\s=b\In an attempt to devise a screening test for aldosterone\x=req-\ producing adenoma (APA) among hypertensive patients, the serum sodium and potassium levels, plasma renin activity (PRA), plasma aldosterone concentration, and aldosterone-PRA ratio were measured in 348 patients with hypertension. Nine patients with a substantially elevated aldosterone-PRA ratio were selected and hospitalized for further investigations. All
Function of the pituitary-adrenal axis was examined in lean and genetically obese fatty (Zucker) rats. The diurnal rhythms of plasma corticosterone and plasma ACTH were similar in both groups. The secretion of corticosterone by adrenal glands incubated in vitro with graded doses of ACTH was also comparable in lean and fatty rats. Adrenalectomy reduced food intake and weight gain in the fatty rats to levels similar to those in the lean animals and raised plasma ACTH to the same level. The injection of corticosterone (2 and 10 mg/day) increased food intake more in adrenalectomized fatty rats than in the corresponding lean ones. Progesterone increased food intake similarly in both groups. The enhanced responsiveness to corticosterone could account for many of the metabolical defects in the fatty rat.
In an attempt to assess a possible relationship between pituitary size and TSH secretion, the volume of sella turcica was measured in 570 subjects, 26 primary hypothyroid patients, and 34 thyrotoxic patients. The volume of sella turcica, measured by a 3-dimensional approach, increased progressively with age until 20 years of age and was rather constant thereafter in normal subjects. In thyrotoxic patients, the volume of sella turcica was normal in spite of decreased plasma TSH concentration. In contrast, 81% of primary hypothyroid patients had an abnormal enlargement of the sella turcica. The magnitude of an increase of sella turcica inversely related with a decrease in serum T4 and T3 concentrations. On the other hand, the magnitude of an increase of sella turcica correlated well with an increase of circulating TSH. We suggest that an increase of sella turcica indirectly reflects an increase in pituitary size and TSH-secreting capacity, possibly due to hypertrophy and hyperplasia of TSH cells in primary hypothyroid patients.
In 16 untreated patients with hyperthyroidism due to Graves' disease, serum antidouble stranded DNA antibody, measured by RIA, was positive (greater than 20 U/ml) in 14. In methimazole-treated patients with T3-suppressible thyroid uptake, anti-DNA antibody was found in 9% (3 of 35). The frequency of positive tests in methimazole-treated patients with T3-nonsuppressible thyroid uptake and in surgically treated patients was 24% (5 of 21) and 57% (4 of 7), respectively. Among anti-DNA antibody-negative (less than 9 U/ml) and weakly positive (10-19 U/ml) patients, those with T3-suppressible thyroid uptake had lower anti-DNA antibody titers than those with T3-nonsuppressible thyroid uptake. Among 32 patients with Hashimoto's thyroiditis, anti-DNA antibody was positive in 7. None of the patients with simple goiter had positive or weakly positive anti-DNA antibody results. Although the quantity of antibodies did not correlate well in individual patients, the rates of positive TSH binding-inhibiting immunoglobulin and anti-DNA antibody tests were roughly comparable in these patient groups. None of these patients with thyroid disease associated with anti-DNA antibody had clinical or other serological evidence suggestive of systemic lupus erythematosus or related collagen vascular disorders. The finding of anti-DNA antibody provides a new aspect of immunological abnormality associated with hyperthyroidism of Graves' disease.
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