13 research outputs found
Effect of a combination of ethinylestradiol and desogestrel in adolescents with oligomenorrhea and ovarian hyperandrogenism
Long-term growth hormone deficiency as a cause of cardiomyopathy and its reversibility with specific replacement therapy
The current case report provides additional, and hopefully convincing, evidence in terms of cause and effect relation of GH deficiency to cardiomyopathy. In line with previous reports (16,17), our data highlight the rapid improvement of cardiac function after specific treatment. It would be interesting to determine whether GH therapy for longer than 3 months results in a more complete reversal of cardiac disease. The treatment period was necessarily short in our patient because we were also interested in the consequences of GH therapy discontinuation, which could provide an additional element to support the specificity of cardiomyopathy. Indeed, our observation of a rapid worsening of cardiac function after GH withdrawal substantiates the specificity of the disease and indicates that long term substitutive treatment is imperative in GH-deficient patients with evidence of cardiac failure. This recommendation is also supported by the epidemiological finding of increased cardiovascular mortality in GH-deficient patients, explained by their greater propensity to develop coronary artery disease and heart failure
A quick method to detect circulating anti-thyroid hormone autoantibodies.
The aim of this study was to evaluate the feasibility of a chromatographic method to easily detect circulating anti-thyroid hormone autoantibodies (THBA), to calculate their affinity constant and the total thyroid hormone (TH) levels in presence of THBA. This method was applied to sera from 4 subject with suspected THBA and 20 controls (10 normal subjects and 10 patients with thyroid dysfunctions). After a short incubation with 125I-T3 or T4 tracer solution containing 8-anilino-1-naphthalenesulfonic acid as inhibitor of the binding of TH to plasma proteins without affecting THBA binding, the samples were chromatographied on prepacked Sephadex LH 20 columns and eluted with TRIS buffer to separate free TH from THBA-bound TH. Samples were considered THBA positive when radioactivity values in TRIS eluates were higher than in controls. THBA-bound TH were subsequently eluted with methanol and used to calculate the total TH present in patients with THBA. After a validation test using two standardized methods, we propose this method to quickly detect TH-BA in samples with suspected spuriously high values of free and total TH
Partial deficiency of adrenal 11-hydroxylase: A possible cause of primary hypertension
Results of supraphysiological adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) stimulation of biosynthetic pathways of adrenal zona fasciculata indicate that a deficiency of 11-hydroxylase exists in patients with essential hypertension. The deficiency is suggested by the much greater stimulus of synthesis of deoxycorticosterone (DOC) and deoxycortisol in hypertensive subjects than in controls (p < 0.001). No significant difference in the synthesis of cortisol, corticosterone, progesterone, 17-hydroxyprogesterone (17-OHP), and delta-4-androstenedione (D4) was observed between the two groups. The ratios for synthesis of DOC and corticosterone and for deoxycortisol and cortisol found in hypertensive patients were significantly higher than those found in controls (p < 0.001); no significant difference was observed in the synthesis of 17-OHP and progesterone. The synthesis of DOC and deoxycortisol was not significantly correlated with either blood pressure or plasma renin activity. Plasma renin activity was significantly lower in hypertensive subjects than in normotensive subjects (p < 0.0001), while no difference was found in aldosterone secretion between the two groups. The 11-hydroxylase deficiency in the adrenal zona fasciculata may be one of the genetic factors causing hypertension together with environmental factors (particularly salt intake and work-related stress). The investigation performed in our study may be useful for the evaluation of adrenal zona fasciculata enzymatic activities during the study of hypertensive patients
Unusual association of thyroiditis, Addison's disease, ovarian failure and celiac disease in a young woman
The coexistence of autoimmune endocrine diseases, particularly autoimmune thyroid disease and celiac disease (CD), has recently been reported. We here present a 23-year-old woman with a diagnosis of hypothyroidism due to Hashimoto's thyroiditis, autoimmune Addison's disease, and kariotypically normal spontaneous premature ovarian failure. Considering the close association between autoimmune diseases and CD, we decided to search for IgA anti-endomysium antibodies (EmA) in the serum. The positivity of EmA and the presence of total villous atrophy at jejunal biopsy allowed the diagnosis of CD. On a gluten-free diet the patient showed a marked clinical improvement accompanied, over a 3-month period, by a progressive decrease in the need for thyroid and adrenal replacement therapies. After 6 months, serum EmA became negative and after 12 months a new jejunal biopsy showed complete mucosal recovery. After 18 months on gluten-free diet, the anti-thyroid antibodies titre decreased significantly, and we could discontinue thyroid substitutive therapy. This case emphasizes the association between autoimmune polyglandular disease and CD; the precocious identification of these cases is clinically relevant not only for the high risk of complications (e.g. lymphoma) inherent to untreated CD, but also because CD is one of the causes for the failure of substitute hormonal therapy in patients with autoimmune thyroid disease
Screening a coastal population in Southern Italy: iodine deficiency and prevalence of goitre, nutritional aspects and cardiovascular risk factors
BACKGROUND AND AIM: To evaluate the prevalence of goitre by means of urinary iodine excretion, palpatory and ultrasonographic thyroid examinations in a heterogeneous population living by the sea. METHODS AND RESULTS: We used a special self-administered questionnaire to evaluate thyroid size, iodine intake, eating habits and cardiovascular risk factors in 600 subjects with a mean age of 45 +/- 17 years: 253 men (42.3%) and 347 women (57.7%). Urinary iodine excretion was low (72.1 +/- 15.7 microg/L; median 71.2) and associated with ultrasonographic evidence of an enlarged thyroid (16%) or structural thyroid abnormalities (30%), thus allowing us to define the Salerno Gulf as a mild-moderate area of endemic goitre. All of the subjects ate a Mediterranean diet, with a mean of two portions of fish/week. The cardiovascular risk factors considered were obesity, cigarette smoking, hypertension, hypercholesterolemia, hypertriglyceridemia and diabetes, the prevalences of which were in line with those reported in other studies of similar age-matched populations. CONCLUSIONS: The moderate intake of fish and the consumption of a Mediterranean diet did not prevent goitre. Iodine deficiency and subsequent goitre endemia are also present at sea level, probably because of a diet based on local products grown on soil with a low iodine content or possible seawater, soil and air environmental pollution that may interfere with the availability of iodine. The assessment of iodine deficiency should therefore involve the entire population and not only subjects living far from the sea
