IGF-I inhibited tumorous GH in 62% and stimulated PRL secretion in 71% of tumours over 4 days, without affecting alpha-subunit secretion or being mitogenic for somatotrophinoma cells in vitro. No hormonal effects were observed over short (4-hour) incubations. IGF-I may be a newly recognized factor directly stimulating tumorous PRL secretion.
Postoperative persistence of elevated growth hormone (GH) levels in patients with acromegaly usually suggests residual adenoma tissue secreting GH and is an indication for further treatment. In rare cases, spontaneous normalization of serum GH levels in patients with acromegaly has been reported to occur as a consequence of intratumoral hemorrhage (pituitary apoplexy). We report two patients in whom persisting acromegaly was documented 1 and 2 weeks, respectively, after transsphenoidal operation and who experienced spontaneous normalization of GH levels. In one patient, this favorable outcome was found 1.5 years after the operation and followed a pregnancy. The other patient, whose GH values normalized 3 months after operation, had received preoperative treatment with a new, long-acting somatostatin analog.
Background:A 61-year-old woman complained of rapidly progressing loss of vision in the right eye. Twenty months earlier, a temporal brain tumor had been partially resected, that appeared to be a malignantly degenerated fibroblastic meningioma, for which she had received postoperative radiation therapy. Ophtalmologic evaluation revealed no retinal abnormalities and no edema of the optic disc.
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