128 research outputs found

    Prolactin

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    During an oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT) glucose and insulin levels were measured in 26 patients with prolactin-producing pituitary tumours without growth hormone excess. Basal glucose and insulin levels did not differ from the values of an age-matched control group. After glucose load the hyperprolactinaemic patients showed a decrease in glucose tolerance and a hyperinsulinaemia. Bromocriptine (CB 154), which suppressed PRL, improved glucose tolerance and decreased insulin towards normal in a second OGTT. — Human PRL or CB 154 had no significant influence on insulin release due to glucose in the perfused rat pancreas. — These findings suggest a diabetogenic effect of PRL. CB 154 might be a useful drug in improving glucose utilization in hormone-active pituitary tumours

    The research gap in chronic paediatric pain: A systematic review of randomised controlled trials

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    Background and Objective: Chronic pain is associated with significant functional and social impairment. The objective of this review was to assess the characteristics and quality of randomized controlled trials (RCTs) evaluating pain management interventions in children and adolescents with chronic pain. Methods: We performed a systematic search of PubMed, Embase and the Cochrane Library up to July 2017. We included RCTs that involved children and adolescents (3 months-18 years) and evaluated the use of pharmacological or non-pharmacological intervention(s) in the context of pain persisting or re-occurring for more than 3 months. Methodological quality was evaluated using the Cochrane Risk of Bias (ROB) Tool. Results: A total of 58 RCTs were identified and numbers steadily increased over time. The majority were conducted in single hospital institutions, with no information on study funding. Median sample size was 47.5 participants (Q1,Q3: 32, 70). Forty-five percent of RCTs included both adults and children and the median of the mean ages at inclusion was 12.9 years (Q1,Q3: 11, 15). Testing of non-pharmacological interventions was predominant and only 5 RCTs evaluated analgesics or co-analgesics. Abdominal pain, headache/migraine and musculoskeletal pain were the most common types of chronic pain among participants. Methodological quality was poor with 90% of RCTs presenting a high or unclear ROB. Conclusions: Evaluation of analgesics targeting chronic pain relief in children and adolescents through RCTs is marginal. Infants and children with long-lasting painful conditions are insufficiently represented in RCTs. We discuss possible research constraints and challenges as well as methodologies to circumvent them. Significance: There is a substantial research gap regarding analgesic interventions for children and adolescents with chronic pain. Most clinical trials in the field focus on the evaluation of non-pharmacological interventions and are of low methodological quality. There is also a specific lack of trials involving infants and children and adolescents with long-lasting diseases

    Influence of age on the clinical presentation of prolactinomas in male patients.

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    OBJECTIVE: Secreting pituitary adenomas are usually not considered a disease of older people. However, in male patients, prolactin-secreting pituitary tumours occur at a similar frequency throughout the entire life span, giving the opportunity to study in this gender the influence of age on the clinical presentation and response to treatment of these tumours. METHODS: We conducted a retrospective study including 9 male patients aged >/=60 (range 60-73) years and 10 aged </=30 (range 17-30) years presenting with a prolactinoma in order to compare clinical presentation, results of pituitary function tests, and response to dopamine agonist therapy between older and younger patients. RESULTS: Four of the 9 elderly as well as the 10 younger patients came to medical attention for typical features of male prolactinomas including visual field defect in 5 (2 elderly), headaches in 2 (1 elderly), impotence in 3 (1 elderly), gynaecomastia and/or galactorrhoea in 2, and arrested puberty in 2. The remaining 5 older people presented for other various reasons: symptoms related to cortisol deficiency in 2, lethargy with clinical signs of hypopituitarism in 1, spontaneous multiple vertebral fractures in 1, and incidental discovery of a pituitary mass in 1. Basal prolactin levels (3,051+/-4,151 vs. 3,365 +/- 4,949 microg/l) and mean tumour diameter (30 +/- 16 vs. 25 +/- 13 mm) were similar in old and young patients. Cortisol deficiency was significantly more frequent in the elderly (n = 6) than in the young (n = 1) patients (p 0.02, Fisher's exact test). Secondary hypothyroidism was found in 2 elderly only, but not in young patients. Sixteen patients (8 elderly) received bromocriptine therapy for at least 6 months with a good tolerance. Normalization of the prolactin levels was achieved in 6 older (75%) and 4 younger patients (50%). CONCLUSIONS: The presentation of a prolactinoma in the elderly man is very heterogeneous and can be misleading. At the time of diagnosis, hypopituitarism is more frequent among older than younger patients despite a similar tumour size. We found dopamine agonists equally effective in the elderly

    Hypergonadotrophic Male Pseudohermaphroditism Due to Complete 17-alpha-Hydroxylase Deficiency

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