Wereport 7 cases of adrenal tumors with concurrent increases in cortisol and aldosterone secretion, which we have examined over the last 2 years. Wealso present the pathology of excised specimens based on immunohistochemical staining, as well as endocrinological findings.Four patients were male and 3 female; 6 were first diagnosed as suffering from primary aldosteronism (PA) and one as adrenal preclinical Cushing's syndrome (PCS).Plasma cortisol concentrations at midnight were greater than 2 jig/dl in 6 patients and more than 1 jig/dl in the dexamethasone suppression test with an 8 mgdose in all patients. This indicates that dexamethasonedid not inhibit the secretion of cortisol. Noincrease in renin activity was seen in the renin-producing irritable test in any of the patients. Immunohistochemical staining showed not only the presence of aldosteronoma, but also the expression of P-450cl7, which is involved in the biosynthesis of cortisol, indicating that both cortisol and aldosterone were concurrently synthesized. With regard to the function of adrenal tumors, we suggest that concurrent secretion of cortisol and aldosterone are not rare and that immunohistochemical examination of the surgicallyextirpated specimen is important for diagnosis. (Internal Medicine 42: 714-718, 2003)
Abstract. A very unusual case of Cushing's syndrome is presented. Most of the preoperative biochemical and radiological examinations were compatible with Cushing's syndrome owing to a right adrenal adenoma. Exceptional findings include normal concentrations of adrenocorticotrophin (ACTH) in plasma as well as a disturbance of its circadian rhythmicity and a significant adrenocortical responsiveness to exogenous ACTH. Secretory patterns of ACTH did not change even after right adrenalectomy.
Studies in vitro revealed that the adenoma itself, but not the surrounding normal adrenal, was the source of cortisol secreted in response to ACTH. Post mortem examinations disclosed unexpectedly a hormonally inactive left adrenal adenoma and a focal hyperplastic lesion of the anterior pituitary with an ACTH concentration 53 times higher than that of the remaining tissue of the gland.
It is a possibility that this case may have represented a transition between pituitary-dependent adrenocortical hyperplasia and adrenal adenoma to this date reported in only one similar case.
A 81-year-old woman was diagnosed as having diabetes mellitus (DM) at 58 years of age. She started insulin therapy the following year, but her blood sugar levels were poorly controlled. At the age of 75, she tested positive for the anti-GAD antibody (7.8 U/ml) and was diagnosed as having slowly progressive type 1 DM (SPIDDM), as well as vitiligo vulgaris. At 78 years of age, chronic thyroiditis was diagnosed after positive tests for anti-thyroid peroxidase antibody and anti-thyroglobulin antibody. At the age of 81, general fatigue and jaundice appeared concomitantly with severe anemia, with Hb levels at 5.2 g/dl. Low serum vitamin B12 levels and the finding of erythroblastic hyperplasia with megaloblasts in bone marrow led to the diagnosis of pernicious anemia. Anemia was alleviated by intramuscular injections of vitamin B12 . The patient developed chronic thyroiditis, vitiligo vulgaris, and pernicious anemia concomitantly with SPIDDM, and was diagnosed as having polyglandular autoimmune syndrome type III. Attention should be paid to these potentially associated autoimmune diseases in daily practice during the follow-up of SPIDDM patients.
The frequency of diabetes mellitus has risen in Japan as the traditional diet has become increasing Americanized and society has aged. With this has come a rise in infectious diseases and complications elderly diabetic patients and a growing need for appropriate management to maintain their quality of life (QOL) and minimize medical measures. Subjects were 98 diabetic patients-60 men and 38 women hospitalized for intravenous antibiotic treatment of infectious disease from 2002 to 2005. We studied plasma glucose control, plasma and urinary protein levels related to nephropathy, and inflammatory responses to treatment. Subjects were divided into good (under 6.5%), fair (from 6.5% to 8.0%), poor (over 8.0%) and severe (over 10%) groups by HbA1c level on admission. We then compared white blood cell counts, CRP levels and the antibacterial medication periods. Those with poorly controlled plasma glucose control, hypoalbuminuria and interrupted or untreated diabetes required significantly longer antibacterial administration. Insulin was increased by the complications of infection, and decreased as infection ameliorated. Appropriate antibiotic administration is essential for diabetic patients with infectious disease, in addition to early intervention, strict plasma glucose control, continuous treatment, and maintenance of good nutrition. Such treatment improves QOL, shortens antibiotic administration, staves off antibiotic-resistant bacteria, and cuts medical costs.
The superoxide anion (O2-) production in polymorphonuclear leukocytes stimulated by phorbol myristate acetate in IDDM and non-insulin dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM) was determined by the method of Johnston et al, compared with that of each age matched controls. And the correlation between O2- production and hemoglobin (Hb) A1 and A1c value was investigated. The O2- production in IDDM was 24.4 +/- 7.4 (mean +/- SD, n mol per 4 X 10(5) cells) at 10 min. and 51.4 +/- 8.7 at 30 min., in NIDDM each 31.6 +/- 9.3, 60.2 +/- 14.4, and in controls each 40.5 +/- 4.2, 72.4 +/- 3.1. O2- production in IDDM was significantly lower than that in NIDDM (p less than 0.001 at 10 min. and p less than 0.01 30 min.) and controls (p less than 0.001 at 10 and 30 min.). O2- production at 10 and 30 min. possessed a negative correlation with Hba1 and A1c value (HbA1: p less than 0.01 at 10 min. p less than 0.05 at 30 min., HbA1c: p less than 0.01 at 10 and 30 min.). These findings suggest that impaired O2- production might be one of the factors accounting for depressed bactericidal activity of polymorphonuclear leukocytes in IDDM, and that a protracted hyperglycemia might shed some effect on O2- production.
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