Moderate tricuspid regurgitation is more frequent in patients taking cabergoline (at higher cumulative doses) than in de novo patients and control subjects, but the clinical significance of this finding has not been established. A complete echocardiographic assessment is indicated in patients treated long term with cabergoline, particularly in those requiring elevated doses.
Hyperprolactinemia induces hypogonadism by inhibiting gonadotropin-releasing hormone pulsatile secretion and, consequently, follicle-stimulating hormone, luteinizing hormone, and testosterone pulsatility. This leads to spermatogenic arrest, impaired motility, and sperm quality and results in morphologic alterations of the testes similar to those observed in prepubertal testes. Men with hyperprolactinemia present more frequently with a macroadenoma than a microadenoma. Symptoms directly related to hypogonadism are prevalent. In men hypogonadism leads to impaired libido, erectile dysfunction, diminished ejaculate volume, and oligospermia. It is present in 16% of patients with erectile dysfunction and in approx 11% of men with oligospermia. Treatment with bromocriptine or cabergoline (CAB) is effective in men with prolactinomas, with a response that is in general comparable to treatment in women. Seminal fluid abnormalities rapidly improve with CAB treatment, while other dopaminergic compounds require longer periods of treatment. Moreover, to improve gonadal function in men, the integrity of the hypothalamic-pituitary-gonadal axis is necessary. New promising data indicate that a substantial proportion of patients with either micro- or macroprolactinoma do not present hyperprolactinemia after long-term withdrawal from CAB. Whether this corresponds to a definitive cure is still unknown, but treatment withdrawal should be attempted in patients achieving normalization of prolactin levels and disappearance of tumor mass to investigate this issue.
A variety of latent endocrine dysfunctions, including life-threatening conditions, occur in patients with FD. Endocrine dysfunctions are also present in patients already receiving ERT and are in part related to their persistent poor quality of life. An endocrine work-up should be recommended in all FD patients. Adequate monitoring and hormonal therapy, when required, have to be performed in cases of subclinical endocrine dysfunction to avoid life-threatening events.
The criteria currently accepted for diagnosing post-surgical remission of acromegaly have high diagnostic accuracy only in the patients aged below 60 years. In older patients, lower cut-offs (i.e. = 1.4 microg/l for fasting GH and = 0.5 microg/l for nadir GH after OGTT) predict normal IGF-I levels. Mean GH levels during a diurnal profile have similar diagnostic accuracy of nadir GH levels after OGTT. This suggests that OGTT is not necessary to establish surgical cure.
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