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1.
The studies aimed at evaluation of pituitary reserve of growth hormone following stimulation with GRF have been carried out in a group of 33 patients (11 women and 22 men, of age between 25 and 62 years) with pituitary tumors. The studied material included cases with pituitary adenoma characterized by excessive secretion of growth hormone (somatotropinoma), prolactin (prolactinoma) or alpha subunits of glycoprotein hormones (alphoma), and those with hormonally inactive adenoma. The GRF stimulation tests were carried out in hospitalized patients after overnight fast between 8.00 and 10.00 a.m. Blood samples for hormonal determinations were taken before the test, and after 15, 30, 60, 90 and 120 minutes following intravenous administration of 100 micrograms of GRF 1-29. Besides growth hormone, also the blood serum concentrations of other pituitary hormones were determined in the patients studied, both in the basal state and during the dynamic tests. In patients with acromegaly the results of the determinations of growth hormone following stimulation with GRF showed considerable individual variability. In 5 cases there was an increase in blood serum growth hormone concentration. No response to GRF was noted in the remaining 8 cases. In adenoma cases of prolactinoma type, growth hormone concentration began to rise already at the 15-th minute of the test in most cases. In three cases of prolactinoma associated with acromegaly no response to GRF was observed. The cases of alphoma-type adenoma were usually characterized by the secretion of pituitary hormones other than growth hormone.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

2.
The aim of the study was clinical evaluation of a new marker of pituitary tumours--the alpha subunit of glycoprotein hormones. The studies were performed in 152 patients with manifestations of intersellar tumours; an elevated serum alpha subunit concentration was found in 49 of these cases. The determinations of alpha subunit were performed by double antibody radioimmunoassay. Iodination of alpha subunit was made by chloramine T technique with subsequent purification of Ultrogel AcA54 column. The remaining pituitary hormones were also determined by radioimmunoassay. The incidence of pituitary tumours of alphoma type was 30 percent. Tumours occurred frequently in association with an increased serum growth hormone and manifestations of acromegaly, less frequently with hyperprolactinemia and signs of prolactinoma. Following neurosurgery of 60Co pituitary irradiation hypopituitarism was of high occurrence.  相似文献   

3.
Patients with chronic liver diseases were evaluated for: 1) the ability of somatostatin to affect the thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH) induced growth hormone (GH) rise; 2) the competence of luteinizing-hormone releasing hormone (LH-RH) to release GH; 3) the non-specific releasing effect of TRH and LH-RH on other anterior pituitary (AP) hormones. In 6 patients, infusion of somatostatin (100 micrograms iv bolus + 375 micrograms i.v. infusion) completely abolished the TRH (400 micrograms i.v.)-induced GH rise; in none of 12 patients, of whom 7 were GH-responders to TRH, did LH-RH (100 micrograms i.v.) cause release of GH; 4) finally, LH-RH (12 patients) did not increase plasma prolactin (PRL) and TRH (7 patients) did not evoke a non-specific release of gonadotropins. It is concluded that: 1) abnormal GH-responsiveness to TRH is the unique alteration in AP responsiveness to hypothalamic hormones present in liver cirrhosis; 2) the mechanism(s) subserving the altered GH response to TRH is different from that underlying the TRH-induced GH rise present in another pathologic state i.e. acromegaly, a condition in which the effect of TRH escapes somatostatin suppression and LH-RH evokes GH and PRL release.  相似文献   

4.
In a significant proportion of patients with acromegaly, a non-specific increase in plasma growth hormone (GH) has been recognized following administration of thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH) or luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone (LH-RH), probably due to the lack of the specificity of the receptor in their tumor cells. In this study, the effects of corticotropin-releasing factor (CRF), a newly isolated hypothalamic hormone, in addition to TRH and LH-RH, on plasma levels of GH and the other anterior pituitary hormones were evaluated in 6 patients with acromegaly. Synthetic ovine CRF (1.0 microgram/kg), TRH (500 micrograms) or LH-RH (100 micrograms) was given as an iv bolus injection, in the morning after an overnight fast. Blood specimens were taken before and after injection at intervals up to 120 min, and plasma GH, adrenocorticotropin (ACTH), thyrotropin, prolactin, luteinizing hormone, follicle-stimulating hormone and cortisol were assayed by radioimmunoassays. A non-specific rise in plasma GH was demonstrated following injection of TRH and LH-RH, in 5 of 6 and 2 of 5 patients, respectively. In all subjects, rapid rises were observed in both plasma ACTH (34.3 +/- 6.2 pg/ml at 0 min to 79.5 +/- 9.5 pg/ml at 30 min, mean +/- SEM) and cortisol level (9.1 +/- 1.3 micrograms/dl at 0 min to 23.4 +/- 1.2 micrograms/dl at 90 min). However, plasma levels of GH and the other anterior pituitary hormones did not change significantly after CRF injection. These results indicate that CRF specifically stimulates ACTH secretion and any non-specific response of GH to CRF appears to be an infrequent phenomenon in this disorder.  相似文献   

5.
Plasma prolactin response to thyrotropin-releasing-hormone (TRH) stimulation was diminished in 30 patients with prolactinomas and 9 patients with acromegaly who had normal serum prolactin levels. There was no overlap of prolactin responses when compared with 32 control patients. Responses of ten patients with adrenocorticotropin (ACTH)-secreting pituitary tumors were similar to those of controls. Plasma growth hormone concentrations after TRH stimulation changed significantly in 28% of normal control and 20%, 25% and 50% of patients with prolactin-, growth hormone- and ACTH-secreting pituitary tumors, respectively. Our data suggest that the blunted TRH-induced rise in plasma prolactin levels in patients with prolactinomas and those with acromegaly may be related to humoral factor(s) affecting TRH receptor or postreceptor function. Growth hormone responses to TRH are nonspecific and should not be considered a marker for active acromegaly.  相似文献   

6.
To clarify the effects of cyclosporine A (CsA) on the secretion of serum thyrotropin (TSH), prolactin (PRL), luteinizing hormone (LH) and follicular stimulating hormone (FSH), we performed TRH and LH-RH testing in 4 patients with the nephrotic syndrome before and after the administration of CsA, 6 mg/kg/day for 4 to 12 weeks. Prior to CsA all patients responded normally to TRH with respect to TSH and PRL secretion. Two patients showed normal response of LH and FSH to LH-RH stimulation while the response in 2 other patients, who were both menopausal, was exaggerated. By the third or fourth week of CsA administration the basal and peak TSH and PRL values declined significantly in all patients in response to TRH stimulation while those of LH and FSH showed only a modest decrease in response to LH-RH stimulation. Two to 4 weeks after the cessation of CsA the response of TSH, PRL and FSH returned to the pretreatment level. These observations suggest that: 1) CsA exerts an inhibitory effect on the secretion of at least TSH and PRL in humans, and 2) the effect of CsA on the pituitary may be partially reversible after the cessation of the therapy.  相似文献   

7.
The development of a long-acting somatostatin (SRIH) analog (octreotide, Sandoz) has been a major breakthrough in the treatment of acromegaly. However, in 20-30% of the patients, growth hormone (GH) plasma levels remain elevated (> 10 micrograms/l) despite treatment with octreotide. This raised the concept of resistance to SRIH analog therapy in acromegaly. Indeed, in vivo response to SRIH analogs varies greatly among acromegalic patients. According to the reviews in the literature and our own autoradiographic data, no direct correlation can be established between the GH response to octreotide and the number or affinity of the SRIH receptors located on the tumor. In our series a greater density of SRIH receptors is present on tumors from patients very sensitive to the SRIH agonist. A subset of patients resistant to octreotide could result from a very low density of SRIH receptor although this type of GH-secreting tumor constitutes certainly a rare case. A subset of GH-secreting pituitary tumors can be characterized by a mutation on the alpha subunit of the guanine nucleotide-dependent protein coupled to the stimulation of adenylate cyclase (G alpha s). This mutation results in a high basal adenylate cyclase activity and a low GHRH-stimulated activity. However, when the adenomas are separated according to their basal adenylate cyclase activity, SRIH is able to decrease cAMP levels in both types of tumor. In addition, in our series no direct correlation is observed between the SRIH inhibition of adenylate cyclase and the amount of SRIH-binding sites.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

8.
The effects of 40 mg oral and 200 microgram intravenous TRH were studied in patients with active acromegaly. Administration of oral TRH to each of 14 acromegalics resulted in more pronounced TSH response in all patients and more pronounced response of triiodothyronine in most of them (delta max TSh after oral TRh 36.4 +/- 10.0 (SEM) mU/l vs. delta max TSH after i.v. TRH 7.7 +/- 1.5 mU/l, P less than 0.05; delta max T3 after oral TRH 0.88 +/- 0.24 nmol/vs. delta max T3 after i.v. TRH 0.23 +/- 0.06 nmol/l, P less than 0.05). Oral TRH elicited unimpaired TSH response even in those acromegalics where the TSH response to i.v. TRH was absent or blunted. In contrast to TSH stimulation, oral TRH did not elicit positive paradoxical growth hormone response in any of 8 patients with absent stimulation after i.v. TRH. In 7 growth hormone responders to TRH stimulation the oral TRH-induced growth hormone response was insignificantly lower than that after i.v. TRH (delta max GH after oral TRH 65.4 +/- 28.1 microgram/l vs. delta max GH after i.v. TRH 87.7 +/- 25.6 microgram/l, P greater than 0.05). In 7 acromegalics 200 microgram i.v. TRH represented a stronger stimulus for prolactin release than 40 mg oral TRH (delta max PRL after i.v. TRH 19.6 +/- 3.22 microgram/, delta max PRL after oral TRH 11.1 +/- 2.02 microgram/, P less than 0.05). Conclusion: In acromegalics 40 mg oral TRH stimulation is useful in the evaluation of the function of pituitary thyrotrophs because it shows more pronounced effect than 200 microgram TRH intravenously. No advantage of oral TRH stimulation was seen in the assessment of prolactin stimulation and paradoxical growth hormone responses.  相似文献   

9.
OBJECTIVE: Endocrine dysfunction is a common problem in patients with human immunodeficiency virus infection (HIV). We therefore evaluated the endocrine function in 31 male homosexual HIV-1-infected men: mean age 37 +/- 7.2 years (range 24-52). METHODS AND MATERIALS: Blood was obtained for baseline T3, T4, TSH, LH, FSH, prolactin, testosterone, ACTH and cortisol values. Endocrine function tests were performed as TRH, CRH, ACTH, LH-RH and HCG tests. RESULTS: Thyroid function: There was a temporarily increased TSH in 3 of 17 patients but normal levels for T3, T4 and fT4 (without thyroid antibodies). One patient showed signs of latent hyperthyroidism (no response in TRH test). Adrenocortical function: Two patients had adrenal insufficiency. They showed a normal baseline cortisol level, an elevated ACTH level and no increase in cortisol levels after stimulation with CRH. All other patients revealed normal responses on the CRH/ACTH tests. Gonadal function: 9 patients had elevated FSH levels (tubular insufficiency), 4 patients additionally had increased LH levels (hypergonadotropic hypogonadism). 5 patients showed signs of tertiary hypogonadism (low LH and testosterone, increase of LH after stimulation with LH-RH). CONCLUSION: In disorders of thyroid and adrenocortical function of primary or tertiary origin, a substitution of hormones should be taken into consideration.  相似文献   

10.
The aim of the study was to analyze 14 consecutive patients with active acromegaly who had not undergone any therapy, the dose response of growth hormone (GH) to thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH), the existence of reproducibility of such response as well as to rule out the possibility of spontaneous fluctuations of GH which would mimic this response. On several nonconsecutive days, we investigated the GH response to saline serum, 100, 200 (twice) and 400 micrograms of TRH administration. We also studied both basal serum prolactin, serum prolactin after TRH administration and thyrotropin values. Our results show an absence of GH response after saline serum infusion, whereas after TRH doses, 36.3 42.8 and 45.4% positive responses were obtained, respectively. All GH responders were concordant to the different doses administered. The mean of GH concentrations of the different doses at different times did not reach significant differences. The response to the administration of the same dose brought about a significative increase, although it was not identical. It demonstrated a progressive increase of the area under the response curve, as did the means of increments after each TRH administration, albeit without reaching statistical significance. Between the GH-responding and GH-nonresponding groups there were no differences in either basal serum prolactin or serum prolactin and thyroid-stimulating hormone levels after TRH stimulation. The present study clearly shows that TRH elicits serum GH release from GH-secreting pituitary tumors. The response was reproducible in qualitative terms rather than quantitative, and no dose-response relationship was found between the TRH concentrations and the amounts of GH secreted.  相似文献   

11.
The effects of prolonged hemodialysis therapy on testosterone secretion have been studied in 41 men with chronic renal insufficiency. Fifteen healthy men served as control group. LH-RH stimulation test was performed in all the studied subjects. It was found that blood serum testosterone concentration is lowered in all the patients with renal insufficiency irrespective of the time of duration of hemodialysis therapy as compared to the control group. In patients dialyzed longer than 50 month testosterone level was higher than in those subjected to shorter period of hemodialysis therapy. Reactivity of testosterone secretion in LH-RH stimulation test was greater in patients dialyzed over 50 months than either in those dialyzed during the shorter period or in the controls.  相似文献   

12.
Triiodothyronine (T3), thyroxine (T4), basal TSH and TSH after stimulation with TRH were determined in healthy subjects and patients treated with D-thyroxine (DT4). After a dosage of 6 mg DT4 the D/L T4 plasma concentration rose about 4-fold 4 hours after application and was only moderately elevated 14 hours later. To achieve constantly elevated T4 levels 3 mg DT4 were applied in the further experiment every 12 hours. The D/L T4 plasma concentration rose 2.5-4-fold and there was a small but significant increase of the D/L T3 plasma concentration. 74 hours after onset of treatment basal TSH was below detectable limits and the increase of TSH 30 min after injection of 200 mug TRH (TRH test) was only about 15% compared to zero time. The time course of TSH suppression was investigated after treatment with DT4 and LT4 (single dosage of 3 mg). TRH-tests were performed before, 10, 26, 50 and 74 hours after the first dosage of D or LT4. There was no difference in the time course of basal TSH and TSH stimulated by TRH. In 10 patients on DT4 long-term therapy, basal and stimulated TSH were found to be below the detectable limits of 0.4 mug/ml. Our results show that (1) plasma half-life of DT4 is less than 1 day, (2) TSH suppression after D and LT4 treatment is very similar, and (3) in patients on long-term DT4 treatment, TSH plasma concentration is below detectable limits even after stimulation with TRH.  相似文献   

13.
We have examined the effects of 3,5 3'-triiodo-L-thyronine (T3), dexamethasone, bromocriptine, thyrotropin releasing hormone (TRH) and estrogen on the levels of pituitary alpha and TSH-beta protein and mRNA levels in hypothyroid mice. After 3 days of treatment with T3 (0.5 micrograms/100 g body weight) serum TSH, alpha and TSH-beta levels were 77%, 79% and 44% of control, respectively. Pituitary alpha and TSH-beta mRNA content was estimated by dot blot hybridization of total RNA with 32P-labelled alpha and TSH-beta plasmid probes. There was no change in alpha mRNA after 3 days of T3 treatment but TSH-beta mRNA had decreased to 60% of control. With T3 at 2 micrograms/100 g body weight for 3 days, TSH protein was 27% of control and TSH-beta was undetectable, but there was no change in alpha. TSH-beta mRNA was decreased to 40% of control at 1 day and was barely detectable at 3 days, whereas alpha mRNA was 70% of control at 1 day and 42% at 3 days. Dexamethasone and bromocriptine caused no consistent change in pituitary levels of alpha and TSH-beta mRNA. Treatment with TRH caused small increases in serum TSH and in both alpha and TSH-beta mRNA levels. Estrogen treatment increased serum TSH and subunit levels and TSH-beta mRNA, but not alpha. We conclude that thyroid hormones decrease alpha and beta subunit mRNA levels discordantly in both the hypothyroid pituitary and in thyrotropic tumors and that the suppressive effect of thyroid hormone is the major regulator of TSH.  相似文献   

14.
To investigate the mechanisms of the synthesis and the release of gonadotropin, rat anterior pituitary cells were stimulated in vitro with luteinizing hormone releasing hormone (LH-RH), [D-Ser(tBu)]6 des-Gly-NH2(10) ethylamide (Buserelin) and 12-0-tetradecanoyl phorbol-13-acetate (TPA), and then the LH and LH-beta subunit released into the medium were determined by radioimmunoassay. Buserelin showed its biological activity at a much lower concentration than LH-RH, but both of them caused the release of LH and LH-beta subunit in a dose-dependent manner. Furthermore, intracellular LH synthesis from LH-beta subunit by stimulation with LH-RH or Buserelin was also found. After inducing various degrees of desensitization by stimulation with LH-RH or Buserelin in a dose-dependent manner (the first stimulation), pituitary cells were stimulated with a fixed dose of TPA (the second stimulation) and the released LH was assayed. LH was released almost constantly by the second stimulation, regardless of the dose used for the first stimulation. These results suggest that the C-kinase pathway was unaffected by the desensitization induced with LH-RH or Buserelin.  相似文献   

15.
Galactorrhea was found in 5 patients with subclinical hypothyroidism. The galactorrhea consisted of the discharge of a few drops of milk only under pressure. Serum T4 was in the lower level of the normal range, but serum T3 was normal (T4: 6.3 +/- 1.2 micrograms/dl, T3: 113 +/- 7 ng/dl). Basal serum TSH and PRL were slightly increased only in 2 and 1 cases, respectively. The PRL responses to TRH stimulation were exaggerated in all cases, although the basal levels were normal. An enlarged pituitary gland was observed in 1 patient by means of CT scanning. All patients were treated by T4 replacement. In serial TRH tests during the T4 replacement therapy, the PRL response was still increased even when the TSH response was normalized. Galactorrhea disappeared when the patients were treated with an increased dose of T4 (150-200 micrograms/day). Recurrence of galactorrhea was not observed even though replacement dose of T4 was later decreased to 100 micrograms/day in 4 cases. In patients with galactorrhea of unknown origin, subclinical hypothyroidism should not be ruled out even when their serum T4, T3, TSH and PRL are in the normal range. The TRH stimulation test is necessary to detect an exaggerated PRL response, as the cause of the galactorrhea. To differentiate this from pituitary microadenoma, observation of the effects of T4 replacement therapy on galactorrhea is essential.  相似文献   

16.
Thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH) blunts growth hormone (GH) response to various stimuli in normal subjects. We were interested if similar inhibitory effect of TRH could be demonstrated in diabetes mellitus where GH is abnormally regulated. In this study we compared the effect of TRH on GH response to L-dopa in normal and diabetic subjects. TRH 0.2 mg iv blunted GH response to L-dopa 0.5 g p.o. in normal subjects with peak GH values 13.1 and 7.3 micrograms/l, p < 0.05. In the diabetics no inhibitory effect of TRH was demonstrated and GH was even paradoxically increased after TRH: 14.9 and 21.9 micrograms/l, p = NS. Lack of inhibitory effect of TRH was more pronounced in patients with proliferative retinopathy. It is concluded that TRH has no inhibitory effect on L-dopa-induced GH response in diabetic subjects. This finding provides further evidence for disturbed GH regulation in diabetes mellitus.  相似文献   

17.
A highly specific and sensitive radioimmunoassay was developed for measuring circulating growth hormone releasing factor (GRF) in human plasma. Before measuring immunoreactive GRF plasma samples were extracted on to Vycor glass. Immunoreactive GRF concentrations in plasma samples from 37 fasting normal subjects ranged from less than 10 to 60 ng/l (mean 21 ng/l). Fasting concentrations in 76 out of 80 acromegalic subjects were within the normal range, but the remaining four patients had values of 92 to 25 000 ng/l. Of these, only the patient with the highest concentration had evidence of ectopic GRF secretion from a disseminated carcinoid tumour. Two of the others had longstanding pituitary tumours, and the fourth patient had a pituitary growth hormone (GH) secreting tumour proved by its removal and subsequent remission of acromegaly. There was no correlation between serum GH and plasma immunoreactive GRF concentrations, irrespective of whether the patients were untreated or had been given radiotherapy or dopamine agonists. The assay should help elucidate the physiological role(s) of GRF and may also prove useful in differentiating between pituitary and hypothalamic defects in patients with acromegaly.  相似文献   

18.
Thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH) and insulin were measured by radioimmunoassay in acetic-acid extracts of 19 pancreatic islet cell tumors induced by streptozotocin and nicotinamide in rats. In addition, gel filtration properties of TRH-immunoreactivity and immunoreactive insulin (IRI) were examined in 5 and 14 tumors, respectively. TRH was demonstrated in 10 of 19 tumors, with a mean of 166 +/- 47 (SEM) pg/mg wet weight, whereas the concentration was less than 3 pg/mg wet weight in the other tumors. In contrast, all tumors contained IRI, with a mean of 11.0 +/- 1.6 micrograms/mg wet weight. Ten tumors in which TRH was demonstrated contained more IRI than those in which TRH was not detected (13.1 +/- 1.8 vs 6.5 +/- 1.7 micrograms/mg wet weight, P less than 0.02). After gel filtration, all TRH immunoreactivity was eluted at the same place as synthetic TRH in the 5 tumors. In addition, gel filtration elutes showed essentially the same pattern of IRI in the 14 tumors, with 3 peaks. The predominant IRI peak comigrated with marker insulin (95.7 +/- 0.8%), another prominent peak occurred coincident with proinsulin standard (3.3 +/- 0.5%), a third peak was present in the void volume (0.28 +/- 0.04%). These distributions of IRI were similar to those in extracts of normal pancreases. The present studies demonstrate TRH immunoreactivity in pancreatic islet cell tumors induced by streptozotocin and nicotinamide in rats. Chemically induced insulinomas can serve as a model for insulin storage which is analogous to islet B cells.  相似文献   

19.
Fourteen patients with acromegaly were treated with bromocryptine (CB 154, Sandoz), 4 X 2.5 mg, for periods of up to eleven months. One patient did not tolerate the drug, ten of the remaining thirteen experienced considerable clinical improvement. There was a dose-dependent suppression of plasma growth hormone levels, but growth hormone response to TRH injection and to glucose administration was still present during therapy although reduced. TSH response to TRH was not significantly altered. The suppressive power of bromocryptine on growth hormone appears to be related to the mechanism by which TRH stimulates growth hormone secretion in acromegaly, but long-term administration of this drug may be successful in spite of an absent response to TRH in some cases. Bromocryptine appears to be a safe and effective drug for the treatment of acromegaly.  相似文献   

20.
It is known that some acromegalic patients exhibited a paradoxical release of growth hormone (GH) after glucose administration. We have attempted to investigate a relationship between the paradoxical GH secretion with the abnormal glucose tolerance test present in some cases of acromegaly. We also studied the inappropriate increase in GH levels following thyrotropin releasing hormone (TRH) injection which is present in some acromegalics. We found that only those patients who had an abnormal glucose tolerance test exhibited simultaneously, the paradoxical release of GH, moreover, the same patients showed GH release following TRH administration. This observation suggests that some acromegalics have an abnormality in their hypothalamic glucose receptor and such abnormality is associated with abnormal GH secretion when TRH is administered. On basis of these findings it is suggested that the hypothalamus may play an important role in the pathogenesis of acromegaly in these cases.  相似文献   

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