LUIGI BOIARDI, FRANC0 CHIARAVALLOTI, and ITALO PORTIOLIWe studied the epidemiology of giant cell arteritis (GCA) and polymyalgia rheumatica (PMR) in a Mediterranean population. Ninety-nine patients with PMR and/or GCA were identified over a 9-year period (1980)(1981)(1982)(1983)(1984)(1985)(1986)(1987)(1988) in Reggio Emilia, Italy. The average annual incidence of PMR and GCA was 12.7/100,000 and 6.9/100,000, respectively, in a population aged 50 years or older. Frequencies of HLA antigens were determined in 49 patients with PMR and/or GCA who were followed by staff at our rheumatology unit during the 1980-1988 period. When compared with HLA findings in 242 healthy controls, DR4 was not found to be significantly associated with PMR (24% in PMR patients versus 14% in controls). Patients with GCA also showed an increased frequency of DR4 compared with controls (36% versus 14%), but this difference was also not statistically significant. The immunogenetic features of PMR and GCA and the relationship between the immunogenetic and epidemiologic patterns in different populations are discussed.
We studied the effects of GH administration on myocardial structure and function in 20 patients with hypopituitarism (14 males and 6 females; mean +/- SE age, 47.2 +/- 2.6 yr; range, 31-59 yr) developed in adulthood because of pituitary or parapituitary tumors. All patients had GH deficiency (GHD), as assessed by a GH response of less than 4 micrograms/L to a standard insulin tolerance test (0.05 U kg, iv) and the combined pyridostigmine (120 mg, orally, at -60 min) plus GHRH (1 microgram/kg, iv, at 0 min) test. Patients received either placebo (n = 10) or GH substitution therapy (n = 10; 0.05 U/kg.day GH for 1 yr; 0.03 U/kg.day during the first month). M- and B-mode echocardiography and pulsed Doppler examination of transmitral flow were performed before treatment, 6 months and 1 yr after starting GH or placebo administration, and 15 days and 3 months after GH or placebo withdrawal. Twenty healthy subjects, matched for age, sex, body mass index, and physical activity, served as controls. Left ventricular dimensions, mass, and systolic function were normal in patients with adult-onset GHD; however, diastolic function, specifically E wave deceleration time, was altered. GH administration markedly increased left ventricular performance and reversed diastolic abnormalities at 6 and even more so at 12 months. On the other hand, a clear increase in left ventricular mass was seen after 12, but not after 6, months of GH administration (P < 0.01 vs. pretreatment values). In addition, although all changes induced by GH treatment disappeared within 3 months after GH withdrawal, at that time the increase in left ventricular mass was still detectable (P < 0.05 vs. pretreatment values). These data indicate that augmented left ventricular contractility is not strictly related to cardiac muscle growth, supporting the hypothesis that GH treatment increases the inotropic activity of myocardial fibers. In conclusion, GH treatment enhances cardiac function, increases cardiac mass, and reverses diastolic abnormalities in adults with hypopituitarism and GHD. However, long term studies are required to demonstrate that GH replacement therapy reduces cardiac death rate in these patients.
Objective. To evaluate the ability of low‐dose cyclosporin A (CsA) to control radiologic disease progression, and to assess the clinical efficacy and tolerability of CsA, compared with conventional disease‐modifying antirheumatic drugs (DMARDs), in patients with early active rheumatoid arthritis (RA). Methods. In this long‐term, multicenter, prospective, open, blinded end point, randomized trial, 361 consenting patients with early (< 4 years since diagnosis) active RA were enrolled. Of the eligible patients, 167 were treated with CsA at 3 mg/kg/day, and 173 with DMARDs. The decision to use conventional antirheumatic drugs as controls was based on the fact that joint erosion could be expected to occur after 1 year regardless of the type of DMARD being used. The possibility of switching therapies in both groups was intended to keep the largest possible number of patients in the study. Results. Blinded evaluation of hand and foot radiographs after 12 months of treatment showed that CsA led to a significant (P < 0.001) delay in the mean ± SD progression in the eroded joint count (1.3 ± 3.1 versus 2.4 ± 3.0 for the control group) and in the joint damage score (3.6 ± 8.9 versus 6.9 ± 9.1 for the control group), both measured by the Larsen‐Dale method. When only the patients without erosion at baseline were considered (37 in the CsA‐treated group and 54 in the control group), erosion appeared in only 10.8% of the CsA‐treated patients, but in 51.8% of the controls (P = 0.00005). Low‐dose CsA was as effective as traditional DMARDs in controlling clinical symptoms. Maintenance on the initially prescribed treatment regimen (“survival on treatment”) was also better at 12 months with CsA than with DMARDs (89.2% versus 77.5%; P = 0.002). The tolerability of CsA was acceptable. Conclusion. These 12‐month results suggest that low‐dose CsA decreases the rate of further joint damage in previously involved joints as well as the rate of new joint involvement in previously uninvolved joints, in patients with early RA.
Our data indicate that oral administration of melatonin to normal human males increases basal GH release and GH responsiveness to GHRH through the same pathways as pyridostigmine. Therefore it is likely that melatonin plays this facilitatory role at the hypothalamic level by inhibiting endogenous somatostatin release, although with a lower potency than pyridostigmine. The physiological role of melatonin in GH neuroregulation remains to be established.
Hyperthyroidism is associated with increased serum IGF-I levels and marked alterations in the neuroregulation of GH secretion. These changes involve decreased GH responsiveness to GHRH at the pituitary level and, at the hypothalamic level, a lack of suppressive effect of an oral glucose load. The normal inhibitory effect of exogenous GH administration but not of an oral glucose load in hyperthyroid patients suggests that these two feedback signals act through different mechanisms. The lack of effect of a TRH infusion on GH responses to L-arginine in normal and hyperthyroid patients makes an inhibitory role for TRH in GH secretion unlikely, at least in Caucasian subjects.
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