Hemorrhagic colitis (HC) is a severe manifestation of the hemolytic uremic syndrome (HUS). We performed a retrospective analysis of patients with HC with the following aims: (1) to characterize the clinicopathologic features; (2) to evaluate mortality rate; (3) to analyze severity of renal and central nervous system (CNS) disease. Patients with HC assisted between 1981-2009 were evaluated and compared with a control group of 137 patients without HC. Among 987 patients with diarrheal prodrome (D) + HUS, 54 (5.5%) presented HC. Clinical findings included abdominal pain (96%), distension (93%), hematochezia (44%), and abdominal mass (11%). Surgery was indicated in 35 patients (65%), and 17 (48.5%) required bowel resection. Transverse and ascending colon were most frequently affected. Macroscopic evaluation showed bowel necrosis (18) and perforation (12). Histologic evaluation (29) showed that 25 (86.2%) had necrosis of the affected segment (transmural in 21). A leukocyte count >20,000/mm(3) and hematocrit >30% were more common in HC patients than in controls (p < 0.001 and p < 0.0001, respectively). Mortality rate was higher in HC patients (33.3%) than in controls (1.4%; p < 0.0001). Dialysis >10 days, seizures, and coma were more frequent in HC patients than in controls (p < 0.0001). In summary, most patients had prominent abdominal findings, and almost 2/3 patients required surgery. Transverse/ascending colon was most affected, and the main histologic finding was transmural necrosis. Higher hematocrit and leukocytosis were frequent. Mortality rate was extremely high, and most had long-lasting anuria and severe neurologic involvement.
Circulating thyroglobulin antibodies (TgAb) and microsomal antibodies (MsAb) and thyroid function (total and free T4 and T3, TSH basal and after TRH) have been evaluated in 92 hyperprolactinaemic patients (82 females and 10 males; 9 with macroprolactinoma, 22 with microprolactinoma, 4 with acromegaly, 5 with organic lesions of the hypothalamus, 2 with empty sella, 2 with idiopathic hypopituitarism, 2 with primary hypothyroidism, and 46 with idiopathic hyperprolactinaemia). Thyroid function was normal in all cases except 3 with hypothalamic disease and central hypothyroidism, the 2 patients with primary hypothyroidism and 2 with thyrotoxicosis (one due to Graves' disease and one to autonomous thyroid adenoma). High titres of TgAb (\m=ge\1/1250) and/or MsAb (\ m=ge\ 1/1600) were found in the subject with Graves' disease, in one acromegalic, in the 2 primary hypothyroids, and in 12 women with either adenomatous or idiopathic hyperprolactinaemia; low titres of one or both antibodies were found in 9 other euthyroid women and in the one with toxic adenoma. In a control population of 185 subjects studied with the same methods, the prevalence of TgAb and/or MsAb positive (low titres) was 3.3% in females and 2.5% in males. Diffuse thyroid hyperplasia was clinically detectable in 12 euthyroid women and in the one with Graves' disease; 3 others had been previously operated for nodular goitre with histological evidence of Hashimoto's thyroiditis (2 cases) or for a cold nodule; a single thyroid nodule was present in the woman with toxic adenoma and in one euthyroid woman. Most of these subjects also had circulating TgAb and/or MsAb, and a few had increased TSH secretion. No significant differences were found in mean thyroid hormone and TSH levels between euthyroid hyperprolactinaemic subjects and healthy controls, but TRH-stimulated TSH levels were significantly higher in thyroid antibodies positive than negative subjects. These data, in agreement with a few previous reports, suggest that autoimmune thyroid disorders (especially asymptomatic autoimmune thyroiditis) occur in hyperprolactinaemic women with a prevalence far exceeding that observed in many surveys in the general population.The association of autoimmune thyroiditis with prolactinoma has been known for some years (Thorner 1977), but thyroid antibodies were found in that study in only 2 of 38 women, corresponding to the general incidence of circulating thyroid antibodies in the population studied (Tunbridge et al. 1977). Recently, Pelkonen et al. (1982) observed autoimmune thyroiditis in combination with pro¬ lactinoma in 3 of 36 women. The diagnosis of autoimmune thyroiditis was based on the criteria of Gordin et al. (1972), i.e. the presence of circulating microsomal and thyroglobulin antibodies in high titres (> 1/100000 and > 1/25000, respectively). Moreover, the same investigators found exagge¬ rated TSH response to TRH in 4 prolactinoma patients without autoimmune thyroiditis (Pelkonen et al. 1982). It seemed therefore of interest to report our data on thyroi...
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