Acromegaly is a rare disease characterized by changes in the bone and soft tissue systems, induced by excess growth hormone and insulin-like growth factor type 1. Among the skin lesions associated with acromegaly is cutis verticis gyrata, an hypertrophic, and coarse folding of the skin of the scalp, an association of uncommon incidence and unknown prevalence. This case report describes the case of a patient diagnosed with acromegaly at age 60 with previously unidentified cutis verticis gyrata.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIntroduction: Acromegaly is associated with high morbidity, but still controversial impact on the overall quality of life (QoL).
Material And Methods: We evaluated QoL using a generic (SF-36) and a disease-specific questionnaire (AcroQoL) in an acromegalic cohort.
Results: Sixty-nine patients answered the questionnaires and had their records reviewed.
Meningiomas are considered the second most common neoplasm of the central nervous system in adults. Most of them are benign with slow growth, frequent in women and with a high recurrence rate. In tumors, DNA error repair processes lose efficacy, providing mutagenesis and genomic instability.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMethods: Prolactin (PRL) secreting adenomas are associated with high incidence of headache. The role of hyperprolactinemia in the headache context is not clear, nor is the effect of its treatment on headache. The present longitudinal study evaluated hyperprolactinemic patients (69), in terms of presence and characteristics of headache before and after hyperprolactinemia treatment.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIntroduction: Axial skeleton arthropathy and osteoporotic vertebral fractures are common findings in acromegalic patients and can result in severe spinal deformity.
Objective: To investigate the presence of spinal fractures and deformities, sagittal imbalances, and spinopelvic compensatory mechanisms in acromegalics.
Patients And Methods: 58 patients with acromegaly from a referral neuroendocrinology center were prospectively evaluated by panoramic spine radiographs to detect the presence of fractures and scoliosis, to measure thoracic kyphosis, lumbar lordosis (LL), pelvic incidence (PI), pelvic tilt (PT) and sagittal vertical axis (SVA).
Background: Non-functioning pituitary adenomas (NFPA) are prevalent pituitary neoplasms. Because they do not present with hormonal hypersecretion, there is no marker that indicates regrowth or recurrence, as in other adenomas.
Objectives: Evaluate the immunohistochemical expression of PTTG, CD105 and Ki-67 and their relationships with age, gender, invasiveness, hormonal expression and regrowth or recurrence in the follow-up of NFPA operated and not submitted to radiotherapy.
Non-functioning pituitary adenomas (NFPA) are classified as benign tumors of slow growth, but 40% of them present local invasion, a characteristic of behavior still unpredictable with the use of current tumor markers. This work aims to evaluate the tissue markers E-cadherin and NCAM, which act on cell adhesion, in tumor tissue samples of NFPA and its relationship with the degree of local invasiveness. Gene expression of E-cadherin (CDH1) and NCAM (NCAM1) was assessed by real-time PCR and tissue expression by immunohistochemistry.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMeningiomas are benign brain tumors that are usually to recur. Studies have shown in vitro and in vivo that meningiomas, regardless of histology and classification, express somatostatin receptors (SSTRs). We investigated the immunohistochemical expression of five SSTR subtypes (SSTR1-SSTR5) in tumor tissue sections from 60 patients with diagnosis of meningioma who underwent surgical resection and relating it to patient age and sex, tumor histology, location, regrowth/recurrence and follow-up.
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