Abstract:The delayed diagnosis of insulinoma remains a clinical issue. One of the main causes of such a delay is hypoglycemia unawareness. A 53-year-old woman fell unconscious during postprandial exercises. Flash glucose monitoring (FGM) systems revealed glucose profiles with fasting hypoglycemia, which facilitated the clinical diagnosis of insulinoma even though she was unaware of her hypoglycemia. The preoperative comparison of the blood glucose values provided by FGM with those obtained from capillary blood were consistent. Thus, FGM may have potential utility in revealing the presence of insulinoma-induced hypoglycemia.
Context:Although saline infusion test is widely used as a confirmatory test for primary aldosteronism (PA), it is reportedly less sensitive in patients in whom aldosterone is responsive to the upright position by performing it in recumbent position.Based on a single-centre experience, seated saline infusion test (SSIT) has been reported to be highly sensitive and superior to recumbent testing in identifying both unilateral and bilateral forms of PA. However, due to limited participants number, the utility of SSIT needs to be validated in other series.Objective: This study aimed to evaluate the accuracy of SSIT in determining the PA subtypes compared with adrenocorticotropic hormone stimulation test under dexamethasone suppression (Dex-AT). Patients and Setting: Sixty-four patients with PA who underwent both SSIT and Dex-AT were included. Subtype diagnosis of PA was determined by adrenal venous sampling (AVS) (16 unilateral and 48 bilateral forms). Main Outcome Measure: Plasma aldosterone concentrations (PACs) were measured after SSIT and Dex-AT. Results:The area under the receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve for diagnosing unilateral PA was greater in SSIT than that in Dex-AT (0.907 vs. 0.755; P = .023).ROC curve analysis predicted optimal cut-off PACs of 13.1 ng/dL (sensitivity, 93.8%; specificity, 79.2%) for SSIT and 34.2 ng/dL (sensitivity, 75.0%; specificity, 68.8%) for Dex-AT.Conclusions: Seated saline infusion test has superior accuracy in subtype diagnosis of PA compared with Dex-AT. SSIT can be a sensitive test for determining patients who require AVS prior to surgery. K E Y W O R D Sadrenal cortex function tests, adrenocortical adenoma, aldosterone, cosyntropin, hyperaldosteronism, hypertension, renin-angiotensin system
In peripheral tissues, triiodothyronine (T3) production and consequent thyroid hormone actions are mainly regulated by iodothyronine deiodinases (DIOs) classified into 3 types: D1, D2, and D3. We aimed to investigate the effects of peripheral DIOs on thyroid hormone economy independent of the hypothalamus‐pituitary‐thyroid axis. We cloned coding sequences of human DIOs with FLAG‐tag and HiBiT‐tag sequences into a pcDNA3.1 vector. To obtain full‐length proteins, we modified these vectors by cloning the selenocysteine insertion sequence of each DIO (SECIS vectors). Western blot analyses and HiBiT lytic assay using HEK293T cells revealed that SECIS vectors expressed full‐length proteins with substantial activity. Subsequently, in vivo transfections of pLIVE‐based SECIS vectors into male C57BL/6J mice were performed by hydrodynamic gene delivery to generate mice overexpressing DIOs predominantly in the liver (D1, D2, and D3 mice). After 7 days from transfections, mice were analyzed to clarify phenotypes. To summarize, serum thyroid hormone levels did not change in D1 mice but D2 mice had higher serum free T3 levels. D3 mice developed hypothyroidism with higher serum reverse T3 (rT3) levels. Transfections with levothyroxine administration suggested that thyroid hormone action was upregulated in D2 mice. Our DIO‐overexpressing mice provided insights on the physiological properties of upregulated DIOs: D2 augments local thyroid hormone action and recruits T3 into the circulation: D3 decreases circulating T3 and T4 levels with elevated rT3, leading to consumptive hypothyroidism. As D3 mice are expected to be a novel hypothyroidism model, they can contribute to progress in the field of thyroid hormone economy and action.
Objective: A unique clinical course was observed in a patient with resistance to thyroid hormone β (RTHβ) caused by a variant of the THRB gene leading to the replacement of glycine with arginine in codon 347 (p.G347R). He presented with the syndrome of inappropriate secretion of thyrotropin (TSH) (free T4 [fT4]: 32.43 pmol/L, TSH: 4.67 mIU/L), but slowly developed progressive hypothyroidism (fT4: 8.37 pmol/L, TSH: 100.90 mIU/L) that resolved after suspending bezafibrate (BZ) treatment (fT4: 32.18 pmol/L, TSH: 7.14 mIU/L). This study clinically and experimentally evaluated this interesting phenomenon. Methods: A retrospective cohort analysis of non-RTHβ patients was performed at Kyoto University Hospital. Data before BZ treatment were compared to the first data after treatment. Using reporter assays of iodothyronine deiodinases (DIO1, DIO2, DIO3) in HEK293T cells, we performed functional analyses of mutant thyroid hormone receptor β with p.G347R (G347R TRβ). Mice with G347R TRβ were generated by hydrodynamic gene delivery. Results: In non-RTHβ patients (n = 7), BZ treatment did not change serum free T3 and TSH but significantly increased fT4 (p = .008). BZ administration increased DIO3 reporter activity in the context of G347R TRβ, whereas did not change DIO1 and DIO2 reporter activity. In the livers of mice with G347R TRβ, BZ administration increased reverse T3 content, which corresponded to an increase in Dio3 messenger RNA. Conclusions: While hypothyroidism associated with BZ treatment did not occur in non-RTHβ patients, it was observed in a patient with RTHβ due to the p.G347R variant. Liver DIO3 upregulation might involve this hypothyroidism.
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