Studies Of Hypothalamic Pituitary Structure And Function In Patients Previously Treated With Bilateral Adrenalectomy Alone For Cushings-Disease

CLINICAL ENDOCRINOLOGY(1986)

Cited 12|Views12
No score
Abstract
A controversy still exists in regard to hypothalamic pituitary function long-term after cure of hypercortisolism due to Cushing's disease. In an attempt to resolve this controversy, we have studied 15 patients, treated at least 6 years previously, by bilateral adrenalectomy. None of these patients had had pituitary-directed therapy. The maximum increment response of serum TSH in response to TRH was greater than 5 mU/l in 13 of the 15. Serum PRL response to TRH, GH response to insulin-induced hypoglycaemia, gonadotrophin responses to LHRH and nocturnal PRL secretion were normal in all patients studied. When nocturnal GH secretion was corrected for age, body mass index and menopausal status it was definitely abnormal in only two patients. The mean nocturnal GH secretion did not differ from that measured in a control group of Addisonian patients. The series of patients also did not differ significantly from the Addisonian patients in relation to the pattern of changes in plasma ACTH, over 24 h after an 0800 h oral dose of hydrocortisone. There was a significant rise in plasma ACTH between 2200 h and 0600 h in both groups of patients. The plasma ACTH concentrations were significantly higher in post-adrenalectomy patients. Hypothalamic pituitary function is normal in the long-term in the majority of patients treated by bilateral adrenalectomy for Cushing's disease.
More
Translated text
Key words
bilateral adrenalectomy,hypothalamic pituitary structure,cushings
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined