Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UNIPROT:P50583 (
asymmetrical
)
12,197
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The results of adrenal scintiscans, venograms and venous aldosterone levels are compared with the histologic findings in 33 patients submitted to operations for primary aldosteronism. Standard and suppression scintiscans were performed 2-14 days following intravenous administration of 2mCi of 131I-19-iodocholesterol. The adrenal lesions were histologically classified into four categories: 25 patients had adenomas, 6 had macronodular hyperplasia, 1 had microscopic hyperplasia and 1 had an adenocarcinoma. Asymmetrical uptake between the two adrenals seen on standard scintiscans did not differentiate between a tumor or
asymmetrical
hyperplasia, unless the tumor was greater than 2 cm in diameter. During suppression scintiscans, unilateral uptake visible within five days of tracer injection was consistent with adenoma. Patients with nodular hyperplasia demonstrated early uptake in both adrenal glands during suppression scintiscans, while the patient with microscopic hyperplasia did not. The type of adrenal lesion was correctly identified in 20/26 (77%) of patients by suppression scintiscans; 21/28 (75% of patients by venograms and 12/16 (75%) of patients who had adrenal venous aldosterone measurements attempted. The majority of surgically correctible lesions could be identified on suppression adrenal scintiscans.
Adrenal
vein catheterization can be reserved for those patients in whom the results of suppression scintiscans are inconsistent with the clinical degree of aldosteronism.
...
PMID:Adrenal imaging with 131I-19-iodocholesterol in the diagnostic evaluation of patients with aldosteronism. 124 93
131I-19-iodocholesterol adrenal scans were obtained in seven patients with Cushing's syndrome. Characteristic imaging patterns were seen in three patients with bilateral adrenal hyperplasia with symmetrical uptake of the isotope. Two patients with adrenocortical adenoma and one patient with a well-differentiated adrenocortical carcinoma showed intense activity in one adrenal gland and absent activity in the contralateral gland. In one patient with adrenal nodular hyperplasia
asymmetrical
uptake was found with increased activity in the right adrenal gland where a larger adenomatous nodule was found at histologic examination.
Adrenal
imaging with radioactive cholesterol is a useful noninvasive technique for the diagnosis and treatment of Cushing's syndrome.
...
PMID:Scanning of the adrenals in Cushing's syndrome. 360 68
Adrenal
scintigraphy with 131I-19-iodo-cholesterol was performed in 13 hypertensive patients with biochemical disturbances suggesting an aldosterone-producing adenoma. The actual presence of an adenoma was subsequently confirmed in all cases. An
asymmetrical
tracer uptake (lateralization) was seen in 7 patients and in 6 of these the adenoma was located in the adrenal with the higher uptake. In one patient a large necrotic tumour was not visualized and a faint contralateral accumulation was wrongly taken to represent a tumour. In 6 patients the scintigram was non-lateralizing. In these highly selected patients a lateralizing scintigram had a high diagnostic specificity and at present adrenal scintigraphy should be the method of first choice in the preoperative side prediction. However, the sensitivity is low: a non-lateralizing scintigram does not exclude the presence of an aldosterone-producing adenoma.
...
PMID:Adrenal scintigraphy in primary aldosteronism caused by an aldosterone producing adenoma. 720 37
In 35 patients with bilateral primary open-angle glaucoma (POAG), with
asymmetrical
evolution of the neuropticopathy between the two eyes, we compared within each patient, the response to ibopamine and the perimetric defect. In 88% of cases (31/35 patients) the eye with the most severe perimetric defect had high intraocular pressure or a larger
IOP
increase after ibopamine. This result was highly significant at the sign test (P < 0.001).
IOP
and its increase after ibopamine significantly differed in the most and least affected eye, being higher in the eye with the most impaired visual field. Since ibopamine can be used to quantify the hydrodynamic impairment, which is thus presumably correlated to the perimetric defect. This study further confirms its importance in the development of glaucomatous damage.
...
PMID:Correlation between ocular hypertension induced by ibopamine and perimetric defect in primary open-angle glaucoma. 924 19
The
asymmetrical
breakdown of the blood-brain barrier (BBB) was studied in female rats. Paw preference was assessed by a food reaching test.
Adrenaline
-induced hypertension was used to destroy the BBB, which was evaluated using triphenyltetrazolium (TTC) staining of the brain slices just after giving adrenaline for 30 s. In normal rats, the whole brain sections exhibited complete staining with TTC. After adrenaline infusion for 30 s, there were large unstained areas in the left brain in right-pawed animals, and vice versa in left-pawed animals. Similar results were obtained in seizure-induced breakdown of BBB. These results were explained by an asymmetric cerebral blood flow depending upon the paw preference in rats. It was suggested that this new method and the results are consistent with contralateral motor control that may be important in determining the dominant cerebral hemisphere in animals.
...
PMID:Blood brain barrier in right- and left-pawed female rats assessed by a new staining method. 1248 93
Adrenal
tuberculosis is relatively infrequent cause of primary adrenocortical insufficiency in developed countries.
Adrenal
involvement is most often the result of hematogenous spread of the pulmonary tuberculosis. Isolated adrenal tuberculosis, especially with enlargement of adrenal glands can cause diagnostic problems and requires differentiation from primary or secondary neoplastic disease. In this paper we present a case of 61-year-old man with several months history of adrenocortical insufficiency without signs of pulmonary tuberculosis. Computed tomography scan revealed
asymmetrical
mass-like enlargement in adrenal glands. Despite of consecutive investigations, the diagnosis remained uncertain. Because of the possibility of neoplastic process of unknown origin, the patient was qualified for surgical exploration during which both enlarged glands were removed. The diagnosis of tuberculosis was made on microscopic examination.
...
PMID:[Adrenal tuberculosis as a cause of primary adrenal insufficiency--case report]. 1624 32