Transgender and gender-diverse (TGD) individuals continue to experience harassment and discrimination across various aspects of life, significantly impacting their physical and mental health. The scarcity of data on their general health, particularly regarding dietary habits, remains a challenge in developing effective healthcare strategies for this population. To address this gap, we analyzed selected dietary habits, physical activity (PA), and body mass index (BMI) among Italian TGD adults compared to the Italian general population (IGP).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPurpose: Information on the general health of transgender and gender diverse (TGD) individuals continues to be lacking. To bridge this gap, the National Institute of Health in Italy together with the National Office against Racial Discriminations, clinical centres, and TGD organizations carried out a cross-sectional study to define the sociodemographic profile, health-related behaviours, and experiences of healthcare access in Italian TGD adult population.
Methods: A national survey was conducted by Computer-Assisted Web Interviewing (CAWI) technique.
Male osteoporosis is a still largely underdiagnosed pathological condition. As a consequence, bone fragility in men remains undertreated mainly due to the low screening frequency and to controversies in the bone mineral density (BMD) testing standards. Up to the 40% of overall osteoporotic fractures affect men, in spite of the fact that women have a significant higher prevalence of osteoporosis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIntroduction: The COVID-19 pandemic caused an increased mortality in nursing homes due to its quick spread and the age-related high lethality.
Results: We observed a two-month mortality of 40%, compared to 6.4% in the previous year.
Treatment of osteoporosis is aimed to prevent fragility fractures and to stabilize or increase bone mineral density. Several drugs with different efficacy and safety profiles are available. The long-term therapeutic strategy should be planned, and the initial treatment should be selected according to the individual site-specific fracture risk and the need to give the maximal protection when the fracture risk is highest (i.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: In acromegaly, 25-50% of patients respond inadequately to conventional long-acting somatostatin analogue (SSA) therapy. Response may be improved by increasing SSA frequency or dose. This study evaluated the biochemical efficacy and safety of high-dose octreotide in patients with acromegaly.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Somatostatin analogs (SSA) may influence glucose metabolism, but the clinical relevance of this effect is uncertain because trials performed so far are limited in terms of number of patients and heterogeneity for length and type of follow-up.
Purpose: The purpose of the study was to assess, via the metaanalysis of acromegaly studies, the clinical impact of SSA on glucose metabolism. The outcomes analyzed were fasting plasma glucose, fasting plasma insulin, hemoglobin A(1c), and plasma glucose concentrations during oral glucose tolerance test.
Glucocorticoid-induced osteoporosis (GIO) is the most common form of secondary osteoporosis with fractures occurring in as many as 30-50% of patients receiving chronic glucocorticoid therapy. Calcium and vitamin D are important measures in the primary prevention of GIO. However, vitamin D and calcium alone do not allow to prevent fractures.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFContext: Data on osteoporotic fractures in acromegaly are limited. An increased prevalence of radiological vertebral fractures was already observed in postmenopausal women with active acromegaly. It is unknown whether this observation may reflect a more general increased risk of fractures in acromegaly.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe oral glucose tolerance test, which is considered the gold standard for the diagnosis of active acromegaly, should not be performed in the presence of basal hyperglycemia. Moreover, false-positive responses may occur in patients with diabetes mellitus. Galanin has previously been demonstrated to induce paradoxical inhibition of growth hormone (GH) secretion in most patients with active acromegaly.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGrowth hormone deficiency (GHD) in adult patients is associated with marked decrease in bone turnover, low bone mass and high risk of clinical and subclinical fractures. We investigated whether the prevalence of spinal deformities in adults with GHD was related to the gonadal status of patients. A total of 89 adult hypopituitary patients with severe GHD were evaluated for bone mineral density (BMD) and vertebral deformities (quantitative morphometric analysis).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGrowth hormone deficiency (GHD) in adults may be of either adult or childhood onset and may occur as isolated GHD or as multiple hormone deficiencies. Adult-onset GHD (AoGHD) usually results from damage to the pituitary gland or hypothalamus. GH is frequently undetectable in normal subjects and thus GHD cannot be distinguished from the normal state using a single random GH measurement.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHypothalamic GHRH is secreted into the portal system, binds to specific surface receptors of the somatotroph cell and elicits intracellular signals that modulate pituitary GH synthesis and/or secretion. Moreover, GHRH is synthesized and expressed in multiple extrapituitary tissues. Excessive peripheral production of GHRH by a tumor source would therefore be expected to cause somatotroph cell hyperstimulation, increased GH secretion and eventually pituitary acromegaly.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Type 2 diabetes mellitus (DM) is known to negatively affect biological properties of venous vasculature, and, particularly, to reduce endothelium-derived nitric oxide release. This condition might influence venous graft function following coronary artery bypass surgery (CABG). The aim of this study was to evaluate the functional effects of a NO-releasing aspirin (NORA) on vein grafts (VG) of diabetics and control patients undergoing elective CABG.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn healthy subjects, parathyroid hormone (PTH) is secreted in a dual fashion, with low-amplitude and high-frequency pulses superimposed on tonic secretion. These 2 components of PTH secretion seem to have different effects on target organs. The aim of our study was to evaluate whether growth hormone excess in acromegaly may modify the spontaneous pulsatility of PTH.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Endocrinol Invest
June 2006
In February 1999, May 2000 and April 2002, three workshops were held in Cortina, Montecarlo and Versailles, respectively, to develop a consensus defining the diagnosis and treatment of acromegaly and its complications. The workshops were sponsored by the Pituitary Society and European Neuroendocrine Association. Invited international participants included endocrinologists, neurosurgeons and radiotherapists skilled in the management of acromegaly.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUnlabelled: This cross-sectional study shows that a high number of untreated adult patients with GHD develop radiological vertebral deformities. Patients undergoing GH replacement treatment showed a significantly lower prevalence of vertebral deformities versus treated patients in the presence of similar BMD, as assessed by DXA.
Introduction: In this cross-sectional study, we investigated whether the prevalence and degree of spinal deformities in adults with growth hormone deficiency (GHD) were related to the age of patients, degree of bone turnover, BMD, and recombinant human GH (rhGH) replacement therapy.
J Endocrinol Invest
January 2006
The aim of acromegaly treatment is to control the disease by suppressing GH hyperactivity and reducing the size or impeding the growth of the pituitary GH secreting mass. Over recent years, many studies have emphasized the role of SS analogs in the treatment of acromegaly. In fact, SS analogs have been demonstrated to be an effective tool not only in the control of GH hypersecretion but also more recently in the control of tumor growth, in a relevant number of acromegalic patients both as primary or adjunctive treatment.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGH acts on various tissues and organs, like liver, kidney, bone and muscle. There are no conclusive data on adult onset GH deficiency (GHD) effects on bone remodeling. In fact reduced, increased or unchanged values of serum markers of bone formation and resorption have been described.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Endocrinol Invest
September 2005
GH has significant impact in adults. In fact, patients with the GH deficiency (GHD) syndrome are now recognized as having an increased cardiovascular risk. The effects of human aging on GH secretion have been evaluated by a number of researchers.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUnlabelled: This cross-sectional study shows that high numbers of postmenopausal women with acromegaly develop vertebral fractures in relation to the activity of disease. In patients with active acromegaly, vertebral fractures occur even in presence of normal BMD, whereas in patients with controlled acromegaly, vertebral fractures are always accompanied by a pathological BMD.
Introduction: We studied the frequency of radiological vertebral fractures in a cohort of postmenopausal women with active or controlled acromegaly.
Chronic growth hormone (GH)/insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I) excess is associated with considerable mortality in acromegaly, but no data are available in pituitary gigantism. The aim of the study was to evaluate the long-term effects of early exposure to GH and IGF-I excess on cardiovascular and metabolic parameters in adult patients with pituitary gigantism. Six adult male patients with newly diagnosed gigantism due to GH secreting pituitary adenoma were studied and compared with 6 age- and sex-matched patients with acromegaly and 10 healthy subjects.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn February 1999 and May 2000, two workshops were held in Cortina, Italy and Montecarlo, respectively, to develop a consensus defining the diagnosis and treatment of acromegaly. The workshops were sponsored by the Italian Society of Endocrinology, the Pituitary Society and European Neuroendocrine Association. Partecipants from all over the world included endocrinologists, neurosurgeons and radiotherapists skilled in the management of acromegaly.
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