Aim: To compare the performance, in terms of specificity for cortisol excess, of late-night salivary cortisol with 24-hour urine-free cortisol (24hr UFC) and overnight 1mg dexamethasone suppression test (1mg DST) in a group of obese T2DM patients.
Methods: Forty obese patients with T2DM without clinical features of Cushing's syndrome were recruited. Plasma, urinary and salivary cortisol were measured directly by an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay using monoclonal antibodies.
Context: Plasma C-type natriuretic peptide (CNP) forms correlate with linear growth velocity in juveniles. In hyperthyroid children, plasma CNP products fall in parallel with height velocity and thyroid hormones (TH) as euthyroidism is restored. The effect of TH on CNP forms after completion of endochondral growth is unknown.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFContext: Parenteral iron administration has been associated with hypophosphatemia. Fibroblast growth factor 23 (FGF23) has a physiological role in phosphate homeostasis via suppression of 25-hydroxyvitamin D [25(OH)D] activation and promotion of phosphaturia. We recently reported a case of iron-induced hypophosphatemic osteomalacia associated with marked FGF23 elevation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUnlabelled: Context Patients with primary adrenal insufficiency (Addison's disease) receive more glucococorticoids than the normal endogenous production, raising concern about adverse effects on bone.
Objective: To determine i) the effects of glucocorticoid replacement therapy on bone, and ii) the impact of glucocorticoid pharmacogenetics.
Design, Setting And Participants: A cross-sectional study of two large Addison's cohorts from Norway (n=187) and from UK and New Zealand (n=105).
Iron-induced renal phosphate wasting, hypophosphataemia and osteomalacia have previously been reported in a small number of Japanese patients receiving parenteral iron sucrose. We report the case history of a European male who, as a result of regular intravenous iron polymaltose, developed prolonged hypophosphataemia complicated by widespread insufficiency fractures. The pathogenesis of this complication remains unknown however our novel finding of a marked elevation in fibroblast growth factor 23 (FGF23), which normalized after ceasing parenteral iron, suggests an important and previously unreported effect of iron on FGF23 homeostasis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: Metabolic abnormalities in patients with bipolar disorder may be secondary to obesity, aspects of the disorder or its treatment. To investigate this further, the purpose the present study was to compare insulin resistance, components of the metabolic syndrome and adiponectin levels in a group of overweight bipolar patients taking sodium valproate and a group of non-psychiatric control subjects.
Methods: Data were collected from 60 overweight bipolar patients who had experienced clinically significant weight gain thought to be related to sodium valproate treatment and from 60 control subjects without psychiatric illness matched for age, gender, body mass index and ethnicity.
Context: Dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA) and DHEA sulfate (DHEAS) are the major circulating adrenal steroids and substrates for peripheral sex hormone biosynthesis. In Addison's disease, glucocorticoid and mineralocorticoid deficiencies require lifelong replacement, but the associated near-total failure of DHEA synthesis is not typically corrected.
Objective And Design: In a double-blind trial, we randomized 106 subjects (44 males, 62 females) with Addison's disease to receive either 50 mg daily of micronized DHEA or placebo orally for 12 months to evaluate its longer-term effects on bone mineral density, body composition, and cognitive function together with well-being and fatigue.
Objectives: Carnitine deficiency impairs fatty acid beta-oxidation and may partly explain weight gain in valproate-treated patients. The aim of this study was to determine whether l-carnitine supplementation improves weight loss outcomes in bipolar patients taking sodium valproate.
Methods: Sixty bipolar patients with clinically significant weight gain thought to be related to sodium valproate, who had been taking sodium valproate for >or=6 months, were randomized to l-carnitine (15 mg/kg/day) or placebo for 26 weeks, in conjunction with a moderately energy-restricted, low-fat diet.