Idiopathic Addison's disease is a chronic organ-specific autoimmune disorder with a long subclinical period characterized only by the presence of adrenal autoantibodies (AA) with or without adrenal function failure. The aim of this longitudinal study was to evaluate the behavior of AA using, an indirect fluorescence method, and adrenal function in 20 AA-positive and 50 AA-negative patients screened by an investigation of a large population of organ-specific autoimmune disease patients without clinical Addison's disease. As controls, 100 normal age-matched subjects were tested only once. In the 20 AA-positive and 50 negative patients, AA and adrenal functional tests were evaluated every 4 months for 5 yr. The AA-positive patients were grouped into 5 adrenal functional stages, specifically: stage 0, normal adrenal function; stage 1, high PRA and low (or normal) aldosterone levels alone; stage 2, along with impaired cortisol response to ACTH, stage 3, along with increased ACTH levels; and stage 4, clinically overt Addison's disease. On the basis of the behavior of AA, the 20 positive patients were grouped as follows: group A, 11 patients with AA titer of 1:8 or higher at the first observation and persistently AA positive in subsequent observations, with titers ranging from 1:8 to 1:64; group B, 6 patients with initial AA titers of 1:8 or lower and AA disappearance in subsequent observations; and group C, 3 patients with AA titer of 1:32 or higher, undergoing corticosteroid therapy after the start of the study and showing AA disappearance in subsequent observations. With respect to adrenal function in group A, 2 patients initially in stage 1 and 1 patient initially in stage 2 did not progress to the upper stages, whereas 5 patients initially in stage 0 and 3 initially in stage 1 progressed subsequently to the upper stages, in 2 cases reaching overt clinical Addison's disease (stage 4). On the other hand, all of the patients of group B showed both a spontaneous disappearance of AA and recovery of adrenal function during the study span. Also, the 3 patients of group C showed disappearance of AA after corticosteroid therapy with recovery of adrenal function. None of the 50 patients who were initially AA negative became AA positive subsequently or showed impairment of adrenal function. We reached the following conclusions. 1) AA, even if present initially in some subjects without clinical Addison's disease, can subsequently disappear. 2) Restoration of adrenal function after disappearance of AA indicates that a spontaneous remission of subclinical adrenocortical failure can occur.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
AVP cell antibodies can be shown in some patients with endocrine autoimmune disease without diabetes insipidus and can sometimes be associated with findings of partial posterior pituitary dysfunction. This suggests that clinical diabetes insipidus could be preceded by a long subclinical period characterized only by the occurrence of AVP-cell-Ab in the sera associated or followed by alterations in functional tests. Longitudinal studies are needed to confirm this hypothesis.
For a period of four years we have been studying 106 healthy males and 66 healthy females, aged 6-10, by cross-sectional design, to look for evidence of a circannual rhythm in LH, FSH, testosterone, PRL, and cortisol secretion. Plasma samples were taken at 0800 h and all hormones were measured by RIA. A cosine function was fitted to the single data to indicate any significant circannual (about 1 year) rhythm and to estimate its parameters: mesor, amplitude, and acrophase. Annual changes were validated in the secretion of: LH (annual crest time in January in both sexes), testosterone (studied only in males, annual crest time in July), and PRL (significant rhythm only in females with annual crest time in March). FSH and cortisol did not show an annual rhythm in both sexes. Our data suggest that sex influences the circannual hormonal rhythms from prepuberty onwards.
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The paper reports on precocious puberty and galactorrhoea in a 4 8/12 year old boy. Roentgenograms of the skull showed slight lateral bulging of sella floor and pneumoencephalography indicated a pituitary adenoma with a suprasellar extension. Pre-operative study of anterior pituitary function was normal except for increased values of LH (900 mIU/ml), testosterone (2000 ng/ml) and prolactin (215 ng/ml). After removal of a chromophobe pituitary adenoma by transfrontal surgery the galactorrhoea disappeared within 10 days. Post-operative endocrine evaluation showed immediate normalization of LH, testosterone and prolactin values.
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