Plasma profiles of prolactin, growth hormone, adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) and cortisol were evaluated in a group of untreated patients with idiopathic Parkinson's disease and a group of healthy age-matched controls. Plasma integrated concentrations of all hormones except prolactin were significantly lower in the patients as compared with the controls; however, prolactin nocturnal peak concentration was significantly elevated in the patients; nocturnal growth hormone levels were significantly reduced in the Parkinson group; ACTH and cortisol plasma concentrations were also consistently lower during most of the day in the patients with Parkinson's disease. These data confirm the presence of a hypothalamic disturbance in patients with idiopathic Parkinson's disease, which can affect pituitary function.
The pathophysiological significance of hyperviscosity and capillary rarefaction in untreated essential hypertension is unknown. Fifty untreated hypertensive men with capillary rarefaction (intravital capillaroscopy) and 20 age-and sex-matched normotensive controls underwent full haemorheological profiling (blood viscosity at high and low shear, haematocrit, platelet and leukocyte counts, fibrinogen and total protein concentrations, P-selectin levels, erythrocyte and leukocyte filterability rates and erythrocyte deformability and aggregation indexes). Subjects with skin capillary density below the group median had younger age, higher dia-
A reduced microvascular network may contribute to abnormal cardiovascular reactivity and to exercise-induced rheological abnormalities in hypertension.
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