The possible stimulatory effects of an intravenous infusion of increasing amounts of pituitary adenylate cyclase-activating polypeptide (PACAP) on anterior pituitary hormone secretions were evaluated in humans. Successively increasing doses of PACAP-38 (2, 4 and 8 pmol·kg–1·min–1; each dose for 20 min) were infused i.v. in 7 normal male subjects. On a different occasion, the same subjects were tested with vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP; 4 pmol · kg–1 · min–1 for 60 min). Circulating GH, ACTH, PRL, TSH and gonadotropin concentrations were measured before PACAP infusion and every 20 min, just before increasing the infusion dose of PACAP. Blood samples were taken before and every 15 min after the beginning of VIP administration. Serum levels of GH, TSH and gonadotropins did not change during PACAP or VIP infusion. Circulating ACTH and PRL concentrations were not modified by the infusion of the lowest dose of PACAP, whereas they were significantly increased in a dose-response fashion when higher amounts of PACAP were given. PRL, but not ACTH levels were significantly increased by VIP infusion. These data show for the first time in humans that ACTH and PRL secretions from the anterior pituitary gland are stimulated by the systemic administration of PACAP. In addition, since VIP stimulated only PRL secretion, PACAP-induced ACTH release appears to be mediated by specific receptors.
In spite of data supporting the use of the serum thyrotropin (TSH) concentration as the best test to detect abnormal thyroid function, measurement of circulating thyroid hormones with or without a serum TSH continues to be frequently requested to evaluate thyroid function. We have analyzed how combinations of thyroid function tests were ordered by referring physicians and the results of the tests in order to offer some suggestions as to how to use thyroid function tests in a cost effective manner. During 1995, 19,181 inpatient and outpatient requests (45,865 different tests) for thyroid function tests were received by the laboratory of a 1600 bed University Hospital in Parma, Italy. The following tests were carried out: T4, free T4, T3, free T3 and TSH. Serum TSH values below and above the normal range were considered to reflect abnormal thyroid function i.e. hyperthyroidism, or hypothyroidism including subclinical disease independent of the results of the other tests. Combinations of ordered tests and the percent of the total for each combination were: TSH+T4+T3 (56%), TSH+FT4+FT3 (14%), TSH (12%), TSH+FT4 (9%), TSH+T4 (1%), TSH+T4+T3+FT4+FT3 (5%), others (3%). The T4+T3+TSH panel (10,780 requests) had normal serum TSH values in 80.6% and the FT4+ FT3+TSH panel (2,590 requests) had normal TSH values in 73.2%. Elevated serum TSH concentrations were observed more frequently in hospitalized than in ambulatory patients (9.7% vs 7.4% p<0.001). T3 (elevated serum T3, normal T4 and low TSH concentrations) and T4 (elevated serum T4, normal T3 and low TSH concentrations) toxicosis were observed in 8.1% and 9.4%, respectively, of the requested test (NS). FT3 and FT4 toxicosis, defined as for T3 and T4 toxicosis, were observed in 7.5% and 4.9%, respectively (NS). The low T3 and low FT3 syndrome in hospitalized patients was present in 1.6% and 2.3% of the requests, respectively (NS). The low T4+low T3 and low FT4+low FT3 syndrome was present in only 0.3% and 0.2%, respectively, of the requests. Our study shows that a) in hospitalized patients thyroid function tests were requested in 20% of the patients and only one in 14 of these patients at the highest could have abnormal thyroid function, as indicated by abnormal TSH value b) FT4 (or T4) is as useful as FT3 (or T3) in the diagnosis of hyperthyroidism, c) in hospitalized patients the low T3 syndrome was far less common than that reported in the literature, probably due to the lower severity of illness, d) panels which include T3 and FT3 are not justified, and e) serum TSH alone is the most appropriate initial thyroid function test.
The effect of an i.v. infusion of somatostatin (SRIH) (4.1 μg/min/180 min) on angiotensin II (ANG II infusion for 60 min of successively increasing doses of 4, 8 and 16 ng/kg/min; each dose for 20 min)-stimulated growth hormone (GH) and corticotropin (ACTH) release was studied in 7 normal men. In addition, 7 additional normal subjects were tested with ANG II alone (as described above), GH-RH (0.1 μg/kg body weight as an i.v. bolus) alone or the combination of GH-RH and ANG II. The ACTH response to ANG II was not modified by SRIH infusion; in contrast, the GH response to ANG II was significantly reduced by the concomitant treatment with SRIH. On the other hand, the administration of GH-RH together with ANG II produced peak GH levels comparable to the sum of the individual responses to ANG II and GH-RH, given alone. These findings provide evidence that the stimulatory effect of ANG II on GH, but not ACTH secretion, is under the inhibitory control of somatostatin, suggesting an interaction between ANG II and SRIH in regulation of GH secretion.
These data suggest antagonistic actions of OT and L-NAME in the control of NOS activity in regulation of gonadotropin secretion induced by LH-RH.
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