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)

In a series of approximately 1,000 patients with pituitary adenoma who were operated on at our institution from 1970 to 1994, 932 were operated on for the first time. Most microadenomas were corticotropin (ACTH)-secreting, whereas all nonfunctioning adenomas were macroadenomas, reflecting internal surgical policy. Only 48 of 932 patients (5.1%) had transcranial surgery. Using stringent criteria for the definition of a cure, we obtained remission of disease in 54.9%, 87.3%, 66.7%, and 46.2% of all patients with growth hormone (GH)-, ACTH-, thyrotropin (TSH)-, and prolactin (PRL)-secreting adenomas, respectively. The good result in patients with Cushing's disease is related to the higher percentage of microadenomas (approximately equal to 80%) in this group. Unfavorable prognostic characteristics for all adenomas are increasing tumor size, invasiveness, infiltration, and high serum levels of the hypersecreted hormone. The absence of a reliable tumor marker makes it difficult to assess the results of surgery in patients with nonfunctioning pituitary adenoma, but normalization or improvement of visual defects occurred in 72.4% of patients. Permanent worsening of vision was detected in 2.2%, mostly operated on through the transcranial approach, but they had large tumors and so were at greater risk. Accordingly, there was a higher death rate in patients who received the transcranial operation (two of 48; 4.2%) than in patients operated on through the trans-sphenoidal route (seven of 884; 0.8%). However, between 1970 and 1980, the mortality rate was 1.6% (six of 367 patients), while between 1981 and 1994, it was 0.5% (three of 565 patients), stressing the importance of surgical experience and perioperative medical management in improving the safety of pituitary surgery.
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PMID:Surgical therapy of pituitary adenomas. 876 2

A 61-year-old woman who had a nonfunctioning pituitary tumor removed was later found to have a pituitary carcinoma with metastasis to the liver that produced adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH), causing Cushing's disease. Despite the second removal of the pituitary tumor, Cushing's disease persisted. Endocrinologic examination demonstrated marked elevation of plasma ACTH, beta-endorphin, and serum cortisol concentrations, which were not suppressed by low- or high-dose dexamethasone administration. A computed tomographic scan of the abdomen revealed a solitary hypodense area in the liver consistent with a metastatic lesion. Immediately after resection of the liver tumor, plasma ACTH concentrations fell to normal range. Such a decline in ACTH secretion was not observed even after the pituitary tumor was removed. Histologic characteristics of both the pituitary and liver tumors were similar. The immunohistochemical study using anti-ACTH antibody showed similar ACTH-positive cells in the pituitary and liver tumors. Based on these findings, the patient was diagnosed as having liver metastasis of ACTH-secreting pituitary carcinoma. This is the first case report in which a metastatic liver tumor of a pituitary carcinoma caused ACTH.
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PMID:Adrenocorticotropin-producing pituitary carcinoma with metastasis to the liver in a patient with Cushing's disease. 1208 Dec 33