The occurrence of autoimmune thyroid disorders among patients with coeliac disease (CD) is well documented, but the exact prevalence of CD among patients with autoimmune thyroid diseases (ATD) is as yet unclear. We screened 150 newly diagnosed patients with ATD by serum endomysial antibody detection (EmA). In 5 subjects (3.3%) EmA positivity was found; all underwent jejunal biopsy. On gluten-free diet an excellent clinical and histological response was recorded with an improvement of hypothyroidism and reduction of the thyroxine dosage. Our data suggest a significant high prevalence (3.3%) of CD in patients with ATD, in particular with Hashimoto’s thyroiditis.
SUMMARY Results of supraphysiological adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) stimulation of biosynthetic pathways of adrenal zona fasciculata indicate that a deficiency of 11-hydroxylase exists in patients with essential hypertension. The deficiency is suggested by the much greater stimulus of synthesis of deoxycorticosterone (DOC) and deoxycortisol in hypertensive subjects than in controls (p < 0.001). No significant difference in the synthesis of cortisol, corticosterone, progesterone, 17-hydroxyprogesterone (17-OHP), and delta-4-androstenedione (D4) was observed between the two groups. The ratios for synthesis of DOC and corticosterone and for deoxycortisol and cortisol found in hypertensive patients were significantly higher than those found in controls (p < 0.001); no significant difference was observed in the synthesis of 17-OHP and progesterone. The synthesis of DOC and deoxycortisol was not significantly correlated with either blood pressure or plasma renin activity. Plasma renin activity was significantly lower in hypertensive subjects than in normotensive subjects (p < 0.0O01), while no difference was found in aldosterone secretion between the two groups. The 11-hydroxylase deficiency in the adrenal zona fasciculata may be one of the genetic factors causing hypertension together with environmental factors (particularly salt intake and work-related stress). The investigation performed in our study may be useful for the evaluation of adrenal zona fasciculata enzymatic activities during the study of hypertensive patients. (Hypertension 7: 204-210, 1985) KEY WORDS • adrenal zona fasciculata • deoxycorticosterone • deoxycortisol plasma renin activity • aldosterone T HE possibility that adrenal steroids are involved in the pathogenesis of human essential hypertension is still under investigation. Mineralocorticoid activity often has been reported to be increased, especially in low-renin hypertension.'-2 Melby and colleagues 3 observed an increased excretion of 18-hydroxydeoxycorticosterone (18-OHDOC) in patients with low-renin hypertension who had marked responses to adrenocorticotropic-hormone-(ACTH)-inhibiting doses of dexamethasone. High plasma levels of 18-OHDOC also have been reported in patients with normal-renin hypertension. 4 The capability of deoxycorticosterone (DOC) to induce hyper- Received March 9, 1984; revision accepted September 24, 1984. tension has been demonstrated by McCall and coworkers 5 in rats treated with methylandrostenediol. Dexamethasone has also been used recently in hypertensive patients with excessive secretion of an unknown mineralocorticoid 6 and in a hypertensive girl with excessive secretion of urinary 17-ketosteroids. 7 Honda and colleagues 8 found abnormalities in the response of adrenal cortex to ACTH infusion in patients with normal-renin and low-renin hypertension that were compatible with a combined functional 17-hydroxylase and 11-hydroxylase failure. Wang and associates 9 have also found 17-hydroxylase deficiency in hypertensive patients. Alterations in excr...
To evaluate the effects of the acute loss of thyroid hormones on the heart the authors studied 11 women with acute hypothyroidism. The cardiac study was performed by means of electrocardiography (ECG), radionuclide ventriculography (RNV) at rest and under effort, and monodimensional echocardiography (MD-echo) and was repeated with ECG and MD-echo after six months of thyroxine suppressive therapy. The ECG showed a significant prolongation of QT interval and flattening and inversion of T wave with normal heart rate. The MD-echo revealed left ventricular function in the normal range and normal left ventricular dimensions. RNV showed the ejection fraction in the lower normal range at rest, which increased to a smaller extent under effort in comparison with a control group. The ECG performed during suppressive therapy with L-thyroxine yielded normal findings with an increase of heart rate and of R wave amplitude, and the MD-echo showed no significant variations of cardiac function due to the increase of heart rate.
A cross-sectional study on young dancers and exdancers was performed to evaluate the effects of intense weight-bearing exercise and dietary restriction, started during puberty, on bone mineral density (BMD), menarche age, menstrual function, and gonadotropin structure. Twenty current dancers (group 1) and 9 exdancers (group 2) were compared with a control group of 30 age-matched, regularly cycling women. Body weight, body mass index, total daily caloric intake, and nutritional markers were significantly lower (P < 0.05) in groups 1 and 2 than in controls. Using Quantitative Computed Tomography for the BMD evaluation, 12 dancers and 5 exdancers had Z-scores less than 2.5 SD below the mean of the controls; whereas, in 6 dancers and in 2 exdancers, BMD was between 1 and 2.5 SD. Groups 1 and 2 had a delay of menarche, which correlated positively with years of dance before menarche (r = 0.8; P < 0.001). Dancers had low levels and altered structure of circulating gonadotropins, which improved after GnRH stimulation. In conclusion, ballet training performed by dancers during puberty, dietary restriction, and low body mass index can all be associated with reduction in BMD and altered gonadotropin isoforms, with subsequent delay of menarche, menstrual dysfunctions, and insufficient peak bone mass. A longitudinal study must be conducted to confirm the persistence of low lumbar spine bone density in adult age.
Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha/cachectin (TNF-alpha/cachectin), Lipopolysaccharide (LPS), ACTH, beta-Endorphin (beta-EPH), and Cortisol (F) levels were determined in 33 Headache patients: 22 patients were affected with Migraine (M) and 11 patients with Chronic Type Tension Headache (CTTH). TNF-alpha/cachectin serum level was detected in 15 out of 22 migraneous patients and in no CTTH patients. Plasma LPS was observed in 11 out of 15 TNF-alpha/cachectin positive migraneous patients (73%) and in 3 out of 11 CTTH patients (27%). A negative correlation was observed between TNF-alpha/cachectin values and either ACTH or beta-EPH. In the group of migraneous patients the presence of serum TNF-alpha/cachectin showed a sensibility of .6 and a specificity of 1. The endocrine and immunological implications concerning these data are discussed.
BackgroundDifferentiated thyroid cancer is usually associated with an excellent prognosis and indolent course. Distant metastases are rare events at the onset of thyroid cancer. Among these presentations, metastasis to the axillary lymph nodes is even more unusual: only few cases were previously reported in the literature; there has been no report of axillary lymph node metastasis from follicular thyroid carcinoma. Axillary lymph node metastasis generally arises in the context of disseminated disease and carries an ominous prognosis.Case presentationHere we present a case of axillary lymph node metastasis in the context of disseminated differentiated thyroid cancer. The patient underwent near total thyroidectomy and neck and axillary lymph node dissection. A histopathological diagnosis of poorly differentiated follicular carcinoma with "signet ring cells" and Hürthle cell features was established. The patient received radioactive iodine therapy and TSH suppression therapy. Subsequently his serum thyroglobulin level decreased to 44.000 ng/ml from over 100.000 ng/ml.Discussion and ConclusionCurrently there are only few reported cases of axillary node metastases from thyroid cancer, and to our knowledge, this is the first report on axillary lymph node metastasis from follicular thyroid carcinoma. "Signet ring cell" is a morphologic feature shared by both benign and, more rarely, malignant follicular thyroid neoplasm, and it generally correlates with an arrest in folliculogenesis. Our case is one of the rare "signet ring cells" carcinomas so far described.
Male Wistar rats were treated with different ethanol concentrations diluted in drinking water in order to evaluate the effect of acute ethanol intoxication on 11β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase (11β-OHSD) activity in liver and kidney tissue homogenates. Rats with the highest ethanol consumption (15% ethanol supplementation) showed a significant decrease in both hepatic and renal 11β-OHSD activity as compared to the control group (p < 0.005). In the same group, aldosterone plasma levels were significantly lower than in controls (p < 0.01), while corticosterone (B) plasma levels were slightly higher, suggesting that the increase in intrarenal B concentrations, probably related to the acute ethanol consumption, might be responsible for a nonspecific B mineralocorticoid activity.
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