Laryngotracheal invasion by well-differentiated thyroid carcinoma is an uncommon occurrence. Recommendations for therapy have primarily included total laryngectomy or shaving of the tumor from laryngeal or tracheal cartilages. Clear guidelines have not been established for the applicability of partial laryngeal resections. In a retrospective analysis of patients with thyroid carcinoma, 13 patients had airway invasion. Of the five patients with laryngeal involvement, three were treated by a partial laryngeal resection. An experimental study was undertaken to determine more precisely the amount of cricoid cartilage which could be resected without reconstruction. Varying amounts of cricoid cartilage were resected. The results indicate that 25 % of the cricoid cartilage may be resected without appreciable airway narrowing. On the basis of the retrospective analysis and experimental study, we feel a partial laryngeal resection is possible in most cases of airway invasion by thyroid carcinoma.
We have studied the hormonal secretion and excretion patterns in a patient with the XX type of 17\g=a\-hydroxylasedeficiency. In the untreated state, the patient's urine contained only those steroids which do not require 17-hydroxylation in their biosynthesis. Aldosterone was not produced in the patient and the metabolic product of its immediate precursor, 18-hydroxy-11-dehydro-tetrahydrocorticosterone, was excreted in markedly elevated amounts. This apparent complete block in 18 oxidation was reversible upon long-term ACTH suppression within 27 days. Direct in vitro incubation of the patient's adrenal gland removed at operation demonstrated, 1) the complete lack of 17\g=a\-hydroxylaseactivity, 2) the functional block in the ability to oxidize the hydroxyl group at the 18 methyl side chain. The addition of physiological concentrations of angiotensin to the incubation medium further showed, 3) angiotensin mildly stimulated the entire aldosterone biosynthetic pathway, 4) angiotensin directly stimulated the conversion of 18-hydroxycorticosterone to aldosterone.O Deceased.
Total alkaline phosphatase (ALP) and its isoenzymes were studied in the sera of 72 hyperthyroid patients and 24 age- and sex-matched controls. Eighty-nine per cent of thyrotoxic patients had elevated total serum ALP activity. Both liver (LALP) and bone (BALP) isoenzymes were present in the sera of 75% of patients. Women (43%) most frequently had elevated levels of LALP and BALP. Men (41%) most often had elevated levels of BALP and normal levels of LALP. The units of BALP present, but not of LALP, were related to measures of thyroid function. Levels of the activity of the aminotransferases and lactic dehydrogenase were usually normal. Gammaglutamyl transferase activity was elevated in nearly 40% of both sexes. The data presented, when correlated with previously reported information, suggest that elevations of serum LALP activity may be due to hepatocellular necrosis with leakage of preformed enzyme into the serum.
In the course of studies designed to develop a radioimmunoassay system for the detection of renin, we have identified in human plasma a potent inhibitor that interferes with the renin-antirenin reaction. Utilizing gel filtration, this renin-antirenin inhibitory activity was found to have the same molecular size as renin substrate. However, it could be separated from renin substrate by ion-exchange chromatography. When fractions containing this activity were tested in an in vitro system containing renin and renin substrate, they were found to inhibit the generation of angiotensin I.
A 19-year-old woman presented with a unique constellation of endocrinopathies, including Cushing's disease, post-partum galactorrhea, hypothalamic hypothyroidism and hypothalamic amenorrhea. There was no evidence of granulomatous or neoplastic disease in pituitary or hypothalamus. The potential role of excess glucocorticoids and disturbances in normal hypothalamic regulation of anterior pituitary function in the pathophysiology of this syndrome is discussed.
\s=b\Increased accuracy of parathyroid hormone assays has yielded an earlier diagnosis of primary hyperparathyroidism, often in an asymptomatic stage. Noninvasive modalities used to localize parathyroid abnormalities have not been accurate for small adenomas. Although arteriography has been shown to be accurate in detection of adenomas, the invasive nature of the study, as well as possible complications, minimizes its use in preoperative localization of parathyroid abnormalities. The computed tomographic (CT) scan was used preoperatively in eight patients to assess its accuracy in localizing parathyroid abnormalities. The radiographic findings were correlated with surgical and pathologic findings. The conditions of seven patients were correctly diagnosed preoperatively by the CT scan, including that of one patient with diffuse hyperplasia. With the increased accuracy attained by this noninvasive examination, we believe that CT scanning should be a routine part of the preoperative examination of patients with primary hyperparathyroidism. (Arch Otolaryngol 1983;109:95-97)
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