Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P01189 (beta-endorphin)
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Lymphocytic hypophysitis usually occurs in the antepartum or postpartum period and recovery of pituitary dysfunction has not been documented in most cases reported previously. We present a 50-year-old woman with lymphocytic hypophysitis who spontaneously recovered from panhypopituitarism over 18 months with the disappearance of an intrasellar mass. Although lymphocytic hypophysitis is thought to be an autoimmune disease, the clinical and pathogenetic significance of circulating antipituitary autoantibodies has not been clarified. Antipituitary antibodies were studied by immunofluorescence in blood samples obtained during the whole clinical course in this particular patient. Antibodies against rat pituitary cytosol were positive during the period of hypopituitarism and became negative when pituitary function recovered. Antibodies reacting with intact prolactin-secreting rat GH3 and corticotropin-secreting mouse AtT-20 cells were also positive during her period of hypopituitarism. They remained positive for several years after the recovery of pituitary function. We conclude that circulating antibodies against rat pituitary cytosol are good markers of pituitary inflammation in this patient. The other point to be emphasized in this case is the simultaneous development of painless thyroiditis and lymphocytic hypophysitis. We have discussed the pathogenic relationship of these two diseases on the basis of similar cases reported previously.
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PMID:Recovery from lymphocytic hypophysitis associated with painless thyroiditis: clinical implications of circulating antipituitary antibodies. 839 55

Inflammatory and granulomatous diseases of the pituitary are rare causes of sellar masses. Lymphocytic hypophysitis is the most relevant of these disorders, and it is characterised by autoimmune pathogenesis with focal or diffuse inflammatory infiltration and varying degrees of pituitary gland destruction. Endocrine symptoms may include partial or total hypopituitarism, with adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) deficiency being the earliest and most frequent alteration. Pituitary abscess is a rare but potentially life-threatening disease and, in 30-50% of patients, anterior pituitary hormone deficiencies or central diabetes insipidus (DI) at onset may be observed: the earliest manifestation being growth hormone deficiency (GHD), followed by follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH)/luteinising hormone (LH), thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) and ACTH deficiencies. Fungal infections of the pituitary are also very rare and include aspergillosis and coccidioidomycosis. Concerning pituitary involvement in systemic diseases, in sarcoidosis endocrine complications are rare, but the hypothalamus and pituitary are the glands most commonly affected. DI is reported in approximately 25-33 % of all neurosarcoidosis cases and is the most frequently observed endocrine disorder. Hyperprolactinaemia and anterior pituitary deficiencies may also occur. Rarely, partial or global anterior pituitary dysfunction may be present also in Wegener's granulomatosis, either at onset or in the course of the disease, resulting in deficiency of one or more of the pituitary axes. Other forms of granulomatous pituitary lesions include idiopathic giant cell granulomatous hypophysitis, Takayasu's disease, Cogan's syndrome and Crohn's disease. The hypotalamic-pituitary system is involved mainly in children with Langerhans' cells histiocytosis who develop DI, which is the most common endocrine manifestation. Anterior pituitary dysfunction is found more rarely and is almost invariably associated with DI. Pituitary involvement may also be observed in another form of systemic hystiocitosis, that is, Erdheim-Chester disease. Tuberculosis is a rare cause of hypophysitis, which may present with features of anterior pituitary dysfunction, such as hypopituitarism with hyperprolactinaemia. In conclusion, in patients with a sellar mass and unusual clinical presentation (DI, neurological symptoms), aggressiveness and onset and in the presence of systemic diseases, inflammatory and granulomatous pituitary lesions should be carefully considered in differential diagnosis.
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PMID:Pituitary tumours: inflammatory and granulomatous expansive lesions of the pituitary. 1994 28