Dosages of 15, 20 or 30 mg hydrocortisone/day have equivalent effects on quality of life in patients with secondary hypocortisolism. With 15 or 20 mg hydrocortisone/day the patients feel nearly as well and content as normal healthy individuals. Since long-term treatment with a high replacement dose of glucocorticoids (hydrocortisone 30 mg/day) induces bone loss, this risk can be avoided with a substitution dosage of 20 mg or even 15 mg hydrocortisone/day, without influencing the well-being of the patient.
Only be means of the OGTT could patients with active acromegaly be completely distinguished from the control subjects and from cured patients. IGF-I, free IGF-I, IGFBP-3 and uGH were useful in the diagnosis of acromegaly, but of limited value in the follow-up of acromegalic patients after treatment. The determination of free IGF-I, which has yet not been investigated in acromegaly, offered no advantage over that of total IGF-I and IGFBP-3; uIGFBP-3 was not useful in the diagnosis of acromegaly.
A case of pituitary apoplexy occurring after Gd-DTPA-administration for contrast enhanced MRI in a patient with an hGH-producing macro-adenoma is presented. Within days the initially increased hGH level fell to the normal range, the oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT) showed a normal suppression of hGH and complete anterior pituitary insufficiency developed. At this time repeated MRI suggested a haemorrhagic infarction of the macro-adenoma. Fourteen months later re-examination confirmed spontaneous cure of the acromegaly, improvement of adenopituitary function and shrinkage of the sellar content. The causal linkage between the pituitary adenoma apoplexy and Gd-DTPA-administration is unclear. It might be due to contrast induced blood pressure and endothelial permeability changes, possibly promoted by pre-existing diabetes mellitus associated vasculopathy.
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