Forty-five patients with galactorrhea-amenorrhea were followed during a period of 1 to 8 years (mean 3.1) after transsphenoidal prolactinoma removal. The ratios of patients who appear to be cured to the total numbers treated were 20 patients of 27 with grade I tumors; six of 10 with grade II; two of five with grade III; and none with grade IV tumors. Six patients with normal prolactin levels one week postoperatively had relapse later, as did three with normal prolactin levels 2 months postoperatively. A normal prolactin level 6 months postoperatively predicted ultimate cure. The 19 pregnancies that occurred in 15 patients, four with high prolactin levels, were uneventful. Prolactin rose normally with pregnancy and returned to prepregnancy level in all but one patient. Prolactin responses to stimulation tests were blunted for 6 months after successful tumor removal. By 1 year, responses to thyrotropin releasing hormone and metoclopramide tests were returning to normal, although responses to chlorpromazine and hypoglycemia remained blunted. The postoperative inhibition of normal lactotropes for 6 months is suggested. Ultimate cure cannot be determined before 6 months and conception should be deferred until then.
TRH, metoclopramide (MCP), chlorpromazine (CPZ), and insulin (ITT) stimulation tests of PRL secretion were carried out in age-matched controls and before and after successful removal of pituitary prolactinomas in women with the galactorrhea-amenorrhea syndrome. In preoperative patients there was a blunted or absent PRL response to TRH in 87%, to MCP in 100%, to CPZ in 100%, and to ITT in 93%. Two to 6 months after successful tumor removal, serum PRL rose 2-fold (the usual criterion for a normal response) in 73% after TRH, in 100% after MCP, but in only 13% after CPZ and in only 14% on ITT. However, the PRL increment with all four tests was significantly lower than that in normal controls. One to 8 yr after successful surgery, the PRL increments after TRH and MCP were returning to normal, but the PRL responses to CPZ and ITT remained blunted. GH, ACTH, and TSH reserves were intact in all patients. The diminished PRL response to all stimulation tests observed up to 6 months postoperatively might be explained by the persistence of a negative feedback effect from high PRL levels associated with the tumor. The more persistent impairment of the PRL response to CPZ and ITT is unexplained but suggests a hypothalamic defect.
From the time of the turn of the twentieth century, dilated hearts and presumed cardiac fatigue in expeditionary climbers and scientists have been the subject of much commentary in the medical and mountaineering literature. Although largely attributed by most, but not all, to left heart strain, the description of dilated hearts in these accounts is clearly that of right heart dilation as a consequence of high and sustained hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction with hypertensive remodeling. This essay will feature quotations from the writings of high altitude pioneers about dilated, strained, or enlarged hearts. It will give some brief physiology of the right side of the heart as background, but will focus on the words of mountaineers and mountaineering physicians as color commentary.
This Lessons from History article about the wind-chill index (WCI) explores the historical polar and meteorologic literature relevant to the topic and presents unpublished work from 1939. Geographer Paul Siple was a 6-time Antarctic explorer and scientist who invented and named the WCI in his doctoral dissertation at Clark University. Charles Passel (1915-2002) performed studies in Antarctica in 1940 that led to publication in 1945. This paper is often credited as the beginning of the WCI. Through years of critiques and revisions by others, these efforts evolved into the wind-chill equivalent temperatures (WCTs) used today. This essay explores the history, the science, and the overlooked originality, simplicity, and details of Siple's unpublished work. The remarkable similarity of the original chart to a current chart is shown by adapting and overlaying the 1939 WCI onto a current WCT chart with its times-to-frostbite data. The writings of Siple, Passel, and others provide an evocative supporting narrative to illustrate some of the problems of living in cold environmental conditions.
This wilderness essay about high altitude deterioration will explore the historical mountaineering and medical literature with a limited discussion of physiology. The writings of mountaineers and physicianmountaineers provide an evocative supporting narrative to illustrate one of the problems of living at altitude.
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