Only when a significant IPS:P ACTH ratio is present can Cushing's disease be established by IPS sampling. The absence of a significant IPS: P ACTH ratio does not necessarily imply ectopic secretion of ACTH, nor does it exclude Cushing's disease. The results of lateralization by IPS sampling do not remove the need for a thorough transsphenoidal examination of the contents of the sella turcica.
Transsphenoidal microsurgery is the standard treatment for patients with Cushing's disease. However, there is general lack of agreement regarding the definition of cure. We studied 58 patients with corrected hypercortisolism after transsphenoidal surgery for Cushing's disease. Plasma and urinary cortisol levels were measured after surgery. After the postsurgical hypocortisolism stage (or periodically in patients without hypocortisolism), urinary free cortisol, plasma cortisol at 0800 h and 2300 h, morning cortisol after 1 mg dexamethasone, and cortisol response to insulin-induced hypoglycemia were performed. Patients were classified in 3 groups: group I, patients with transient hypocortisolism and normal hypothalamus-pituitary-adrenal axis afterwards; group II, patients with transient hypocortisolism and abnormalities in the circadian rhythm or the stress response afterwards; and group III, patients without postoperative hypocortisolism. Thirty-three patients were included in group I, 8 in group II, and 17 in group III. Groups I and II were similar in postsurgical plasma cortisol (46.9 +/- 30.3 vs. 60.7 +/- 38.6 nM) and mean follow-up (69.8 vs. 68.8 months) but were significantly different in their recurrence rate (3.4% vs. 50%, P < 0.001). Patients in group III had normal postsurgical plasma and urinary cortisol but persistent abnormalities in circadian rhythm and stress response. After a mean follow-up of 39.1 months, their recurrence rate was similar to that of group II (64.7% vs. 50%). The complete normalization of the adrenocortical function, which is always preceded by postsurgical hypocortisolism, is associated with a very low recurrence risk and should be considered, in our opinion, the main criterion of surgical cure in Cushing's disease.
Summary:Hypoparathyroidism secondary to Riedel's thyroiditis is rare, only 2 previous cases having been reported. We present the case of a 36 year old woman with Riedel's thyroiditis which developed into hypothyroidism and hypoparathyroidism.
Summary:A 39 year old man presented with gynaecomastia, loss of libido and high blood pressure. Hormone studies revealed elevated plasma levels of oestradiol and its precursors, which increased in response to adrenocorticotrophic hormone and were reduced to normal levels with dexamethasone.Computed tomography disclosed a left adrenal mass and surgery was performed. The removed tumour weighed 84 g and the histological diagnosis was ofadenoma. Nine years after surgery, he is asymptomatic, without hypertension, and radiological and or hormonal evidence of recurrence. We discuss the hormone profile in this case and the dynamics ofsteroid production by the tumour which, in contrast to the classical concept of tumour autonomy, showed dependence of oestradiol secretion on endogenous adrenocorticotrophic hormone.
The role of GH in regulating GH-binding protein (GHBP) and GH receptor concentrations in humans is not clear. Studies performed mostly in children and on a minor scale in adults are somewhat controversial. The key question as to whether GHBP levels are altered in hypopituitarism before GH treatment is instituted remains unanswered. In this study, we have selected a severely GH-deficient group of adult patients with panhypopituitarism, acquired as a result of surgery and irradiation of hypothalamic-pituitary tumors, to evaluate the GHBP/receptor status by measuring GHBP activity in plasma. Twenty panhypopituitary patients (8 males and 12 females; age range, 20-74 yr) and 20 age (22-68 yr)- and sex-matched normal subjects were studied. GH deficiency was confirmed by insulin-induced hypoglycemia and arginine infusion tests; the peak GH response was less than 2 micrograms/L. Plasma insulin-like growth factor-I levels were below or in the low normal range (mean +/- SD, 88.3 +/- 53.6 micrograms/L) and were significantly different from insulin-like growth factor-I (IGF-I) levels in the normal group (mean +/- SD, 189 +/- 49.8 micrograms/L; P < 0.01). Plasma GHBP activity, measured using a GH-binding/gel chromatography assay, showed similar values in the GH-deficient group (mean +/- SD, 14.1 +/- 3.83%) and the control group (mean +/- SD, 13.7 +/- 3.79%), with no statistically significant difference. Neither the intra- nor intergroup comparison of GHBP levels according to age and sex showed statistically significant differences or age trends. In the light of these data and considering that GHBP activity in plasma probably reflects the GH receptor status in tissues, we may assume that the GH receptor was unaffected by chronic GH deficiency. These findings also support the previously reported concept that the GHBP/receptor level is a relatively fixed determinant of growth, established individually and independently of GH secretory status in early life, perhaps on a genetic basis.
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