We report the case of a restrictive aortic insufficiency diagnosed on a 53-year old woman while being treated by low dose of cabergoline for hyperprolactinemia. Such valves involvements had already been described with cabergoline and other dopamine agonists, drugs the patient was previously exposed to. However, chronology of events leads us to suspect cabergoline, although such effects had only been described with much higher doses.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnn Endocrinol (Paris)
December 2007
Used in its neurological indication, cabergoline is known to induce cardiac valve regurgitations, essentially mitral and aortic valvular diseases, by its action on the 5HT2b receptors. Until now, it was assumed that the dose and the duration of exposure were the major factors of appearance. We describe a case of aortic insufficiency which developed in a patient given low doses of cabergoline (0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF1. Red blood cells can store glucose and may thus participate in blood glucose homeostasis. We investigated if a defect in this process exists in non-insulin dependent diabetes (NIDD).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe have observed effects of acute hyperinsulinaemia on arterial pressure of five diabetics and tested the reproducibility of this action. Systolic (TAS) and diastolic (TAD) arterial pressure were studied during two hyperinsulinaemic-euglycaemic clamps effected with Artificial Pancreas (Biostator CGIIS, Miles) at one month of interval. During the first clamp, between the beginning of insulin infusion and the end of 4th stage, we have observed a fall of TAS (115 +/- 4, VS 137 +/- 6 mmHg; moy +/- SEM; p less than 0.
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