45 research outputs found

    Diagnosis and management of pituitary tumours in the elderly: A review based on personal experience and evidence of literature

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    6nononeAn increasing proportion of pituitary adenomas are recognized in the elderly, raising the question of their optimal diagnosis and management. Age-related endocrine changes and associated diseases may significantly modify the clinical presentation and hormonal evaluation of these patients. About 80% of pituitary adenomas in this age group are non-secreting, requiring careful differential diagnosis with non-adenomatous sellar lesions. In this group, visual deterioration and hypopituitarism remain the leading symptoms. Recognized secreting tumours are mainly GH-secreting, most of them intrasellar, followed by prolactinomas, which present as clinically non-secreting and are usually invasive. Cushing's disease appears as a very rare eventuality in the elderly. Optimal therapeutic management should aim to control the disease while preserving or improving patient's quality of life. Transsphenoidal surgery has proved to be an efficient and well-tolerated option for non-secreting adenomas with visual defects and intrasellar GH-secreting adenomas, being able to improve metabolic and cardiovascular complications of acromegaly even in this age group. In contrast, dopamine-agonist drugs can be proposed as a primary therapy for prolactinomas even in the presence of severe neurological complications. Because the use of radiotherapy is hampered by its delay of action and potential neurological side effects, its indications should be better defined in this age group. The clinical importance of hypopituitarism should not be underestimated, and thyroid- and adrenal-replacement therapy are mandatory in the presence of documented hormone deficiency, carefully avoiding overtreatment in order to limit possible side effects on the cardiovascular system and bone mineralization. Indications for GH- and sex steroid-replacement therapy still await age-specific guidelines. © 2005 Society of the European Journal of Endocrinology.noneMinniti G.; Esposito V.; Piccirilli M.; Fratticci A.; Santoro A.; Jaffrain-Rea M.-L.Minniti, G.; Esposito, V.; Piccirilli, M.; Fratticci, A.; Santoro, A.; Jaffrain-Rea, M. -L

    Tra epilessia e parasonnie

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    A female aged 25 years, with a previous diagnosis of juvenile myoclonic epilepsy, already treated with valproate, complained about fragmented and agitated sleep with insomnia and jerks-like movements during sleep and excessive daytime somnolence. Her parents reported noises, movements and shouting. Previous EEG registration showed diffuse brief spike and waves discharges, moreover during photostimulation. The nocturnal video polysomnography showed some diffuse sharp-waves in wake and during sleep. During REM sleep diffuse jerks were present, sometimes with brief eyes opening and vocalization, without evident clear epileptiform activity. Manifestation like these ones, during REM phase, in this kind of patients, disrupting quality of sleep, are not reported. They could be physiological events of REM phase, manifestations of arousal or concomitant parasomnias

    Surgical treatment of femoral artery pseudoaneurysms after cardiac catheterization.

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    Abstract AIM: To report a clinical experience about surgical treatment of iatrogenic peripheral artery pseudoaneurysms (FPA). METHODS: This is a retrospective review of 90 consecutive patients (46 males, 44 females, mean age 66.2 years, range 33-86) with FPA complicating coronary angiography or angioplasty, observed between October 1990 through June 2006. RESULTS: A 3 cm pseudoaneurysm or larger was confirmed by duplex ultrasound scanning in 90 out of 21 454 cardiac patients (0.42%), occurring more frequently in interventional (59/3 983) rather than diagnostic (31/17 471) procedures (1.48% vs 0.17%). The surgical treatment consisted in direct closure with polypropilene suture and occasionally, patch angioplasty or bypass. No limb loss occurred. There were 4 wound complications (4.4%), one pulmonary embolism (1.1%), 3 deaths (3.3%). CONCLUSION: Classical results reported in literature demonstrate that the surgical repair of femoral pseudoaneurysms following cardiac catheterization is safe, effective and durable. In these series, although low major morbidity (1.1%) and no cases of limb loss were reported, the authors observed 3 death (4.4%), resulting from the severity of cardiac disease in 2 cases and from the vascular repair itself in one case (femoral endoarteritis). These results substantiate the common observation that patients who actually require invasive coronary diagnosis and treatment are often affected by advanced cardiovascular disease and suffer the occurrence of complications, having a high risk of death. Therefore, any surgical treatment should be performed with strict adherence to sound vascular surgical principles

    Surgical treatment of femoral artery pseudoaneurysms after cardiac catheterization.

    No full text
    Abstract AIM: To report a clinical experience about surgical treatment of iatrogenic peripheral artery pseudoaneurysms (FPA). METHODS: This is a retrospective review of 90 consecutive patients (46 males, 44 females, mean age 66.2 years, range 33-86) with FPA complicating coronary angiography or angioplasty, observed between October 1990 through June 2006. RESULTS: A 3 cm pseudoaneurysm or larger was confirmed by duplex ultrasound scanning in 90 out of 21 454 cardiac patients (0.42%), occurring more frequently in interventional (59/3 983) rather than diagnostic (31/17 471) procedures (1.48% vs 0.17%). The surgical treatment consisted in direct closure with polypropilene suture and occasionally, patch angioplasty or bypass. No limb loss occurred. There were 4 wound complications (4.4%), one pulmonary embolism (1.1%), 3 deaths (3.3%). CONCLUSION: Classical results reported in literature demonstrate that the surgical repair of femoral pseudoaneurysms following cardiac catheterization is safe, effective and durable. In these series, although low major morbidity (1.1%) and no cases of limb loss were reported, the authors observed 3 death (4.4%), resulting from the severity of cardiac disease in 2 cases and from the vascular repair itself in one case (femoral endoarteritis). These results substantiate the common observation that patients who actually require invasive coronary diagnosis and treatment are often affected by advanced cardiovascular disease and suffer the occurrence of complications, having a high risk of death. Therefore, any surgical treatment should be performed with strict adherence to sound vascular surgical principles
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