We studied insulin-like growth factors (IGF) I and II, prolactin, and the insulin response to arginine in 19 children with craniopharyngioma and documented growth hormone deficiency. Patients were divided into three groups according to their growth rate during the first postoperative year. Seven patients with excessive growth (Group A) had hyperinsulinism, normal IGF values, elevated basal prolactin levels, and a delayed thyrotropin response to thyrotropin-releasing hormone, which was compatible with hypothalamic lesions. In the six patients with normal growth (Group B), the insulin level was low; all other hormone values were similar to those of Group A. In the six patients with decreased growth (Group C), levels of IGF I, insulin, prolactin, and thyrotropin were low, indicating the presence of severe pituitary damage and explaining the failure to grow. Patients in all groups had low or undetectable basal levels of growth hormone. We conclude that in Group B, normal IGF permitted normal growth, and prolactin hypersecretion may have been responsible for normal IGF I values. Excessive growth in Group A may have been caused by hyperinsulinism associated with hyperphagia and obesity of hypothalamic origin.
An evaluation of twenty-one boys, including a discordant pair of identical twins, is presented in whom bilateral anorchia was found with a negative family history and without history of breech presentation or of postnatal testicular trauma, torsion or orchitis. The most likely cause is prenatal testicular torsion. The incidence of the condition in our hospital is 1 in 177 cases of cryptorchidism. Prepubertal growth was normal before treatment, and testosterone replacement therapy allowed a normal pubertal growth spurt and skeletal maturation. Although demonstrable basal urinary testosterone was found in the subjects with a postpubertal bone age, most patients tested showed no increase after stimulation with human chorionic gonadotrophin. In the presence of a normal penis and scotum, such findings, together with a high basal FSH and an increased response of plasma LH to LHRH, make surgical exploration unnecessary. In the rare patient who shows a positive but subnormal response of testosterone to HCG, Leydig cells are presumed to be present either ectopically or in rudimentary testes, and further surgical exploration is indicated.
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