Publications by authors named "M Saeed-uz-Zafar"

A 67-year-old white male presented with symptomatic hypercalcemia (15.6 mg/dl) in December 1989. He had undergone thyroidectomy for removal of a mucin-producing adenocarcinoma of the thyroid in 1967, and after eight years of follow-up during which time no other neoplasms were detected, he was reported as a unique case of this syndrome.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Determining the cause of Cushing's disease and correcting the abnormality presents a continuing challenge to the clinician despite remarkable advances in diagnostic and therapeutic techniques. We present seven cases to illustrate 1) the classic disorder cured by pituitary adenomectomy; 2) persistence of the disease after adenomectomy; 3) Cushing's disease manifesting in the puerperium and remitting with dopamine agonist therapy; 4) a patient whose disease relapsed at least five times during 20 years of treatment by adrenalectomy, pituitary radiation, mitotane, and pituitary adenomectomy; 5) the Nelson syndrome; 6) the ectopic adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) syndrome in a patient with dexamethasone suppressible urinary cortisol who had a pituitary adenoma which stained positively for ACTH but who was not cured by total hypophysectomy; and 7) a patient whose ACTH-secreting tumor proved fatal despite repeated surgical, radiologic and pharmacologic measures.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Acromegaly and hyperprolactinemia have been reported in association with the McCune-Albright syndrome, but the pathophysiology of the GH and PRL hypersecretion that occurs in patients with this disorder has not been defined. We studied GH and PRL secretory dynamics in three patients with McCune-Albright syndrome and hypersecretion of these hormones. Each patient had excessive linear growth, glucose-non-suppressible plasma GH concentration, and GH responsiveness to TRH and GHRH.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

A patient with acromegaly, pituitary enlargement, and elevated plasma GH levels also had a bronchial carcinoid tumor. Signs and symptoms of active acromegaly along with elevated GH levels persisted for 11 yr after hypophysectomy and pituitary stalk section. Resection of the bronchial carcinoid reduced plasma GH to barely detectable levels.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF