Publications by authors named "Chiara Cosci"

Objective: Growth hormone (GH) has antiapoptotic effects in several cell lines, including human colonic adenocarcinoma cells. In addition, it has been reported that patients with acromegaly have reduced apoptosis in colonic mucosa. The aim of the study was to investigate colonic apoptosis and underlying molecular mechanisms in transgenic mice overexpressing bovine GH (Acro) aged 3 months (young) or 9 months (elder).

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Acromegaly, a syndrome related to growth hormone/IGF-1 excess, is frequently complicated by cardiovascular abnormalities (acromegalic cardiomyopathy). Extremely frequent are left ventricular hypertrophy and alterations of diastolic filling, which may progress to systolic dysfunction and eventually heart failure. Cardiac abnormalities may normalize after successful medical or surgical treatment of acromegaly, particularly in young patients with short-lasting disease, but this is less likely to occur in elderly patients.

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Objective: Left ventricular (LV) hypertrophy and myocardial fibrosis are considered the main pathological features of acromegalic cardiomyopathy. The aim of the study was to evaluate the proportion of LV hypertrophy and the presence of fibrosis in acromegalic cardiomyopathy in vivo using cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR).

Design And Patients: Fourteen consecutive patients (eight women, mean age 46 +/- 10 years) with untreated active acromegaly were submitted to two-dimensional (2D) colour Doppler and integrated backscatter (IBS) echocardiography and CMR.

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Background: Data on coronary heart disease (CHD) are scanty and matter of argument in acromegalic patients.

Objective: The objective of this study was to evaluate risk factors for development of CHD and the occurrence of cardiac events in acromegalic patients during a 5-yr prospective study.

Design: Ten-year likelihood for CHD development was estimated by the Framingham scoring system (FS); patients were stratified as having low (FS < 10), intermediate (>or= 10 FS < 20), or high (FS >or= 20) risk.

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Background: Obesity is a clinical feature of patients with Cushing's disease. Peroxisome proliferators-activated receptor (PPAR)gamma is the master regulator of adipogenesis; however, the expression of PPARgamma isoforms in the subcutaneous adipose tissue (SAT) of patients with Cushing's disease is unknown.

Aim And Methods: The expression of PPARgamma1 and PPARgamma2 was evaluated by real-time reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) and immunofluorescence (PPARgamma2 only) in SAT samples of 7 patients with untreated active Cushing's disease (Cushing(UNTR)), 8 with Cushing's disease in remission (Cushing(REM)) after pituitary adenomectomy, 15 normal lean subjects (Control(LEAN)), and 15 obese patients (Control(OBE)).

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Background: Thyrotropin (TSH)-secreting pituitary adenoma (TSHoma) and resistance to thyroid hormone (RTH) are two forms of inappropriate TSH secretion. Thyroid blood flow is largely TSH dependent.

Objective: To assess whether thyroid blood flow may help to differentiate TSHoma and RTH.

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Background: Acromegaly seems to be associated with an increased prevalence of colonic adenomas, although factors affecting their development and recurrence of the latter are not fully known.

Subjects And Methods: Seventy-nine patients with active acromegaly were prospectively followed up for 5 yr. Two hundred eighty healthy subjects served as controls.

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Background: Patients with acromegaly have an increased risk of developing colonic tumours; reduced apoptosis is considered a leading mechanism in tumorigenesis. GH and IGF-1 decrease apoptosis in several cell lines including human colonic adenocarcinoma, but it is unknown whether epithelial cells of colonic mucosa of patients with acromegaly have reduced apoptosis.

Aim: The aim of the study was to evaluate the degree of apoptosis in a cross-sectional study, in biopsy samples of colonic mucosa obtained from patients with acromegaly.

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Background: Acromegalic patients have increased left ventricular (LV) mass (M) and impaired diastolic function.

Aim: Using ultrasonic cardiac tissue characterization, we evaluated the early changes in cardiac fibrosis (IBS) and intrinsic myocardial contractility (CVI) as well as their reversibility after treatment with somatostatin analogues (SMSA) in patients with acromegaly.

Patients And Methods: Twenty-two acromegalic patients with active untreated disease (Acro(UNTR)) underwent conventional Doppler echocardiography and integrated backscattering; 25 healthy subjects (controls) and eight patients with acromegaly in remission after pituitary adenomectomy (Acro(REM)) served as controls.

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Objective: The objective of the study was to evaluate the expression and functional activity of Peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor (PPAR) gamma in pituitary adenomas from 14 consecutive acromegalic patients and to establish its role in apoptosis.

Subjects And Methods: Fourteen consecutive acromegalic patients were enrolled in the study. Wistar-Furth rats were used for in vivo studies.

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GH has antiapoptotic effects on several cells. However, the antiapoptotic mechanisms of GH on colonic mucosa cells are not completely understood. Peroxisome proliferator activated receptor-gamma (PPARgamma) activation enhances apoptosis, and a link between GH and PPARgamma in the colonic epithelium of acromegalic patients has been suggested.

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Acromegalic patients have an increased prevalence of colonic neoplasms and lower peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma (PPARgamma) levels, the latter acting as a tumor suppressor gene. In this study we evaluated the expression of PPARgamma in the biopsy samples of the polyps and outside polyps colonic mucosa from seven patients with active, untreated acromegaly, 11 with cured disease, and 15 controls. Serum GH and IGF-I levels were higher in patients with untreated acromegaly than in those with acromegaly in remission or controls (P = 0.

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Amiodarone-induced thyrotoxicosis (AIT) may occur either in the presence of underlying thyroid disease (type I AIT) or in apparently normal thyroid glands (type II AIT). Type II AIT, a destructive thyroiditis, often favorably responds to glucocorticoids. Iopanoic acid (IopAc) is an iodinated cholecystographic agent that inhibits deiodinase activity and reduces the conversion of T(4) toT(3).

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Background: Amiodarone-induced thyrotoxicosis (AIT) may develop either in apparently normal glands (type II AIT) or in the presence of thyroid abnormalities (type I AIT). Sometimes AIT is resistant to conventional treatment. Thyroidectomy was used in patients with AIT, but in patients who are thyrotoxic it may be hazardous.

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