Clinical endocrinology
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Clinical endocrinology · Apr 2002
Long-term follow-up results of transsphenoidal surgery for Cushing's disease in a single centre using strict criteria for remission.
Transsphenoidal selective adenomectomy (TSA) is widely accepted as the treatment of choice for Cushing's disease but not all patients are cured by this procedure. The success of surgery depends on the skill and experience of the surgeon but the criteria used to define remission are highly variable. We have analysed the outcome following surgery in our centre using the stringent requirement of a postoperative serum cortisol of < 50 nmol/l as our definition of remission and assessed whether changes in surgical policy, including a greater emphasis on selective procedures and the move in recent years to a single surgeon undertaking all pituitary surgery, have improved complication and remission rates. ⋯ Transsphenoidal surgery is a safe and effective treatment for Cushing's disease and our results compare favourably with those from published series, the majority of which comprise relatively small numbers. The presence of an intrasellar lesion and postoperative serum cortisol < 50 nmol/l are good predictors of remission in the long term but historically in our centre this can only be achieved in a significant number of patients at the expense of some degree of hypopituitarism. However, the surgical outcome for Cushing's disease, including a reduced frequency of hypopituitarism, can be improved if patients are operated on by a single pituitary surgeon, using selective adenomectomy as the preferred surgical approach wherever possible.
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Clinical endocrinology · Apr 2002
Effects of GH replacement on 24-h ambulatory blood pressure and its circadian rhythm in adult GH deficiency.
Increased prevalence of hypertension and cardiovascular mortality have been reported in hypopituitary patients who had been appropriately replaced with conventional pituitary hormones except GH. Growth hormone replacement (GHR) results in improvement of surrogate markers of cardiovascular function. Data on effects of GHR on blood pressure (BP) in adult growth hormone deficiency (AGHD), however, remain contradictory. There are as yet no reports on BP circadian rhythms in untreated or treated AGHD. Therefore, in a 12-month follow-up study, we evaluated the effects of GHR on ambulatory blood pressure (ABP) in AGHD patients. ⋯ Systolic and diastolic BP and HR circadian rhythms are preserved in AGHD following 12 months of GHR. However, there is a significant decrease in 24-h mean SBP and DBP and increase in 24-h mean HR after 12 months on GHR. We postulate that this decrease in 24-h mean SBP and DBP may result in a reduction of cardiovascular morbidity and mortality and may explain the beneficial effects of GHR on cardiovascular system previously reported in AGHD patients.