The aim of the study was to screen the malignancy in an acromegalic patient group and to determine whether there was any increased risk and the incidence of malignancy and its association with disease characteristics such as duration of disease, latency in diagnosis, and GH and IGF-1 levels. One hundred-five (65 female, 40 male) patients with acromegaly followed and treated at Cerrahpasa Medical School, Endocrinology and Metabolism outpatient clinic between 1983 and 2007 were included in this study. The patients were screened with colonoscopy, mammography, and thyroid and prostate ultrasonography (US). Malignancy was detected in 16 (15%) patients. Thyroid cancer was found in 5 patients (4.7%), breast cancer in 3 (2.8%), colon cancer in 2 (1.9%), lung cancer in 2 (1.9%), cervix cancer in 1 (0.9%), myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) in 1 (0.9%), cholangiocarcinoma in 1 (0.9%), and multiple endocrine neoplasm (MEN) type 1 in 1 patient (0.9%). Cancer was more common in the male patients (P = 0.046) and high levels of GH increased the risk of cancer development (P = 0.046). In this series, the most commonly detected cancer types were thyroid followed by breast and colon cancers. Although high levels of initial GH seemed to increase the risk of cancer development in acromegalic patients, age, gender, age at the time of diagnosis, duration of disease, and initial IGF-I levels were not associated with cancer development.
Our anatomic study offered the facility to learn the endoscopic anatomy of the orbital apex and the medial wall of the orbita and understand the appropriate approaches (such as medial orbitotomy and optic canal decompression) to some pathologic lesions of this region. With skilled and experienced hands, it can superimpose many traditional orbital approaches with minimal invasiveness and less postoperative complications.
A significant percent of women with hyperprolactinemia whom we evaluated had sexual dysfunction. No hormonal changes other than prolactin and no depression was found as a cause of FSD.
The EEASR, a minimally invasive route to suprasellar parachiasmatic area, provided wide exposure of the basal cisterns. The surgical areas that were accessed through the subchiasmatic corridor could be divided into a medial part that included the interpeduncular and prepontine cisterns and a lateral part that contained carotid and sylvian cisterns superiorly and the crural and ambient cisterns inferiorly.
Aromatase (P450AROM) converts testosterone to estrogen. This conversion could be important in normal physiology and estradiol-induced tumorigenesis in human pituitary. The objective of this study was to examine the expression of P450AROM in normal human pituitary and determine the gender difference. We examined aromatase expression in 19 normal human pituitary glands [13 males, 6 females, median age: 30 years (interquartile ranges, IQR: 23-63)] obtained from autopsy. We demonstrated aromatase gene expression levels by quantitative RT-PCR and aromatase protein with immunohistochemical staining in normal male and female human pituitary. Although median relative expression level of aromatase mRNA of male individuals [median DeltaCt = 42.6 (IQR: 7.6-93.9)] was higher than the female individuals [median DeltaCt = 3.9 (IQR:0-44.8)], we could not determine a significant gender difference in aromatase mRNA levels (p = 0.2). The difference between the aromatase protein density by immunohistochemistry was not significant between genders (p = 0.78). The aromatase levels were also not correlated with the age of the study subjects (p = 0.42 r = -0.21). The results indicate that aromatase enzyme is present in human pituitary. The amount and the density of the enzyme show a large variance among different individuals. Although higher mRNA expression was observed in male pituitary compared to female pituitary, there was no statistically significant difference for gender or age.
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