimmunoassay.
...
PMID:Corticotropin releasing factor (CRF): diagnostic implications. 298 22
Fifty-nine patients with Cushing's syndrome, due to adrenocortical tumor, were studied and treated during the period 1953 through 1983 at Vanderbilt University Medical Center. Cushing's syndrome is caused by hypercortisolism that can be due to (1) medicinal use of steroids, (2) excess pituitary secretion of
adrenocorticotropin
(ACTH) (
Cushing's disease
), (3) adrenocortical tumor, benign or malignant, and (4) the ectopic ACTH syndrome. Clinical and endocrinologic features of Cushing's syndrome are described, and differential diagnosis of adrenocortical tumor by precise endocrinologic studies is detailed. Computerized axial tomographic (CAT) scan is currently the most accurate imaging modality for preoperative localization of tumors. Preoperative differential diagnosis between adrenocortical adenoma and carcinoma has become fairly accurate. Operative approaches in each category are described. Follow-up from 1 to 30 years has been completed for all patients, except for one who was lost after 7 years. Results of surgical treatment of adrenocortical adenomas are excellent, but the salvage from adrenocortical carcinomas is poor.
...
PMID:Tumors of the adrenal cortex and Cushing's syndrome. 298 63
Cushing's disease
has come full cycle. As originally asserted more than 50 years ago, modern diagnostic techniques now demonstrate an
adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH)
secreting pituitary adenoma in approximately 80% of such patients. At this historical juncture, we report a long-term follow-up of our 17 patients who underwent adrenalectomy (8) or later adrenalectomy plus adrenal autotransplantation (9) between 1955 and 1976. Two patients died soon after surgery and five others died later of "natural" causes. Four others moved away but were stable when last contacted. Of the six patients who remain available for current follow-up, three have undergone hypophyseal surgery. Another patient has evidence of pituitary enlargement, and the remaining two are yet to undergo computerized tomography (CT) scan. Four illustrative cases are reviewed in some detail. One case presented with Nelson's syndrome and acute onset blindness. The second represented multiple endocrine adenomatosis with hyperparathyroidism in addition to
Cushing's disease
. The third exhibited Cushing's syndrome from the autotransplants, finally cured by hypophysectomy. The fourth exhibited huge ACTH levels from a large pituitary adenoma that could not be totally resected and recurrent Cushing's syndrome associated with large autotransplant "adenomas." The initial surgical treatment of choice is pituitary adenectomy. Bilateral adrenalectomy will remain useful where curative pituitary surgery is not feasible. Neither pituitary irradiation nor medical therapy has been truly effective in our patients. Adrenal autotransplants survive, to some extent, in virtually all patients. However, the degree of function is variable, and the full function may not be achieved for many months or even years. Functioning autotransplants have not prevented Nelson's syndrome, and they would appear to offer little practical benefit at this time.
...
PMID:Cushing's disease today. Late follow-up of 17 adrenalectomy patients with emphasis on eight with adrenal autotransplants. 298 64
Synthetic ovine corticotropin-releasing factor (o-CRF) stimulated
adrenocorticotropin
(ACTH) release at the concentration of 10(-10) M or more in monolayer culture of rat anterior pituitary cells. Dexamethasone, 10(-7) M, inhibited this effect. In 5 healthy human subjects, o-CRF, 1 microgram/kg iv bolus, increased plasma ACTH levels from less than 10 pg/ml to 40.4 +/- 11.0 (mean +/- SD) after 30-60 min, and plasma cortisol from 12.8 +/- 2.8 micrograms/dl to 23.6 +/- 3.1 after 45-60 min. Of 7 patients with
Cushing's disease
(CD), five showed an exaggerated response of plasma ACTH and cortisol, one an exaggerated response of plasma ACTH but low response of plasma cortisol and the other no response of both hormones. The significant positive correlation between the inhibition of plasma cortisol by dexamethasone and the response of plasma ACTH and cortisol to o-CRF in CD was seen. No response of plasma ACTH and cortisol to o-CRF was seen in each one patient with Cushing's syndrome due to an adrenocortical adenoma, ectopic ACTH syndrome (but low response at retesting), isolated ACTH deficiency and Sheehan's syndrome. In one patient with Addison's disease an exaggerated response of plasma ACTH but no response of plasma cortisol was seen. In 4 of 5 healthy subjects and 5 of 7 patients with CD, plasma ACTH and cortisol levels showed a second peak at 120--210 min after o-CRF administration. To clarify the prolonged effect of o-CRF in human in vivo, the disappearance rates of injected o-CRF were evaluated by radioimmunoassay in 3 patients with cured Cushing's syndrome. A biexponential decay curve showed t1/2 values of 9.3 +/- 0.4 min and 79.6 +/- 0.7 min (mean +/- SE). From the chromatographic profile, a portion of injected o-CRF was thought to be bound to macromolecule (s). o-CRF, as a specific secretagogue of ACTH, is thought to be useful tool in evaluating patients with hypothalamo-pituitary-adrenal disorders.
...
PMID:[Studies for clinical application of ovine corticotropin-releasing factor]. 298 91
Release of immunoreactive ACTH and
beta-endorphin
(beta-EP) in response to corticotrophin-releasing factor (CRF) and dopaminergic agents was studied in vivo and in vitro in a patient with
Cushing's disease
. Iv administration of synthetic ovine (o) CRF significantly stimulated plasma ACTH release, accompanied by increase of plasma cortisol levels. Oral administration of bromocriptine significantly suppressed plasma cortisol levels. Although reduced responses of plasma ACTH and cortisol to o-CRF was observed 1 month after removal of the pituitary adenoma, these normalized 6 months after operation. In vitro perifusion of the pituitary adenoma obtained by surgery revealed that o-CRF also stimulated ACTH and beta-EP release in a dose-responsive manner (10(-9)M 10(-5)M) and that dopamine suppressed their basal secretion. Gel exclusion chromatography of the perfusates showed that the predominant component of ACTH and beta-EP before and after o-CRF stimulation coeluted with standard ACTH and beta-EP, respectively. The present data suggest that o-CRF is a potent secretagogue for ACTH and beta-EP release from the human pituitary adenoma causing
Cushing's disease
and that ACTH secretion from certain adenomas, possibly originating from the intermediate lobe of the pituitary gland, is partly regulated by a dopaminergic mechanism.
...
PMID:Effect of ovine corticotrophin releasing factor, bromocriptine, and dopamine on release of ACTH and beta-endorphin in a patient with Cushing's disease. 298 59
A comparison was made with the data of 62 cases of pituitary adenoma, evaluated pre- and postoperatively, including as well the results of immunohistochemical hormone examination (also for calcitonin). Prolactin was found in 18 of the 21 adenomas carrying the preoperative diagnosis of prolactinoma, whereas cells containing other hormones (growth hormone, LH, FSH, TSH, ACTH,
beta-endorphin
), were only occasionally present. The growth hormone was strongly positive in the adenoma tissue in 16 of the 17 cases of acromegaly. 5 of these adenomas were accompanied by a marked hyperprolactinemia and also contained many prolactin cells. 6 of the 19 adenomas diagnosed as being 'inactive' contained hormone-positive cells, but only a very small number of cells. ACTH was found in 3 of the 4 pituitary adenomas of patients with
Cushing's disease
. 2 of these were also positive for
beta-endorphin
. The tissue of 1 gonadotrophic adenoma (with elevated FSH in serum) gave positive results with an anti-LH antiserum. Calcitonin was not found in any adenoma. The preoperative serum prolactin levels did not quantitatively correlate with the percentage of prolactin-positive cells.
...
PMID:Immunohistochemical examination of pituitary adenomas. Comparison to clinical and endocrinological findings. 298 43
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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