Short term alterations of plasma corticotrophin immunoreactivity (ACTH) and cortisol were studied in healthy men under basal conditions and during intravenous administration of metyrapone. In the intravenous experiment, a low dose (1 g/5 h) and a high dose (4 g/5 h) of metyrapone ditartrate were infused. In the early phase of the metyrapone experiments, plasma ACTH fell from 9.46 +/- 0.95 (SE) pmol/l at 08.00 h to 7.7 +/- 1.1 pmol/l at 09.00 h (P greater than 0.05) in the low-dose experiment, and from 7.0 +/- 1.6 pmol/l to 4.6 +/- 0.9 pmol/l (P less than 0.05) in the high-dose experiment. A significant delayed increase of plasma ACTH secondary to the hypocortisolaemic stimulus was apparent in the high-dose experiment, in which plasma cortisol was maximally suppressed to 14 +/- 3 nmol/l at 13.00 h. No significant increase was observed in the low-dose experiment, the maximal suppression of plasma cortisol being 46 +/- 9 nmol/l at 14.00 h. The present data suggest dual effects of metyrapone on plasma ACTH: 1) a suppressive effect, the mechanism of which is not yet understood, and 2) the known increasing effect of 'feed-back' stimulation, which seems to be very sensitive to alterations of plasma cortisol only at cortisol levels lower than about 50 nmol/l. The suppressive effect of metyrapone may account for the frequently described inadequate response of plasma ACTH to metyrapone-induced hypocortisolaemia. Particularly, the diagnostic validity of the very short versions of the metyrapone test would seem to be seriously questioned.
We present an automated verification of the well-known modal logic cube in Isabelle/HOL, in which we prove the inclusion relations between the cube's logics using automated reasoning tools. Prior work addresses this problem but without restriction to the modal logic cube, and using encodings in first-order logic in combination with first-order automated theorem provers. In contrast, our solution is more elegant, transparent and effective. It employs an embedding of quantified modal logic in classical higher-order logic. Automated reasoning tools, such as Sledgehammer with LEO-II, Satallax and CVC4, Metis and Nitpick, are employed to achieve full automation. Though successful, the experiments also motivate some technical improvements in the Isabelle/HOL tool.
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