Clinical endocrinology
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The prevalence of Nelson's syndrome has varied greatly, at least in part because of the variability of the diagnostic criteria employed by different authors. We define Nelson's syndrome as the presence of an enlarging pituitary tumour associated with elevated fasting plasma ACTH levels and hyperpigmentation in patients with Cushing's disease after bilateral adrenalectomy. We have compared patients with Cushing's disease who developed Nelson's syndrome after bilateral adrenalectomy with those who did not. Our objective was to find differences between the two groups which might predict the development of Nelson's syndrome. ⋯ The prevalence of Nelson's syndrome was 47% in our series of 30 patients with Cushing's disease after bilateral adrenalectomy. No clinical or laboratory data before adrenalectomy predicted the development of the syndrome. The value of prophylactic pituitary irradiation could not be evaluated from our clinical material. However, after adrenalectomy, the presence of hyperpigmentation and ACTH levels above 154 pmol/l had positive predictive value for the development of Nelson's syndrome. In this situation magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the pituitary is mandatory and, if no tumour is detected, MRI should be repeated at intervals.
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Clinical endocrinology · Aug 1998
Elevated post-dexamethasone suppression cortisol concentrations correlate with hormonal alterations of the hypothalamo-pituitary adrenal axis in patients with adrenal incidentalomas.
It has recently been suggested that autonomous cortisol production may lead to subclinical glucocorticoid excess in a substantial number of patients with incidentally discovered adrenocortical adenomas. Following a standard low-dose dexamethasone suppression test (LDDST) cortisol concentrations are frequently incompletely suppressed in patients with adrenal incidentalomas, due to an ACTH-independent secretion of cortisol by the adrenal mass. Thus, post LDDST cortisol concentrations may provide a measure of the degree of autonomous glucocorticoid secretion, but hormonal alterations in relation to post-LDDST cortisol concentrations have not been thoroughly investigated. ⋯ It is concluded that higher post-low dose dexamethasone cortisol concentrations are associated with lower ACTH and dehydroepiandrosterone sulphate, higher midnight cortisol concentrations and larger adenomas. These findings are consistent with the hypothesis that post-low dose dexamethasone cortisol concentrations represent a useful index in assessing subtle glucocorticoid autonomy in patients with adrenal adenomas.
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Clinical endocrinology · Jun 1998
Genotype-phenotype analysis in late onset 21-hydroxylase deficiency in comparison to the classical forms.
To establish the type and frequency of mutations causing late onset 21-hydroxylase deficiency and associated clinical and biochemical phenotypes and to compare these findings to those from heterozygotes and homozygotes for classical 21-hydroxylase deficiency. ⋯ Normal basal serum 17-hydroxyprogesterone levels cannot exclude late onset CAH, although response to adrenocorticotrophic stimulation clearly distinguished this disorder from carriers of the classical disease. The frequency of mutations causing less severe enzyme deficiency was higher in the late onset patients than in a group of classical patients, although other genes or environmental pressures may determine the age of onset of disease.
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Clinical endocrinology · May 1998
Comparative StudyThe low-dose dexamethasone suppression test in patients with adrenal incidentalomas: comparisons with clinically euadrenal subjects and patients with Cushing's syndrome.
Increasing evidence favours subtle glucocorticoid excess in many patients with adrenal incidentalomas. However, existing evidence is based mainly on the overnight dexamethasone suppression test, a test that is commonly abnormal even among clinically euadrenal subjects. The aim of the present study was to evaluate patients with adrenal incidentalomas for subtle glucocorticoid excess by the more specific low-dose dexamethasone test (LDDST). Moreover, since the criteria of what constitutes an abnormal cortisol response following this test have been largely anecdotal, we report our results in comparison with those obtained in clinically euadrenal subjects, and patients with Cushing's syndrome. ⋯ On the basis of our data in a large group of clinically euadrenal subjects, we suggest that following LDDST cortisol concentrations should become undetectable with the currently used radioimmunoassays. In patients with adrenal incidentalomas, application of the LDDST confirmed the presence of incomplete suppression of cortisol in the majority of patients. We suggest that the LDDST is a sensitive index of autonomous cortisol production in patients with adrenal incidentalomas; following this test a grading of subtle glucocorticoid excess may be obtained but future studies correlating biochemical, clinical and epidemiological data are required, in order to develop widely agreed cut-off levels of clinically significant glucocorticoid excess in these patients.
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Clinical endocrinology · Apr 1998
Serum leptin and insulin in paediatric end-stage liver disease and following successful orthotopic liver transplantation.
Leptin, the product of the ob gene, is a postulated feedback regulator of adiposity with appetite suppressant and catabolic effects. Catabolic states are associated with decreased body fat mass as a result of both nutritional and metabolic perturbation. Low serum leptin has been described previously in a number of catabolic states. It has been unclear whether the observed changes in leptin are a cause or consequence of changes in adiposity. Paediatric end-stage liver disease (ESLD) is characterized by decreased body fat mass and poor linear growth. Successful treatment by orthotopic liver transplantation (OLT) is accompanied by increase in fat mass. We investigated the hypothesis that serum leptin would be low in paediatric ESLD and that increase in body fat mass post-OLT would result in increased serum leptin. ⋯ Serum leptin is low in children with end-stage liver disease but does not show the expected correlation with measures of body fat mass. Surprisingly, following orthotopic liver transplantation serum leptin falls significantly despite significant increases in measures of body fat mass (triceps skinfold thickness standard deviation scores, mid-arm circumference standard deviation scores). Orthotopic liver transplantation restores the expected correlation of serum leptin with measures of body fat mass within the treatment group. The elevation of serum leptin above predicted levels in paediatric end-stage liver disease offers a mechanism for the anorexia and cachexia characteristic of this disease.