Body fat accumulation and lack of exercise, used as surrogate markers of sedentary lifestyle, influence thyroid nodule size and could predict some ultrasonographic characteristics, like hypoechoicity and internal vascularity. Therefore, routine thyroid examination of obese patients and promotion of active lifestyle may be warranted to prevent thyroid nodule formation and possibly progression to malignancy.
Thyroid function was evaluated in 72 adult survivors (41 females and 31 males) at 16 to 56 years of age, 1.5 years mean time (range 0.2 - 9.8) after hemapoeitic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) with no known prior history of thyroid dysfunction. Thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH) and free thyroxin levels (FT4) were determined before and after stimulation with thyrotropin releasing hormone (TRH). Conditioning regimens for HSCT did not include TBI. Overt hypothyroidism (basal TSH > 8 microIU/ml, FT4 < 0.8 ng/dl) was observed in 6% of male patients and 5% of female patients; subclinical hypothyroidism (basal TSH 4 - 8 microIU/ml, low normal FT4 0.8 - 1.9 ng/dl) was observed in 13% of males and 5% of females. A significant number of euthyroid patients (40% males and 54% females) with normal basal TSH and FT4 levels overresponded to TRH stimulation; the finding being statistically significant (p < 0.005). A heavy TSH response after TRH stimulation indicates compensated subclinical dysfunction of the thyroid gland. Chemotherapy-only conditioning regimens may have an adverse effect on thyroid gland function not always detected by determination of basal TSH and FT4 levels. This finding warrants long-term evaluation of thyroid function in HSCT patients.
Gonadal dysfunction in adult long-term survivors of hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) is an adverse effect of conditioning regimens consisting of chemotherapy and total body irradiation (TBI). The impact of conditioning regimens consisting of chemotherapy alone on the function of the hypothalamic-pituitary-gonadal (HPG) axis was evaluated in a series of 41 female and 31 male patients who had undergone either autologous or allogeneic bone marrow/peripheral blood stem cell transplantation; mean age at transplantation was 32.6 years and mean time interval from transplantation was 1.5 years (range 0.2-9.8 years). Provocative testing of the HPG axis by administration of luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone was included in the first endocrinological evaluation. The follow-up period extended to three consecutive years. Gonadal dysfunction was not reported by any of the patients prior to their underlying illness. Hypergonadotrophic hypogonadism was observed in 97% of female and 19% of male patients. Leydig cell strain (normal testosterone, high luteinizing hormone levels) was evident in 32% and spermatogenesis damage (high follicle-stimulating hormone levels) in 68% of the male population. At the conclusion of the study four women (10%) had regained spontaneous menses and all hypogonadal men had resumed normal testosterone levels. Our results indicate a high incidence of gonadal dysfunction due to target organ failure in HSCT recipients not treated by TBI.
A 43-year-old woman, previously misdiagnosed as having primary hyperthyroidism and treated with antithyroid drugs, presented to us with overt hyperthyroidism, high levels of thyroid hormones and elevated thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH). Μagnetic resonance imaging (MRI) revealed a pituitary microadenoma extending suprasellarly. the patient responded favorably to initial treatment with somatostatin analogs for 2 years but due to the escape phenomenon, tsH levels escalated and hyperthyroidism relapsed. transsphenoidal adenomectomy was applied but recurrence was again observed due to incomplete tumor removal. Gamma knife radiosurgery was finally employed 5.5 years ago, resulting in complete disease remission without evidence of long-term complications to date. thyrotropin-secreting adenomas (tsHomas) are rare with an estimated prevalence of about one case per million. we retrieved from the literature 14 cases of tsHomas treated by gamma knife radiosurgery and compared the outcomes. our results demonstrate the efficacy and safety of gamma knife radiosurgery for achieving remission in most of the cases, suggesting validation of this technique as an effective treatment option for the management of recurrent tsHomas.
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