220 results on '"Bizzarro, Antonio"'
Search Results
52. COMPORTAMENTO DEL PEPTIDE PROCOLLAGENO III N TERMINALE NEL SIERO DI PAZIENTI CON OFTALMOPATIA BASEDOWIANA CON O SENZA IPERTIROIDISMO
- Author
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Criscuolo T, DE BELLIS, Annamaria, BIZZARRO, Antonio, Quarto C, Di Martino S, Bellastella A., PASQUALI, Daniela, Criscuolo, T, DE BELLIS, Annamaria, Bizzarro, Antonio, Quarto, C, Pasquali, Daniela, Di Martino, S, and Bellastella, A.
- Published
- 1991
53. INCREASED SERUM LEVELS OF PROCOLLAGEN III-N PEPTIDE IN PATIENTS WITH UNTREATED GRAVES’OPHTALMOPATHY WITH OR WITHOUT HYPERTHYROIDISM
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Criscuolo T, DE BELLIS, Annamaria, BIZZARRO, Antonio, Quarto C, Di Martino S, Bellastella A., PASQUALI, Daniela, Criscuolo, T, DE BELLIS, Annamaria, Bizzarro, Antonio, Quarto, C, Pasquali, Daniela, Di Martino, S, and Bellastella, A.
- Published
- 1991
54. A Five Year Prospective Investigation of Anterior Pituitary Function after Traumatic Brain Injury: Is Hypopituitarism Long-Term after Head Trauma Associated with Autoimmunity?
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Tanriverdi, Fatih, primary, De Bellis, Annamaria, additional, Ulutabanca, Halil, additional, Bizzarro, Antonio, additional, Sinisi, Antonio A., additional, Bellastella, Giuseppe, additional, Amoresano Paglionico, Vanda, additional, Dalla Mora, Liliana, additional, Selcuklu, Ahmed, additional, Unluhizarci, Kursad, additional, Casanueva, Felipe F., additional, and Kelestimur, Fahrettin, additional
- Published
- 2013
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55. Late Primary Autoimmune Hypothyroidism in a Patient with Postdelivery Autoimmune Hypopituitarism Associated with Antibodies to Growth Hormone and Prolactin-Secreting Cells
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De Bellis, Annamaria, primary, Colella, Caterina, additional, Bellastella, Giuseppe, additional, Lucci, Emma, additional, Sinisi, Antonio Agostino, additional, Bizzarro, Antonio, additional, and Holdaway, Ian, additional
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- 2013
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56. Time course of Graves’ ophthalmopathy after total thyroidectomy alone or followed by radioiodine therapy: a 2-year longitudinal study
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De Bellis, Annamaria, primary, Conzo, Giovanni, additional, Cennamo, Gilda, additional, Pane, Elena, additional, Bellastella, Giuseppe, additional, Colella, Caterina, additional, Iacovo, Assunta Dello, additional, Paglionico, Vanda Amoresano, additional, Sinisi, Antonio Agostino, additional, Wall, Jack R., additional, Bizzarro, Antonio, additional, and Bellastella, Antonio, additional
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- 2011
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57. Investigation of antihypothalamus and antipituitary antibodies in amateur boxers: is chronic repetitive head trauma-induced pituitary dysfunction associated with autoimmunity?
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Tanriverdi, Fatih, primary, De Bellis, Annamaria, additional, Battaglia, Marina, additional, Bellastella, Giuseppe, additional, Bizzarro, Antonio, additional, Sinisi, Antonio A, additional, Bellastella, Antonio, additional, Unluhizarci, Kursad, additional, Selcuklu, Ahmet, additional, Casanueva, Felipe F, additional, and Kelestimur, Fahrettin, additional
- Published
- 2010
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58. Anti-Pituitary Antibodies in Children With Newly Diagnosed Celiac Disease: A Novel Finding Contributing to Linear-Growth Impairment
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Delvecchio, Maurizio, primary, De Bellis, Annamaria, additional, Francavilla, Ruggiero, additional, Rutigliano, Vincenzo, additional, Predieri, Barbara, additional, Indrio, Flavia, additional, De Venuto, Domenica, additional, Sinisi, Antonio Agostino, additional, Bizzarro, Antonio, additional, Bellastella, Antonio, additional, Iughetti, Lorenzo, additional, and Cavallo, Luciano, additional
- Published
- 2010
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59. Antipituitary antibodies after traumatic brain injury: is head trauma-induced pituitary dysfunction associated with autoimmunity?
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Tanriverdi, Fatih, primary, De Bellis, Annamaria, additional, Bizzarro, Antonio, additional, Sinisi, Antonio Agostino, additional, Bellastella, Giuseppe, additional, Pane, Elena, additional, Bellastella, Antonio, additional, Unluhizarci, Kursad, additional, Selcuklu, Ahmet, additional, Casanueva, Felipe F, additional, and Kelestimur, Fahrettin, additional
- Published
- 2008
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60. Immunological and clinical aspects of lymphocytic hypophysitis
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De Bellis, Annamaria, primary, Ruocco, Giuseppe, additional, Battaglia, Marina, additional, Conte, Marisa, additional, Coronella, Concetta, additional, Tirelli, Gilda, additional, Bellastella, Antonio, additional, Pane, Elena, additional, Sinisi, Antonio Agostino, additional, Bizzarro, Antonio, additional, and Bellastella, Giuseppe, additional
- Published
- 2008
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61. Anti-hypothalamus and anti-pituitary antibodies may contribute to perpetuate the hypopituitarism in patients with Sheehan's syndrome
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De Bellis, Annamaria, primary, Kelestimur, Fahrettin, additional, Agostino Sinisi, Antonio, additional, Ruocco, Giuseppe, additional, Tirelli, Gilda, additional, Battaglia, Marina, additional, Bellastella, Giuseppe, additional, Conzo, Giovanni, additional, Tanriverdi, Fatih, additional, Unluhizarci, Kursad, additional, Bizzarro, Antonio, additional, and Bellastella, Antonio, additional
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- 2008
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62. Antipituitary Antibodies against Gonadotropin-Secreting Cells in Adult Male Patients with Apparently Idiopathic Hypogonadotropic Hypogonadism
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De Bellis, Annamaria, primary, Sinisi, Antonio Agostino, additional, Conte, Marisa, additional, Coronella, Concetta, additional, Bellastella, Giuseppe, additional, Esposito, Dario, additional, Pasquali, Daniela, additional, Ruocco, Giuseppe, additional, Bizzarro, Antonio, additional, and Bellastella, Antonio, additional
- Published
- 2006
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63. Pituitary antibodies and lymphocytic hypophysitis
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De Bellis, Annamaria, primary, Bizzarro, Antonio, additional, and Bellastella, Antonio, additional
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- 2005
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64. Steroid-cell autoantibodies are preferentially expressed in women with premature ovarian failure who have adrenal autoimmunity
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Falorni, Alberto, primary, Laureti, Stefano, additional, Candeloro, Paola, additional, Perrino, Silvia, additional, Coronella, Concetta, additional, Bizzarro, Antonio, additional, Bellastella, Antonio, additional, Santeusanio, Fausto, additional, and De Bellis, Annamaria, additional
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- 2002
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65. Levels of Adrenocortical Autoantibodies Correlate with the Degree of Adrenal Dysfunction in Subjects with Preclinical Addison’s Disease1
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Laureti, Stefano, primary, De Bellis, Annamaria, additional, Muccitelli, Vincenzo Igino, additional, Calcinaro, Filippo, additional, Bizzarro, Antonio, additional, Rossi, Riccardo, additional, Bellastella, Antonio, additional, Santeusanio, Fausto, additional, and Falorni, Alberto, additional
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- 1998
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66. Association of Arginine Vasopressin-Secreting Cell, Steroid-Secreting Cell, Adrenal and Islet Cell Antibodies in a Patient Presenting with Central Diabetes insipidus, Empty Sella, Subclinical Adrenocortical Failure and Impaired Glucose Tolerance
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De Bellis, Annamaria, primary, Bizzarro, Antonio, additional, Di Martino, Sergio, additional, Savastano, Silvia, additional, Agostino Sinisi, Antonio, additional, Lombardi, Gaetano, additional, and Bellastella, Antonio, additional
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- 1995
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67. Time course of Graves' ophthalmopathy after total thyroidectomy alone or followed by radioiodine therapy: a 2-year longitudinal study.
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Bellis, Annamaria, Conzo, Giovanni, Cennamo, Gilda, Pane, Elena, Bellastella, Giuseppe, Colella, Caterina, Iacovo, Assunta, Paglionico, Vanda, Sinisi, Antonio, Wall, Jack, Bizzarro, Antonio, and Bellastella, Antonio
- Abstract
The findings in hyperthyroid patients with Graves' orbitopathy (GO) of antibodies against antigens shared between the thyroid and orbit, such as the TSH-receptor (TRAb) and a novel protein G2s (G2sAb), suggested a possible common therapeutic strategy. However, the gold therapeutic standard for hyperthyrodism in these patients remains still unsettled and is mainly based on personal experience. Studies on the effect of total thyroidectomy (TT) alone or followed by radioiodine ablation (RAI) of thyroid remnants showed often conflicting results. This longitudinal study was aimed at evaluating the influence of TT alone or followed by post-surgical RAI with respect to methimazole treatment on the activity and severity of GO in patients with hyperthyroidism and GO. Sixty consecutive patients with Graves' disease and mild/moderate GO were studied and grouped as follows: group 1, including 25 patients (16F, 9M) undergoing TT alone; group 2, including 10 patients (8F, 2M) undergoing TT followed by RAI for histological evidence of differentiated thyroid cancer; group 3, including 25 patients (18F, 7M) euthyroid under methimazole therapy, studied as controls. Clinical study of ophthalmopathy and measurements of TRAb and G2sAb were performed in all patients at start of the study (time of TT for group 1 and RAI after TT for group 2 and of the first finding of euthyroidism under methimazole treatment for group 3) and after 6, 12, 24 months. Patients of both groups 1 and 2 showed an early significant decrease and a further progressive reduction of the activity and severity of GO with a disappearance of TRAb and a decrease of G2sAb levels during the follow-up, without statistically significant differences between the two groups. Patients in group 3 showed a much later and less marked improvement of GO with persistence of TRAb and G2sAb positivity, even if with reduction of TRAb levels at 12 and 24 months. Our results suggest that in Graves' patients with large goiter or relapse of hyperthyroidism and mild/moderate GO, TT alone could be an advisable choice to treat hyperthyroidism also improving GO with reduction of cost/benefit ratio. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
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68. Prolactin and Autoimmunity.
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Bellis, Annamaria, Bizzarro, Antonio, Pivonello, Rosario, Lombardi, Gaetano, and Bellastella, Antonio
- Abstract
The interrelationship between prolactin (PRL) and the immune system have been elucitaded in the last decade, opening new important horizons in the field of the immunoendocrinology. PRL is secreted not only by anterior pituitary gland but also by many extrapituitary sites including the immune cells. The endocrine/paracrine PRL has been shown to stimulate the immune cells by binding to PRL receptors. Increased PRL levels, frequently described in autoimmune diseases, could depend on the enhancement of coordinated bi-directional communications between PRL and the immune system observed in these diseases. Hyperprolactinemia has been described in the active phase of some non organ-specific autoimmune diseases, as systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) and rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and organ-specific autoimmune diseases, as celiac disease, type 1 diabetes mellitus, Addison's disease, autoimmune thyroid diseases. In these diseases PRL increases the syntesis of IFNγ and IL-2 by Th1 lymphocytes. Moreover, PRL activates Th2 lymphocytes with autoantibody production. Of particular interest is the association between hyperprolactinemia and levels of anti DNA antibodies, islet cell antibodies (ICA), thyreoglobulin antibodies (TgAb), thyroperoxidase antibodies (TPOAb), adrenocortical antibodies (ACA), transglutaminase antibodies (tTGAb) in SLE, in type 1 diabetes mellitus, in Hashimoto's thyroiditis, in Addison's disease and in celiac disease, respectively. High levels of PRL have been also frequently detected in patients with lymphocytic hypophysitis (LYH). Several mechanisms have been invoked to explain the hyperprolactinemia in LYH. The PRL increase could be secondary to the inflammatory process of the pituitary gland but, on the other hand, this increase could have a role in enhancing the activity of the immune process in LYH. Moreover, the detection of antipituitary antibodies targeting PRL-secreting cells in some patients with idiopathic hyperprolactinemia suggests the occurrence of a possible silent LYH in these patients. Finally, the role of anti-prolactinemic drugs to inactivate the immune process in LYH is still discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2005
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69. Lymphocytic hypophysitis: a rare or underestimated disease?
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Bellastella, Antonio, Bizzarro, Antonio, Coronella, Concetta, Bellastella, Giuseppe, Sinisi, Antonio Agostino, and De Bellis, Annamaria
- Published
- 2003
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70. Vasopressin Cell Antibodies and Central Diabetes Insipidus in a Patient with Systemic Lupus Erythematosus and Dermatomyositis
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Kajiyama, Hiroshi, Terai, Chihiro, De Bellis, Annamaria, Bizzarro, Antonio, Bellastella, Antonio, Ohta, Shuji, Okamoto, Hiroshi, Uesato, Masashi, Hara, Masako, and Kamatani, Naoyuki
- Published
- 2004
71. [Blood levels of neopterin in patients with liver cirrhosis]
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ANTONIELLO S, DI MARTINO G, RUSSO M, BIZZARRO, Antonio, AULETTA M, DE BELLIS, Annamaria, CACCIATORE L., Antoniello, S, DI MARTINO, G, Russo, M, Bizzarro, Antonio, Auletta, M, DE BELLIS, Annamaria, and Cacciatore, L.
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Adult ,Liver Cirrhosis ,Male ,Liver Cirrhosis, Alcoholic ,Macrophages ,Humans ,Female ,gamma-Globulins ,Clinical Enzyme Tests ,Macrophage Activation ,Middle Aged ,Biopterin ,Neopterin - Abstract
Neopterin is a pyrazino-pyrimidine compound which is biosynthesized by macrophages. Increased concentrations of neopterin have been reported in conditions causing stimulation of cellular immunity, such as viral and other infections, graft versus host disease, autoimmune diseases and different malignancies. Recently, increased urinary neopterin levels have been found in patients with acute viral hepatitis and NANB chronic hepatitis. In the present study, neopterin serum levels were measured in 23 cirrhotic patients (6 HBV related, 7 alcoholic and 10 cryptogenetic cirrhosis) and in 24 normal subjects. Mean values of serum neopterin were statistically increased in cirrhotics (3.92 +/- 3.28 ng/mL versus 1.24 +/- 0.51 ng/mL in controls, p less than 0.01). Serum neopterin values were not statistically different either in cirrhotics assessed in three different classes according to Child's classification or in cirrhotics with or without serological findings of active disease. In fact, in cirrhotic patients, serum neopterin levels did not correlate with serum aspartate and alanine aminotransferases, alkaline phosphatase, gamma-glutamyltransferase and gammaglobulins values. These data show that increased levels of serum neopterin occur in cirrhotic patients, but there is no relation between serum neopterin values and the histological activity or the clinical severity of the disease. The results are consistent with the hypothesis that activated macrophages are involved in all forms and in all stages of liver cirrhosis.
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- 1989
72. [TAC-positive lymphocytes in Basedow's disease]
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BIZZARRO, Antonio, FONTANA A, DE BELLIS, Annamaria, DAPONTE A, GENTILE, Sandro, CASTELLO G, IACONO G., Bizzarro, Antonio, Fontana, A, DE BELLIS, Annamaria, Daponte, A, Gentile, Sandro, Castello, G, and Iacono, G.
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Adult ,Male ,Recurrence ,T-Lymphocytes ,Humans ,Female ,Receptors, Interleukin-2 ,Prospective Studies ,Graves Disease - Published
- 1987
73. T-lymphocyte-subsets in endocrine exophthalmos
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CENMAMO G, CASTELLO G., BIZZARRO, Antonio, Cenmamo, G, Bizzarro, Antonio, and Castello, G.
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Male ,Methimazole ,T-Lymphocytes ,Exophthalmos ,Humans ,Female ,Middle Aged ,Graves Disease - Abstract
Peripheral T-Lymphocyte subsets were analyzed with monolateral antibodies in 40 patients with Graves' ophthalmopathy. The 20 patients with untreated hyperthyroid exophthalmos showed a slight statistically not significant decrease in the percentage of total T-Lymphocytes and a statistically significant decrease with percentage of the OK T8 cells. No significant changes were observed in the percentage of OK T3 and OK T4 and OK T8 cells in patients with euthyroid exophthalmos under the drug treatment. These findings indicate the significant association of quantitative abnormality of suppressor-cytotoxic cells with untreated hyperthyroid exophthalmos.
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- 1985
74. [Anti-rubella antibodies in neapolitan females. Correlation with age and work (author's transl)]
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IANNUCCI F, ADAMO N, COPPOLA C, D'ANNA M, LAVITOLA G, PROIETTI F, GORGA F., BIZZARRO, Antonio, Iannucci, F, Adamo, N, Bizzarro, Antonio, Coppola, C, D'Anna, M, Lavitola, G, Proietti, F, and Gorga, F.
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Adult ,Employment ,Socioeconomic Factors ,Age Factors ,Humans ,Female ,Rubella virus ,Antibodies - Published
- 1981
75. [Effect of cyproheptadine on plasma ACTH and cortisol secretion in a patient with Cushing's disease]
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ESPOSITO V, D'ALESSANDRO B, BELLASTELLA A, IACONO G, OFFICIOSO A, PICCOLO C., BIZZARRO, Antonio, Esposito, V, D'Alessandro, B, Bellastella, A, Iacono, G, Bizzarro, Antonio, Officioso, A, and Piccolo, C.
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17-Hydroxycorticosteroids ,Adult ,Adrenocorticotropic Hormone ,Hydrocortisone ,Cyproheptadine ,Humans ,Female ,Adrenal Cortex Function Tests ,Cushing Syndrome ,Dexamethasone - Published
- 1976
76. [Effect of atropine on hypophyseal gonadotropins in the basal condition and under GnRH stimulation]
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BIZZARRO, Antonio, IANNUCCI F, VERDOLIVA A, SORICELLI A, GUARINO G, DE MATTEO A, L'ABBATE V., Bizzarro, Antonio, Iannucci, F, Verdoliva, A, Soricelli, A, Guarino, G, DE MATTEO, A, and L'Abbate, V.
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Adult ,Atropine ,Gonadotropin-Releasing Hormone ,Male ,Reference Values ,Humans ,Follicle Stimulating Hormone ,Luteinizing Hormone - Abstract
The Authors have tested serum levels of LH and FSH in 10 healthy males after stimulation test with GnRH preceded by administration i.m. of 1 mg. of atropine 10' and 1 hour before the test, to examine some interferences of the drug on ipophisary gonadotropins. Atropine has no effect on LH and FSH release because there are no differences between mean values of the hormones during the test with and without atropine, at any time it is administered. All the data obtained have been controlled with Student's "t" test.
- Published
- 1980
77. Effect of anaesthesia on serum levels of LH and FSH in man with and without GnRH test
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Bizzarro, Antonio, Martino, Gennaro Di, lannucci, Flavio, Verdoliva, Alfredo, Florio, Antonino, Guarino, Giuseppina, and Iacono, Giovanni
- Abstract
The effect of anaesthesia with atropine and pentobarbital (PB) in three groups of volunteers has been tested. The dose used for the anaesthesia was 20 mg/kg body weight of PB. The experiment was performed with and without stimulation test with GnRH. Anaesthesia was shown to increase serum levels of LH and to increase the response to stimulation with GnRH. Atropine and mental stress seem to have no effect on the hormones. No variation in serum levels of FSH in the anaesthesized volunteers was noted. The data obtained have been statistically controlled.
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- 1982
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78. ective investigation of pituitary functions in patients with acute infectious meningitis: is acute meningitis induced pituitary dysfunction associated with autoimmunity?
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Tanriverdi F, DE BELLIS, Annamaria, Teksahin H, Alp E, Sinisi AA, BELLASTELLA, Giuseppe, AMORESANO PAGLIONICO, Vanda, Bellastella A, Unluhizarci K, Doganay M, Kelestimur F., BIZZARRO, Antonio, Tanriverdi, F, DE BELLIS, Annamaria, Teksahin, H, Alp, E, Bizzarro, Antonio, Sinisi, Aa, Bellastella, Giuseppe, AMORESANO PAGLIONICO, Vanda, Bellastella, A, Unluhizarci, K, Doganay, M, and Kelestimur, F.
- Abstract
Previous case reports and retrospective studies suggest that pituitary dysfunction may occur after acute bacterial or viral meningitis. In this prospective study we assessed the pituitary functions, lipid profile and anthropometric measures in adults with acute bacterial or viral meningitis. Moreover, in order to investigate whether autoimmune mechanisms could play a role in the pathogenesis of acute meningitis-induced hypopituitarism we also investigated the anti-pituitary antibodies (APA) and anti-hypothalamus antibodies (AHA) prospectively. Sixteen patients (10 males, 6 females; mean ± SD age 40.9 ± 15.9) with acute infectious meningitis were included and the patients were evaluated in the acute phase, and at 6 and 12 months after the acute meningitis. In the acute phase 18.7% of the patients had GH deficiency, 12.5% had ACTH and FSH/LH deficiencies. At 12 months after acute meningitis 6 of 14 patients (42.8%) had GH deficiency, 1 of 14 patients (7.1%) had ACTH and FSH/LH deficiencies. Two of 14 patients (14.3%) had combined hormone deficiencies and four patients (28.6%) had isolated hormone deficiencies at 12 months. Four of 9 (44.4%) hormone deficiencies at 6 months were recovered at 12 months, and 3 of 8 (37.5%) hormone deficiencies at 12 months were new-onset hormone deficiencies. At 12 months there were significant negative correlations between IGF-I level vs. LDL-C, and IGF-I level vs. total cholesterol. The frequency of AHA and APA positivity was substantially high, ranging from 35 to 50% of the patients throughout the 12 months period. However there were no significant correlations between AHA or APA positivity and hypopituitarism. The risk of hypopituitarism, GH deficiency in particular, is substantially high in the acute phase, after 6 and 12 months of the acute infectious meningitis. Moreover we found that 6th month after meningitis is too early to make a decision for pituitary dysfunction and these patients should be screened for at least 12 months. In addition, the occurrence of AHA and APA positivity due to acute infectious meningitis was demonstrated for the first time. Further longer-term prospective investigations need to be carried out on a larger cohort of patients to understand the role of autoimmunity in the pathogenesis of late hypopituitarism after acute infectious meningitis
79. Revisitation of autoimmune hypophysitis: knowledge and uncertainties on pathophysiological and clinical aspects
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Dario Giugliano, Katherine Esposito, Giuseppe Bellastella, Annamaria De Bellis, Antonio Bellastella, Antonio Bizzarro, Maria Ida Maiorino, Bellastella, Giuseppe, Maiorino, Mi, Bizzarro, Antonio, Giugliano, Dario, Esposito, Katherine, Bellastella, Antonio, and DE BELLIS, Annamaria
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Hypophysitis ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Autoimmune hypophysitis ,030209 endocrinology & metabolism ,Disease ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Endocrinology ,HLA Antigens ,Biopsy ,IgG4 plasmacytic hypophysiti ,medicine ,DIAGNOSTIC STANDARD ,Humans ,CTLA-4 Antigen ,Intensive care medicine ,Autoimmune hypophysiti ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Antibodies, Monoclonal ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,Lymphocytic hypophysitis ,Antipituitary antibodies ,medicine.disease ,Pathophysiology ,Lymphocytic hypophysiti ,Immunoglobulin G ,Pituitary Gland ,Immunology ,business ,Antipituitary antibodie ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,IgG4 plasmacytic hypophysitis - Abstract
Purpose: This publication reviews the accepted knowledges and the findings still discussed on several features of autoimmune hypophysitis, including the most recently described forms, such as IgG4 and cancer immunotherapy- related hypophysitis. Methods: The most characteristic findings and the pending controversies were derived from a literature review and previous personal experiences. A single paragraph focused on some atypical examples of the disease presenting under confounding pretences. Results: Headache, visual field alterations and impaired pituitary secretion are the most frequent clinical findings of the disease. Pituitary biopsy, still considered the gold diagnostic standard, does not always receive consent from the patients. The role of magnetic resonance imaging is limited, as this disease may generate images similar to those of other diseases. The role of antipituitary and antihypothalamus antibodies is still discussed owing to methodological difficulties and also because the findings on the true pituitary antigen(s) are still debated. However, the low sensitivity and specificity of immunofluorescence, one of the more widely employed methods to detect these antibodies, may be improved, considering a predetermined cut-off titre and a particular kind of immunostaining. Conclusion: Autoimmune hypophysitis is a multifaceted disease, which may certainly be diagnosed by pituitary biopsy. However, the possible different clinical, laboratory and imaging features must be considered by the physician to avoid a misdiagnosis when examining a possibly affected patient. Therapeutic choice has to be made taking into account the clinical conditions and the degree of hypothalamic-pituitary involvement, but also considering that spontaneous remissions can occur.
- Published
- 2016
80. Hashimoto's Thyroiditis and Entero-Chromaffin-like Cell Hyperplasia: Early Detection and Somatostatin Analogue Treatment
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Alessandro Federico, Giovanni Conzo, Antonio Bizzarro, Dario Esposito, A. De Bellis, Giacomo Accardo, Giuseppe Pannone, A. Colao, Daniela Pasquali, Antonietta Gerarda Gravina, Marco Romano, Antongiulio Faggiano, Andrea Renzullo, A., Renzullo, G., Accardo, D., Esposito, DE BELLIS, Annamaria, Bizzarro, Antonio, Romano, Marco, Federico, Alessandro, A. G., Gravina, Conzo, Giovanni, G., Pannone, A., Faggiano, A., Colao, and Pasquali, Daniela
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endocrine system ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pathology ,Atrophic gastritis ,Immunology ,Cell ,lcsh:Medicine ,Early detection ,Autoimmune thyroid disease ,Thyroiditis ,Hashimoto's thyroiditis ,chronic atrophic gastritis ,hypergastrinemia ,entero-chromaffin-like cells ,somatostatin analogs ,Internal medicine ,Immunology and Allergy ,Medicine ,Autoimmune disease ,business.industry ,lcsh:R ,Hyperplasia ,medicine.disease ,Somatostatin Analogue ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Endocrinology ,business - Abstract
Type IIIb polyglandular autoimmune disease comprises autoimmune thyroid disease (HT) and chronic atrophic gastritis (AIG). Hypergastrinemia, secondary to AIG, predisposes to gastric enterochromaffin-like cell (ECL) hyperplasia, a preneoplastic condition. We evaluated the prevalence of AIG, hypergastrinemia and ECL hyperplasia in HT patients. A secondary end-point was to assess the efficacy of treatment with a somatostatin analogue in HT patient with ECL hyperplasia. From 2009 to 2011, 146 HT patients were enrolled in a prospective study. All cases underwent hormonal profile, and parietal cell antibody (PCA), gastrin, and chromogranin A (CgA) serum level assays. Selected patients with elevated gastrin and CgA levels underwent gastro esophageal endoscopy (EGDS). Patients positive for ECL hyperplasia received Octreotide LAR 30 mg/28 days for 12 months. Gastrin and CgA assays were repeated every three months and EGDS after one year. The results show that gastrin and CgA were significantly higher than normal in 17/115 (14.7%) patients. Seven more HT had isolated PCA positivity and in the 17 PCA positive patients histology diagnosed AIG, corpus prevalent, with mild to moderate atrophy. Diffuse ECL hyperplasia of the gastric body was present in three subjects, one of them presenting a type-1 carcinoid. Gastrin and CgA levels were significantly reduced (p
- Published
- 2013
81. Subclinical diabetes insipidus
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Antonio Bizzarro, Antonio Agostino Sinisi, Annamaria De Bellis, Caterina Colella, Giuseppe Bellastella, Antonio Bellastella, Bellastella A, 1. 1., Bizzarro, Antonio, Colella, C, Bellastella, Giuseppe, Sinisi, Aa, and DE BELLIS, Annamaria
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Pregnancy ,genetic structures ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,medicine.disease_cause ,medicine.disease ,Autoimmune Diseases ,Autoimmunity ,Diabetes Insipidus, Neurogenic ,Pathogenesis ,Natural history ,Endocrinology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Posterior pituitary ,Pituitary Gland ,Diabetes insipidus ,Immunology ,medicine ,Humans ,business ,Subclinical infection - Abstract
Subclinical central diabetes insipidus (CDI) can be the outcome of a number of diseases that affect the hypothalamus–infundibulum–post hypophysis axis. One of the most common forms of subclinical CDI is linked to an autoimmune pathogenesis even if other causes may be also responsible. Among these, pregnancy, traumatic and surgical brain injury and some infiltrative, vascular, infectious and neoplastic diseases have been reported with increasing frequency. The natural history of autoimmune CDI seems to evolve through 4 functional stages according to the presence of antibodies to vasopressin-secreting cells (AVPcAb) and the relationship between their behavior overtime, the variations of posterior pituitary function and the characteristics of hypothalamic–hypophyseal region on magnetic resonance imaging. This staging is of crucial importance for the therapeutic strategy, taking into account that some stages could be still reversible. Several medical treatments have been suggested to interrupt the progression toward clinical CDI but the results are still discussed.
- Published
- 2012
82. Antipituitary Antibodies Recognizing Growth Hormone (GH)-Producing Cells in Children with Idiopathic GH Deficiency and in Children with Idiopathic Short Stature
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Gilda Tirelli, Maria Carolina Salerno, Giuseppe Ruocco, Antonio Bizzarro, Giuseppe Bellastella, Marina Battaglia, Concetta Coronella, Antonio Bellastella, Valentina Esposito, Marisa Conte, Annamaria De Bellis, DE BELLIS, A, Salerno, Mariacarolina, Conte, M, Coronella, C, Tirelli, G, Battaglia, M, Esposito, V, Ruocco, G, Bellastella, G, Bizzarro, A, Bellastella, A., DE BELLIS, Annamaria, Salerno, M, Bellastella, Giuseppe, and Bizzarro, Antonio
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Cross-sectional study ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,education ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Context (language use) ,Biochemistry ,Autoimmune Diseases ,Cohort Studies ,Antipituitary antibodies,growth hormone (GH)-producing cells,hildren with idiopathic GH deficiency, children with idiopathic short stature ,Endocrinology ,Pituitary Gland, Anterior ,Internal medicine ,mental disorders ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Longitudinal Studies ,Insulin-Like Growth Factor I ,Child ,Fluorescent Antibody Technique, Indirect ,Autoantibodies ,Human Growth Hormone ,business.industry ,Biochemistry (medical) ,Autoantibody ,medicine.disease ,Body Height ,Idiopathic short stature ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,El Niño ,Hypothalamus ,Child, Preschool ,IGHD ,Female ,business ,psychological phenomena and processes ,Papio ,Cohort study - Abstract
Context: Antipituitary antibodies (APA) recognizing GH-secreting cells may indicate an autoimmune pituitary involvement in adults with idiopathic GH deficiency (IGHD). Objective: We aimed 1) to investigate the presence of APA in prepubertal children with IGHD or idiopathic short stature (ISS), identifying the pituitary hormone-producing cells targeted by APA; and 2) to verify whether in patients with ISS the presence of APA could predict the development of GHD. Design: We performed a cross-sectional and partially longitudinal cohort study. Setting: The study was performed at the Endocrinology Unit and Pediatric Unit of the Second University and University Federico II of Naples, respectively. Patients: Twenty-six children with IGHD (group 1), 60 children with ISS (group 2), 33 children with GHD caused by lesions/abnormalities of the hypothalamus or pituitary (group 3), and 40 controls participated in the study. Nineteen children of group 2 were reevaluated after 2 yr. Main Outcome Measures: IGF-I levels, GH secretion, and APA (by indirect immunofluorescence) were evaluated in all participants. Results: At study entry, APA recognizing GH-producing cells were detected in seven of 26 children in group 1 and in 14 of 60 in group 2. Two years later, all eight initially APA-positive and all 11 APA-negative of the 19 reevaluated patients persisted positive and negative, respectively. The reevaluation of GH secretion in these patients revealed the development of GHD in all but one of the APA-positive children but in none of the APA-negative ones. Conclusions: IGHD in children can be frequently associated with APA targeting GH-secreting cells; thus, the detection of APA in children with ISS could identify those prone to develop GHD.
- Published
- 2006
83. Pregnancy may favour the development of severe autoimmune central diabetes insipidus in women with vasopressin cell antibodies: description of two cases
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Annamaria De Bellis, Giuseppe Bellastella, A. Bizzarro, Ernesto Aitella, Domenico Cozzolino, Mariluce Barrasso, Sergio Di Martino, Katherine Esposito, Bellastella, Giuseppe, Bizzarro, Antonio, Aitella, E, Barrasso, M, Cozzolino, Domenico, Di Martino, S, Esposito, Katherine, and DE BELLIS, Annamaria
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Adult ,Vasopressin ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,medicine.disease_cause ,Autoimmune Disease ,Autoimmunity ,Autoimmune Diseases ,Endocrinology ,Pregnancy ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Deamino Arginine Vasopressin ,Subclinical infection ,Autoantibodies ,Autoimmune disease ,business.industry ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Medicine (all) ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Autoantibodie ,Arginine Vasopressin ,Diabetes Insipidus, Neurogenic ,Diabetes insipidus ,Gestation ,Female ,business ,Human - Abstract
Recently, an increased incidence of central diabetes insipidus (CDI) in pregnancy, and less frequently in thepost partumperiod, has been reported, most probably favoured by some conditions occurring in pregnancy. This study was aimed at investigating the influence of pregnancy on a pre-existing potential/subclinical hypothalamic autoimmunity. We studied the longitudinal behaviour of arginine–vasopressin cell antibodies (AVPcAbs) and post-pituitary function in two young women with a positive history of autoimmune disease and presence of AVPcAbs, but without clinical CDI, and who became pregnant 5 and 7 months after our first observation. The behaviour of post-pituitary function and AVPcAbs (by immunofluorescence) was evaluated at baseline, during pregnancy and for 2 years after delivery. AVPcAbs, present at low/middle titres at baseline in both patients, showed a titre increase during pregnancy in one patient and after delivery in the other patient, with development of clinically overt CDI. Therapy with 1-deamino-8-d-arginine vasopressin (DDAVP) caused a prompt clinical remission. After a first unsuccessful attempt of withdrawal, the therapy was definitively stopped at the 6th and the 7th month ofpost partumperiod respectively, when AVPcAbs disappeared, accompanied by post-pituitary function recovery, persisting until the end of the follow-up. The determination of AVPcAbs is advisable in patients with autoimmune diseases planning their pregnancy, because they could be considered good predictive markers of gestational orpost partumautoimmune CDI. The monitoring of AVPcAb titres and post-pituitary function during pregnancy in these patients may allow for an early diagnosis and an early replacement therapy, which could induce the disappearance of these antibodies with consequent complete remission of CDI.
- Published
- 2014
84. Lymphocytic hypophysitis: a rare or underestimated disease?
- Author
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Antonio Agostino Sinisi, Antonio Bizzarro, Antonio Bellastella, Giuseppe Bellastella, Annamaria De Bellis, Concetta Coronella, Bellastella, A, Bizzarro, Antonio, Coronella, C, Bellastella, Giuseppe, Sinisi, Antonio Agostino, and DE BELLIS, Annamaria
- Subjects
Pituitary gland ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Hypophysitis ,Pituitary Diseases ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Spontaneous remission ,Autoimmune Diseases ,Endocrinology ,Internal medicine ,Biopsy ,medicine ,Humans ,Endocrine system ,Lymphocytes ,Depression (differential diagnoses) ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Pituitary Gland ,Autoimmune hypophysitis ,Optic chiasma ,business - Abstract
Lymphocytic hypophysitis (LYH) is an uncommon autoimmune disease in which the pituitary gland is infiltrated by lymphocytes, plasma cells and macrophages and its function is usually impaired. It has to be suspected in pregnant women and in women with recent delivery presenting with hyperprolactinemia, headache, visual field alterations and changes of one or more pituitary hormone secretions with secondary impairment of related peripheral target glands, especially when associated with other autoimmune endocrine or non-endocrine disorders. It can also occur less frequently in prepubertal or post-menopausal women and in men. Headache, visual field impairment and more rarely diplopia are due to extrasellar pituitary enlargement with optic chiasma compression and/or to invasion of cavernous sinuses. Among the 'isolated' pituitary hormone deficiencies, ACTH deficit is usually the earliest and most frequent hormonal impairment and in rare cases can induce an acute secondary hyposurrenalism as the first sign of the disease, with high mortality in affected patients. Histopathological findings from pituitary biopsy show lymphoplasmacytic infiltrate with lymphoid aggregates surrounding atropic acini of pituitary cells; immunohistochemical analysis shows numerous mast cells randomly distributed and also localized in the vicinity of capillaries, suggesting a possible influence on capillary permeability and angiogenesis, thus favoring the inflammatory and immunological aggression against pituitary cells. Nuclear magnetic resonance imaging shows uniform sellar floor depression and an extrasellar symmetrical pituitary enlargement, usually displacing the optic chiasma, which shows a rapid homogeneous enhancement after gadolinium also involving the adjacent dura (dural tail). Antipituitary antibodies have been detected in several patients with LYH but their role needs to be clarified. Since a possible spontaneous remission can occur, a careful follow-up is required in subclinical patients without important hyposurrenalism or symptomatic extrasellar expansion. Medical (immunosuppressive, replacement and antiprolactinemic) and neurosurgical (decompression) treatments are needed in clinical symptomatic patients.
- Published
- 2003
85. Antipituitary Antibodies in Adults with Apparently Idiopathic Growth Hormone Deficiency and in Adults with Autoimmune Endocrine Diseases
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Concetta Coronella, A. M. Sinisi, Stefano Solimeno, Antonio Bellastella, Antonio Bizzarro, Luisa Anna Stile, Annamaria De Bellis, Marisa Conte, G. Pisano, Silvia Perrino, DE BELLIS, Annamaria, Bizzarro, Antonio, Conte, M, Perrino, S, Coronella, C, Solimeno, S, Sinisi, Am, Stile, La, Pisano, G, and Bellastella, A.
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pituitary gland ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,education ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Hypoglycemia ,Biochemistry ,Autoimmune Diseases ,Endocrinology ,Seroepidemiologic Studies ,Immunopathology ,Internal medicine ,mental disorders ,Humans ,Medicine ,Endocrine system ,Autoantibodies ,Autoimmune disease ,Human Growth Hormone ,business.industry ,Biochemistry (medical) ,Insulin tolerance test ,medicine.disease ,Growth hormone secretion ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Pituitary Gland ,Autoimmune hypophysitis ,Female ,business ,psychological phenomena and processes - Abstract
The role of antipituitary antibodies (APA) in autoimmune pituitary diseases still needs to be clarified. The aim of this study was 2-fold: first, to investigate the presence of APA in adults with idiopathic or acquired GH deficiency (GHD) and in adults with autoimmune endocrine diseases; and second, to evaluate whether in autoimmune endocrine patients APA titer is correlated to the pituitary function and particularly to GH secretion. We studied 12 adults with isolated and apparently idiopathic GHD who were treated with recombinant GH in childhood (group 1a), 14 patients with adult GHD secondary to surgery for pituitary and parasellar tumors (group 1b), and 180 patients with organ-specific autoimmune diseases (group 2). APA were evaluated by indirect immunofluorescence. In all APA-positive patients and in 20 APA-negative patients of group 2, GH secretion was investigated by testing its response to insulin-induced hypoglycemia (insulin tolerance test) and, when impaired, also to arginine. APA were found (at high titers) in 4 of 12 patients of group 1a (33.3%) but were absent in all patients in group 1b. APA were also found in 40 of 180 patients of group 2 (22.2%), 35 of them at low titers (group 2a) and 5 at high titers (group 2b). Twenty of the 140 autoimmune endocrine APA-negative patients studied (group 2c) and all APA-positive patients at low titers (group 2a) had normal pituitary function. Conversely, all APA-positive patients at high titers (groups 1a and 2b) had a severe isolated GHD. An inverse correlation between APA titers and GH peak serum response to insulin tolerance test in autoimmune endocrine patients was observed. Our results suggest that APA, when detected at high titers, may be considered a good diagnostic tool to highlight the possible occurrence of GHD in adults with autoimmune endocrine diseases. Moreover, they may indicate an autoimmune pituitary involvement in adults with apparently idiopathic GHD, suggesting that the prevalence of autoimmune GHD is much higher than that so far considered.
- Published
- 2003
86. Longitudinal Study of Vasopressin-Cell Antibodies and of Hypothalamic-Pituitary Region on Magnetic Resonance Imaging in Patients with Autoimmune and Idiopathic Complete Central Diabetes Insipidus
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Concetta Coronella, G. Lombardi, A. Colao, Antonio Bellastella, Stefano Solimeno, Rosario Pivonello, Antonio Bizzarro, G. Pisano, F. Di Salle, A. De Bellis, A. Vetrano, DE BELLIS, Annamaria, Colao, A, Bizzarro, Antonio, DI SALLE, F, Coronella, C, Solimeno, S, Vetrano, A, Pivonello, R, Pisano, G, Lombardi, G, Bellastella, A., A., De Belli, Colao, Annamaria, A., Bizzarro, F., Di Salle, C., Coronella, S., Solimeno, A., Vetrano, Pivonello, Rosario, G., Pisano, Lombardi, Gaetano, and A., Bellastella
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Hypothalamo-Hypophyseal System ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pituitary gland ,Vasopressins ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Neurogenic ,vasopressin-cell antibodie ,medicine.disease_cause ,Biochemistry ,Autoimmunity ,immunology ,hypothalamic-pituitary region ,Autoimmune Diseases of the Nervous System ,Endocrinology ,Internal medicine ,Biopsy ,medicine ,Humans ,Longitudinal Studies ,Autoantibodies ,Autoimmune disease ,Pituitary stalk ,Adult, Autoantibodies ,immunology, Autoimmune Diseases of the Nervous System ,immunology/pathology, Diabetes Insipidus ,immunology/pathology, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Hypothalamo-Hypophyseal System ,immunology/pathology, Immunoglobulin G ,immunology, Longitudinal Studies, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Middle Aged, Vasopressins ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Biochemistry (medical) ,Autoantibody ,autoimmune complete central diabetes insipidus ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Diabetes Insipidus, Neurogenic ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Immunoglobulin G ,Diabetes insipidus ,immunology/pathology ,Female ,business ,Diabetes Insipidus ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
Diagnosis of autoimmune central diabetes insipidus (CDI) is based on the presence of autoantibodies to AVP-secreting cells (AVPcAb) or the coexistence of other autoimmune polyendocrine syndromes; moreover, it can be also suggested by the presence of lymphocytic infundibulo-neurohypophysitis, evidenced by biopsy of pituitary stalk and/or by pituitary stalk thickening on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). However, so far, in clinical CDI patients with lymphocytic infundibulo-neurohypophysitis, AVPcAb have not been investigated and in those with or without autoimmune polyendocrine syndromes (APS), longitudinal studies on the behavior of AVPcAb alone, or of both AVPcAb and hypothalamic pituitary imaging on MRI are lacking. Aim of this work was to investigate in these patients the occurrence of AVPcAb (by indirect immunofluorescence) and of pituitary stalk thickening (by MRI) and their longitudinal changes during a follow-up period. We studied 22 patients, aged 29-53, with APS and complete CDI, grouped as follows: 10 with recent onset (< or =1.5 yr) of CDI (group 1a) and 12 with CDI of long-term duration (> or = 7 yr) (group 1b); moreover, a group of 13 patients with apparent idiopathic CDI of recent onset (
- Published
- 2002
87. Diagnostic evaluation of a patient with suspected Cushing’s Syndrome and hyperandrogenism: metabolic and clinical aspects for a correct differential diagnosis
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Annamaria DE BELLIS, Dello Iacovo, A., Colella, C., Lucci, E., Barrasso, M., Accardo, G., Pasquali, D., Amoresano Paglionico, V., Iorio, S., Bellastella, G., Docimo, G., Conzo, G., Bizzarro, A., DE BELLIS, Annamaria, Dello Iacovo, A., Colella, C., Lucci, E., Barrasso, M., Accardo, G., Pasquali, Daniela, AMORESANO PAGLIONICO, Vanda, Iorio, S., Bellastella, Giuseppe, Docimo, Giovanni, Conzo, Giovanni, and Bizzarro, Antonio
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Hirsutism - Androgens - Adrenocortical carcinoma - Abstract
85-89 Adrenal tumors are tumors in which the oncological aspect (adenoma or carcinoma) can be associated with an endocrinological component responsible for a specific clinical syndrome (Cushing’s Syndrome, Conn’s disease or androgenic hypersecretion). We describe the diagnostic evaluation of a 65 years old woman with hirsutism and high serum level of androgens. The evaluation of this case needed the determination of serum adrenal androgens, abdominal ultrasonography, computerized tomography (CT) before and after contrast, a total body positron emission tomography (PET) with 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) and the evaluation of different tumoral markers. The CT evidenced the presence of a large mass (9X6 cm) in the right adrenal. This mass had not a clear distinction from the I, VI and VII hepatic segment, infiltrated the inferior cava and the renal vein of the same side; this lesion presented an important and disomogeneous uptake of constrast. PET confirmed a disomogeneous uptake of FDG. Hormonal evaluation showed very high level of testosterone, androstenedione, dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate and free urinary cortisol. The patient underwent adrenalectomy and ipslateral nephrectomy. The histological examination con- firmed the suspicion of adrenal carcinoma. The appearance of hirsutism, toghether with high levels of androgens can be considered a marker of an androgen-secreting tumor. For this reason, a correct diagnostic evaluation has to investigate the adrenal function with the aim of a precocious diagnosis and treatment of this tumor sometimes highly aggressive.
- Published
- 2014
88. Light, blindness and endocrine secretions
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T. Criscuolo, A. A. Sinisi, Giovanni Amato, A. De Bellis, Antonio Bellastella, A. Bizzarro, Carlo Carella, S. Iorio, G. Pisano, V. I. Muccitelli, Bellastella, A, Amato, G, Bizzarro, Antonio, Carella, C, Criscuolo, T, Iorio, S, Muccitelli, Vi, Pisano, G, Sinisi, Antonio Agostino, and DE BELLIS, Annamaria
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Male ,Light ,Blindness ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Gh igf axis ,Pineal hormone ,Biology ,medicine.disease ,Pineal Gland ,Hormones ,Endocrine secretion ,Circadian Rhythm ,Endocrinology ,Pituitary Gland ,Immunology ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Endocrine system ,Female ,Gonads ,Gonadal hormones ,Melatonin - Published
- 1999
89. A five year prospective investigation of anterior pituitary function after traumatic brain injury: is hypopituitarism long-term after head trauma associated with autoimmunity?
- Author
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Fahrettin Kelestimur, Halil Ulutabanca, Annamaria De Bellis, Liliana Dalla Mora, Fatih Tanriverdi, Kursad Unluhizarci, Felipe F. Casanueva, Giuseppe Bellastella, A. Selcuklu, Vanda Amoresano Paglionico, Antonio Bizzarro, Antonio Agostino Sinisi, Tanriverdi, F, DE BELLIS, Annamaria, Ulutabanca, H, Bizzarro, Antonio, Sinisi, Antonio Agostino, Bellastella, Giuseppe, AMORESANO PAGLIONICO, Vanda, DALLA MORA, Liliana, Selcuklu, A, Unluhizarci, K, Casanueva, Ff, and Kelestimur, F.
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pediatrics ,Pituitary gland ,Time Factors ,Adolescent ,Traumatic brain injury ,Hypopituitarism ,Head trauma ,Autoimmune Diseases ,Young Adult ,Anterior pituitary ,Pituitary Gland, Anterior ,Internal medicine ,Medicine ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,Young adult ,Prospective cohort study ,business.industry ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,nervous system diseases ,Natural history ,Endocrinology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,nervous system ,Brain Injuries ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
Traumatic brain injury (TBI) has been recently recognized as a common cause of pituitary dysfunction. However, there are not sufficient numbers of prospective studies to understand the natural history of TBI induced hypopituitarism. The aim was to report the results of five years' prospective follow-up of anterior pituitary function in patients with mild, moderate and severe TBI. Moreover, we have prospectively investigated the associations between TBI induced hypopituitarism and presence of anti-hypothalamus antibodies (AHA) and anti-pituitary antibodies (APA). Twenty five patients (20 men, five women) were included who were prospectively evaluated 12 months and five years after TBI, and 17 of them also had a third-year evaluation. Growth hormone (GH) deficiency is the most common pituitary hormone deficit at one, three, and five years after TBI. Although most of the pituitary hormone deficiencies improve over time, there were substantial percentages of pituitary hormone deficiencies at the fifth year (28% GH, 4% adrenocorticotropic hormone [ACTH], and 4% gonadotropin deficiencies). Pituitary dysfunction was significantly higher in strongly AHA- and APA-positive (titers ≥1/16) patients at the fifth year. In patients with mild and moderate TBI, ACTH and GH deficiencies may improve over time in a considerable number of patients but, although rarely, may also worsen over the five-year period. However in severe TBI, ACTH and GH status of the patients at the first year evaluation persisted at the fifth year. Therefore, screening pituitary function after TBI for five years is important, especially in patients with mild TBI. Moreover, close strong associations between the presence of high titers of APA and/or AHA and hypopituitarism at the fifth year were shown for the first time.
- Published
- 2013
90. Late primary autoimmune hypothyroidism in a patient with postdelivery autoimmune hypopituitarism associated with antibodies to growth hormone and prolactin-secreting cells
- Author
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Emma Lucci, Antonio Bizzarro, Giuseppe Bellastella, Annamaria De Bellis, Caterina Colella, Ian Holdaway, Antonio Agostino Sinisi, DE BELLIS, Annamaria, Colella, C, Bellastella, Giuseppe, Lucci, E, Sinisi, Aa, Bizzarro, Antonio, and Holdaway, I.
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Adult ,endocrine system ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.drug_class ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Pituitary Diseases ,Hypopituitarism ,Hashimoto Disease ,Lactation Disorders ,Hypoglycemia ,Basal (phylogenetics) ,Endocrinology ,Pregnancy ,Internal medicine ,Medicine ,Humans ,Family history ,Inflammation ,business.industry ,Human Growth Hormone ,Genetic Diseases, Inborn ,Thyroiditis, Autoimmune ,medicine.disease ,Prolactin ,Pituitary Gland ,Female ,Gonadotropin ,Thyroid function ,business ,hormones, hormone substitutes, and hormone antagonists - Abstract
Pituitary and thyroid autoimmunity can be triggered by pregnancy. We report the first association of combined growth hormone (GH) and prolactin secretion deficiency due to autoimmune damage to GH- and prolactin-secreting cells in a patient with postdelivery lactation failure, presenting subsequently with primary autoimmune hypothyroidism.A 34-year-old woman presented with lactation failure following the delivery of her first child. She had a family history of hypothyroidism without a history of pituitary dysfunction. Physical examination did not show any abnormal findings. Laboratory investigations showed normal gonadotropin levels after the restoration of normal menstrual cycles following pregnancy, normal basal and stimulated cortisol levels, but an impaired GH response to insulin-induced hypoglycemia, and low basal prolactin and insulin-like growth factor-1 concentrations. Thyroid function was normal when initially investigated three months after delivery, but five months later, marked primary hypothyroidism (thyrotropin levels100 mIU/L) occurred. Immunological investigation revealed the presence of antipituitary antibodies, identified by double immunofluorescence and targeting GH- and prolactin-secreting cells. Antithyroid antibodies, in the normal range three months postpartum, became significantly elevated when the hypothyroidism appeared. Autoimmune hypophysitis is responsible for selective or multiple pituitary-hormone deficiencies, sometimes involving thyrotropin secretion and causing secondary hypothyroidism, but usually associated with hyperprolactinemia. To our knowledge, this is the first observation of autoimmune hypopituitarism involving deficient growth hormone and prolactin secretion in a patient with lactation failure after delivery, subsequently followed by severe primary autoimmune hypothyroidism, thus falling into an unusual constellation of autoimmune polyendocrine syndrome type 3.Considering the well-known relationship between pregnancy and autoimmunity, an early postdelivery immunological and functional investigation in women presenting with disorders of lactation may be useful to detect potential pituitary and thyroid dysfunction even at a subclinical stage.
- Published
- 2013
91. Soluble CD8 antigen, stimulated C-peptide and islet cell antibodies are predictors of insulin requirement in newly diagnosed patients with unclassifiable diabetes
- Author
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P. Di Bonito, Antonio Bizzarro, A. De Bellis, E. Pace, S. Turco, Brunella Capaldo, G. Corigliano, DI BONITO, P, DE BELLIS, Annamaria, Capaldo, B, Turco, S, Corigliano, C, Pace, E, Bizzarro, Antonio, DE BELLIS, A, Capaldo, Brunella, Corigliano, G, and Bizzarro, A.
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,CD8 Antigens ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Body Mass Index ,Islets of Langerhans ,Basal (phylogenetics) ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,HLA-DR3 Antigen ,Endocrinology ,Antigen ,Antigens, CD ,Predictive Value of Tests ,Internal medicine ,Diabetes mellitus ,Diabetes Mellitus ,Internal Medicine ,Humans ,Insulin ,Medicine ,Prospective Studies ,Child ,Autoantibodies ,Glycated Hemoglobin ,geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,C-Peptide ,biology ,business.industry ,C-peptide ,Histocompatibility Testing ,Autoantibody ,General Medicine ,Glucose Tolerance Test ,Glucagon ,Islet ,medicine.disease ,Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1 ,chemistry ,biology.protein ,Female ,Antibody ,business ,Biomarkers - Abstract
To evaluate the predictive factors of insulin requirement in newly diagnosed patients with unclassifiable diabetes, 54 consecutive patients, aged less than 35 years, were prospectively followed for 3 years or more. At entry, haemoglobin HbA1c, basal and stimulated C-peptide concentrations, HLA phenotype, islet cell antibodies (ICA) status, and serum levels of soluble CD8 antigen (sCD8) were evaluated. After a median time of 9 (range 2-32) months, 31 patients (group 1) required insulin therapy, whereas 23 patients (group 2) remained non-insulin-requiring after 36 months. Group 1 patients were younger (P0.05) and had higher HbA1c and sCD8 serum levels (P0.0001), respectively), a higher frequency of ICA positivity and of HLA DR3 and/or DR4 phenotype (P0.005 and P0.0001, respectively), and lower C-peptide concentrations (P0.005 and P0.0001, basal and stimulated, respectively) than group 2. The sensitivity, specificity, positive and negative predictive value, and overall accuracy for the subsequent insulin requirement were: sCD8 serum levels (737 U/ml), 100%, 65%, 79%, 100% and 85%, respectively; stimulated C-peptide (0.60 nmol/l), 71%, 96%, 96%, 74% and 81%, respectively; and ICA positivity (20 JDFU), 45%, 91%, 87%, 55% and 65%, respectively. Thus, higher sCD8 serum levels, low stimulated C-peptide concentrations and ICA positivity are the most powerful predictors of subsequent recourse to insulin therapy in young, newly detected patients with unclassifiable diabetes.
- Published
- 1996
92. Time course of Graves' ophthalmopathy after total thyroidectomy alone or followed by radioiodine therapy: a 2-year longitudinal study
- Author
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Antonio Bellastella, Giuseppe Bellastella, Antonio Agostino Sinisi, Antonio Bizzarro, Caterina Colella, Assunta Dello Iacovo, Vanda Amoresano Paglionico, Gilda Cennamo, Jack R. Wall, Giovanni Conzo, Annamaria De Bellis, Elena Pane, De Bellis, A, Conzo, G, Cennamo, Gilda, Pane, E, Bellastella, G, Colella, C, Iacovo, Ad, Paglionico, Va, Sinisi, Aa, Wall, Jr, Bizzarro, A, Bellastella, A., DE BELLIS, Annamaria, Conzo, Giovanni, Cennamo, G., Pane, E., Bellastella, Giuseppe, Colella, C., Dello Iacovo, A., AMORESANO PAGLIONICO, Vanda, Sinisi, A. A., Wall, J. R., and Bizzarro, Antonio
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Adult ,Male ,endocrine system ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Goiter ,endocrine system diseases ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Antineoplastic Agents ,Trab ,Hyperthyroidism ,Severity of Illness Index ,Gastroenterology ,Iodine Radioisotopes ,Graves' ophthalmopathy ,Endocrinology ,Antithyroid Agents ,Internal medicine ,Severity of illness ,Diplopia ,Secondary Prevention ,medicine ,Exophthalmos ,Humans ,Euthyroid ,Longitudinal Studies ,Thyroid Neoplasms ,Eye Proteins ,Thyroid cancer ,Autoantibodies ,business.industry ,Ocular parameter ,Thyroid ,Thyroidectomy ,Membrane Proteins ,Receptors, Thyrotropin ,medicine.disease ,Combined Modality Therapy ,Surgery ,Graves Ophthalmopathy ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Female ,Radiopharmaceuticals ,business - Abstract
The findings in hyperthyroid patients with Graves' orbitopathy (GO) of antibodies against antigens shared between the thyroid and orbit, such as the TSH-receptor (TRAb) and a novel protein G2s (G2sAb), suggested a possible common therapeutic strategy. However, the gold therapeutic standard for hyperthyrodism in these patients remains still unsettled and is mainly based on personal experience. Studies on the effect of total thyroidectomy (TT) alone or followed by radioiodine ablation (RAI) of thyroid remnants showed often conflicting results. This longitudinal study was aimed at evaluating the influence of TT alone or followed by post-surgical RAI with respect to methimazole treatment on the activity and severity of GO in patients with hyperthyroidism and GO. Sixty consecutive patients with Graves' disease and mild/moderate GO were studied and grouped as follows: group 1, including 25 patients (16F, 9M) undergoing TT alone; group 2, including 10 patients (8F, 2M) undergoing TT followed by RAI for histological evidence of differentiated thyroid cancer; group 3, including 25 patients (18F, 7M) euthyroid under methimazole therapy, studied as controls. Clinical study of ophthalmopathy and measurements of TRAb and G2sAb were performed in all patients at start of the study (time of TT for group 1 and RAI after TT for group 2 and of the first finding of euthyroidism under methimazole treatment for group 3) and after 6, 12, 24 months. Patients of both groups 1 and 2 showed an early significant decrease and a further progressive reduction of the activity and severity of GO with a disappearance of TRAb and a decrease of G2sAb levels during the follow-up, without statistically significant differences between the two groups. Patients in group 3 showed a much later and less marked improvement of GO with persistence of TRAb and G2sAb positivity, even if with reduction of TRAb levels at 12 and 24 months. Our results suggest that in Graves' patients with large goiter or relapse of hyperthyroidism and mild/moderate GO, TT alone could be an advisable choice to treat hyperthyroidism also improving GO with reduction of cost/benefit ratio.
- Published
- 2012
93. INVOLVEMENT OF HYPOTHALAMUS AUTOIMMUNITY IN PATIENTS WITH AUTOIMMUNE HYPOPITUITARISM: ROLE OF ANTIBODIES TO HYPOTHALAMIC CELLS
- Author
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De Bellis, A, Sinisi, Aa, Pane, E, Dello Iacovo, A, Bellastella, G, Di Scala, G, Falorni, A, Giavoli, C, Gasco, V, Giordano, R, Ambrosio, Mr, Colao, A, Bizzarro, A, Bellastella, A, Italian Autoimmune Hypophysitis Network Group Arvat, E, Beck Peccoz, P, Betterle, C, Cannavo', Salvatore, Chiovato, L, Delvecchio, M, De Marinis, L, Degli Uberti, E, Ghigo, E, Maghnie, M, Mantero, F, Persani, L, Rotondi, M, Spada, A, Zatelli, M. C., DE BELLIS, Annamaria, Sinisi, Aa, Pane, E, Dello Iacovo, A, Bellastella, Giuseppe, Di Scala, G, Falorni, A, Giavoli, C, Gasco, V, Giordano, R, Ambrosio, Mr, Colao, A, Bizzarro, Antonio, and Bellastella, A.
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,anticorpi anti-ipotalamo ,Corticotropin-Releasing Hormone ,Hypophysitis ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Context (language use) ,Hypopituitarism ,Immunofluorescence ,medicine.disease_cause ,Biochemistry ,Autoimmune Diseases ,sindrome poliendocrina autoimmune ,Autoimmunity ,NO ,Cohort Studies ,Anticorpi anti-ipofisi ,Endocrinology ,Adrenocorticotropic Hormone ,Antibody Specificity ,Seroepidemiologic Studies ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,antibodies ,hypothalamus ,health care economics and organizations ,Autoantibodies ,diabete insipido centrale ,Subclinical infection ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Human Growth Hormone ,business.industry ,Biochemistry (medical) ,medicine.disease ,hypophysitis ,Diabetes Insipidus, Neurogenic ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Diabetes insipidus ,Immunology ,Autoimmune hypophysitis ,Female ,business - Abstract
Antipituitary antibodies (APA) but not antihypothalamus antibodies (AHA) are usually searched for in autoimmune hypopituitarism.Our objective was to search for AHA and characterize their hypothalamic target in patients with autoimmune hypopituitarism to clarify, on the basis of the cells stained by these antibodies, the occurrence of autoimmune subclinical/clinical central diabetes insipidus (CDI) and/or possible joint hypothalamic contribution to their hypopituitarism.We conducted a cross-sectional cohort study.Ninety-five APA-positive patients with autoimmune hypopituitarism, 60 without (group 1) and 35 with (group 2) lymphocytic hypophysitis, were studied in comparison with 20 patients with postsurgical hypopituitarism and 50 normal subjects.AHA by immunofluorescence and posterior pituitary function were evaluated; then AHA-positive sera were retested by double immunofluorescence to identify the hypothalamic cells targeted by AHA.AHA were detected at high titer in 12 patients in group 1 and in eight patients in group 2. They immunostained arginine vasopressin (AVP)-secreting cells in nine of 12 in group 1 and in four of eight in group 2. All AVP cell antibody-positive patients presented with subclinical/clinical CDI; in contrast, four patients with GH/ACTH deficiency but with APA staining only GH-secreting cells showed AHA targeting CRH- secreting cells.The occurrence of CDI in patients with lymphocytic hypophysitis seems due to an autoimmune hypothalamic involvement rather than an expansion of the pituitary inflammatory process. To search for AVP antibody in these patients may help to identify those of them prone to develop an autoimmune CDI. The detection of AHA targeting CRH-secreting cells in some patients with GH/ACTH deficiency but with APA targeting only GH-secreting cells indicates that an autoimmune aggression to hypothalamus is jointly responsible for their hypopituitarism.
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- 2012
94. Investigation of antihypothalamus and antipituitary antibodies in amateur boxers: is chronic repetitive head trauma-induced pituitary dysfunction associated with autoimmunity?
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Felipe F. Casanueva, Fatih Tanriverdi, Antonio Agostino Sinisi, Marina Battaglia, Fahrettin Kelestimur, Antonio Bellastella, Annamaria De Bellis, Kursad Unluhizarci, Antonio Bizzarro, Ahmet Selcuklu, Giuseppe Bellastella, Tanriverdi, F, DE BELLIS, Annamaria, Battaglia, M, Bellastella, Giuseppe, Bizzarro, Antonio, Sinisi, A, Bellastella, A, Unluhizarci, K, Selcuklu, A, Casanueva, F, and Kelestimur, F.
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Traumatic brain injury ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Hypothalamus ,Poison control ,Autoimmunity ,Hypopituitarism ,medicine.disease_cause ,Head trauma ,Pathogenesis ,Endocrinology ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Craniocerebral Trauma ,Humans ,Autoantibodies ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,Odds ratio ,Boxing ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Brain Injuries ,Pituitary Gland ,Pituitary dysfunction ,business ,human activities - Abstract
ObjectiveCurrent data clearly demonstrate that sports-related chronic repetitive head trauma due to boxing might result in hypopituitarism. However, the mechanism of sports-related traumatic brain injury-induced pituitary dysfunction is still unclear. In order to understand whether autoimmune mechanisms could play a role in the pituitary dysfunction due to sports-related head trauma, we investigated the presence of antipituitary antibodies (APAs) and antihypothalamus antibodies (AHAs) in amateur boxers.Patients and designSixty-one actively competing (n=44) or retired (n=17) male boxers (mean age, 26 years; range, 17–53) who had been evaluated regarding pituitary functions previously were included in the study. In all boxers and in 60 age/sex-similar normal controls, AHAs and APAs were investigated by an indirect immunofluorescence method.ResultsAHAs were detected in 13 of 61 boxers (21.3%), and APAs were detected in 14 of 61 boxers (22.9%), but in none of the normal controls. Pituitary dysfunction was significantly higher in AHA-positive boxers (46.2%) than in AHA-negative boxers (10.4%) (P=0.003). There was a significant association between AHA positivity and hypopituitarism due to boxing (odds ratio: 7.37, 95% confidence interval 1.8–30.8). There was no significant association between APA positivity and hypopituitarism.ConclusionsThis study demonstrates for the first time the presence of AHAs and APAs in boxers who were exposed to sports-related head trauma. Moreover, the present investigation provides preliminary evidence that AHAs are associated with the development of pituitary dysfunction in boxers, thus suggesting that autoimmunity may have a role in the pathogenesis.
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- 2010
95. Predictive role of the immunostaining pattern of immunofluorescence and the titers of antipituitary antibodies at presentation for the occurrence of autoimmune hypopituitarism in patients with autoimmune polyendocrine syndromes over a five-year follow-up
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Bellastella, G, Rotondi, M, Pane, E, Dello Iacovo, A, Pirali, B, Dalla Mora, L, Falorni, A, Sinisi, Aa, Bizzarro, A, Colao, A, Chiovato, L, De Bellis, A, Italian Autoimmune Hypophysitis Network Study, Ambrosio, Mr, Arvat, E, Beck Peccoz, P, Betterle, C, Cannavo', Salvatore, Degli Uberti, E, Giordano, R, Ghigo, E, Lombardi, G, Maghnie, M, Mantero, F, Persani, L, Spada, A, Santeusanio, F, Delvecchio, M., Bellastella, G., Rotondi, M., Pane, E., Dello Iacovo, A., Pirali, B., Dalla Mora, L., Falorni, A., Sinisi, ANTONIO AGOSTINO, Bizzarro, Antonio, Colao, Annamaria, Chiovato, L., DE BELLIS, Annamaria, Italian AutoimmuneHypophysitis Network, S. t. u. d. y., Bellastella, G, Rotondi, M, Pane, E, DELLO IACOVO, A, Pirali, B, DALLA MORA, L, Falorni, A, Sinisi, Aa, Bizzarro, A, Colao, A, Chiovato, L, DE BELLIS, A, Ambrosio, Mr, Arvat, E, BECK-PECOZ, P, Betterle, C, Cannavò, S, DEGLI UBERTI, E, Giordano, R, Ghigo, E, Lombardi, G, Maghnie, M, Mantero, F, Persani, L, Spada, A, Santeusanio, F, and DEL VECCHIO, M.
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,education ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Fluorescent Antibody Technique ,Context (language use) ,Hypopituitarism ,Immunofluorescence ,medicine.disease_cause ,Biochemistry ,Statistics, Nonparametric ,antipituitary antibodie ,NO ,Autoimmunity ,Endocrinology ,Anterior pituitary ,autoimmune hypopituitarism ,Pituitary Gland, Anterior ,Predictive Value of Tests ,Internal medicine ,mental disorders ,medicine ,Humans ,Polyendocrinopathies, Autoimmune ,Autoantibodies ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,biology ,business.industry ,polyendocrine syndrome ,Biochemistry (medical) ,medicine.disease ,antipituitary antibodies ,autoimmune polyendocrine syndromes ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,hypopituitarism ,Autoimmune polyendocrine syndrome ,immunofluorescence, antipituitary antibodies, poly-endocrine syndrome ,biology.protein ,Regression Analysis ,Female ,Antibody ,business ,Immunostaining ,psychological phenomena and processes - Abstract
CONTEXT: Antipituitary antibodies (APA) are frequently present in patients with autoimmune polyendocrine syndrome (APS). DESIGN: The aim was to evaluate the predictive value of APA for the occurrence of hypopituitarism. A total of 149 APA-positive and 50 APA-negative patients with APS and normal pituitary function were longitudinally studied for 5 yr. METHODS: APA, by indirect immunofluorescence, and anterior pituitary function were assessed yearly in all patients. The risk for developing autoimmune pituitary dysfunction was calculated using survival and multivariate analysis. RESULTS: Hypopituitarism occurred in 28 of 149 (18.8%) APA-positive patients but in none of the 50 APA-negative patients. The immunostaining pattern in APA-positive patients involved either isolated pituitary cells [type 1 pattern; n=99 (66.4%)] or all pituitary cells [type 2 pattern; n=50 (33.6%)]. All patients developing pituitary dysfunction throughout the study span had a type 1 pattern. Kaplan-Meier curves for cumulative survival showed a significantly higher rate for developing hypopituitarism in relation to positive APA tests (P
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- 2010
96. Antipituitary antibodies after traumatic brain injury: is head trauma-induced pituitary dysfunction associated with autoimmunity?
- Author
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Fatih Tanriverdi, Kursad Unluhizarci, Antonio Bizzarro, Felipe F. Casanueva, Elena Pane, Fahrettin Kelestimur, Antonio Bellastella, Annamaria De Bellis, Antonio Agostino Sinisi, Ahmet Selcuklu, Giuseppe Bellastella, Tanriverdi, F, DE BELLIS, Annamaria, Bizzarro, Antonio, Sinisi, Antonio Agostino, Bellastella, Giuseppe, Pane, E, Bellastella, A, Unluhizarci, K, Selcuklu, A, Casanueva, Ff, and Kelestimur, F.
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Adult ,Male ,Pituitary gland ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Traumatic brain injury ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Thyrotropin ,Autoimmunity ,Hypopituitarism ,medicine.disease_cause ,Head trauma ,Endocrinology ,Adrenocorticotropic Hormone ,Internal medicine ,mental disorders ,medicine ,Odds Ratio ,Humans ,Testosterone ,Autoantibodies ,Chi-Square Distribution ,Estradiol ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,Odds ratio ,medicine.disease ,nervous system diseases ,Prolactin ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,nervous system ,Brain Injuries ,Pituitary Gland ,Female ,Animal studies ,business ,Chi-squared distribution ,psychological phenomena and processes ,Gonadotropins - Abstract
ObjectiveTraumatic brain injury (TBI) is a devastating public health problem that may result in hypopituitarism. However, the mechanisms responsible for hypothalamic–pituitary dysfunction due to TBI are still unclear. Although the antibodies against neurons have been demonstrated in injured animal studies, investigations regarding the occurrence of antipituitary antibodies (APAs) in patients with TBI are lacking in the literature. In order to investigate whether autoimmune mechanisms could play a role in the pituitary dysfunction after TBI, we have planned this study aimed at investigating the presence of APA at the third year of TBI and association between the TBI-induced hypopituitarism and APA.Patients and designTwenty-nine (25 males and 4 females; age 36.5±2.3 years) patients who had completed a 3-year follow-up after TBI were included in the present study. APA and pituitary function were evaluated in all the patients 3 years after TBI; moreover, APAs were tested also in sera of 60 age-/sex-matched normal controls. The APAs were investigated by an indirect immunofluorescence method.ResultsAPAs were detected in 13 out of the 29 TBI patients (44.8%), but in none of the normal controls. Pituitary dysfunction development ratio was significantly higher in APA-positive patients (46.2%) when compared with APA-negative ones (12.5%; P=0.04). There was a significant association between APA positivity and hypopituitarism due to TBI (odds ratio: 2.25, 95% confidence intervals 1.1–4.6). Moreover, there was a significant positive correlation (r=0.74, P=0.004) between APA titer ratio and peak GH response to GHRH+GH related peptide (GHRP)-6 test, suggesting that high APA titers were associated with low GH response to GHRH+GHRP-6 test.ConclusionsThis study shows for the first time the presence of the APA in TBI patients 3 years after head trauma. Moreover, present investigation indicates preliminary evidence that APA may be associated with the development of TBI-induced pituitary dysfunction, thus suggesting that autoimmunity may contribute in the development of TBI-induced hypopituitarism. The presence of the association between APA and TBI-induced hypopituitarism may provide a new point of view in this field and promote further clinical and experimental studies.
- Published
- 2008
97. Anti-hypothalamus and anti-pituitary antibodies may contribute to perpetuate the hypopituitarism in patients with Sheehan's syndrome
- Author
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Antonio Bizzarro, Gilda Tirelli, Giuseppe Ruocco, Antonio Bellastella, Annamaria De Bellis, Antonio Agostino Sinisi, Giuseppe Bellastella, Fahrettin Kelestimur, Marina Battaglia, Fatih Tanriverdi, Giovanni Conzo, Kursad Unluhizarci, DE BELLIS, Annamaria, Kelestimur, F., Sinisi, Antonio Agostino, Ruocco, G., Tirelli, G., Battaglia, M., Bellastella, Giuseppe, Conzo, Giovanni, Tanriverdi, F., Unluhizarci, K., Bizzarro, Antonio, and Bellastella, A.
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Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pituitary gland ,Vasopressin ,Time Factors ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Hypothalamus ,Fluorescent Antibody Technique ,Autoimmunity ,Hypopituitarism ,Autoimmunity Sheehan’s syndrome ,Endocrinology ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Sheehan's syndrome ,Aged ,Autoantibodies ,business.industry ,Empty Sella Syndrome ,General Medicine ,Syndrome ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Sheehan Syndrome ,Pituitary Hormones ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Case-Control Studies ,Pituitary Gland ,Diabetes insipidus ,Female ,business ,Endocrine gland - Abstract
ObjectiveWhile anti-pituitary antibodies (APAs) were detected in some patients with Sheehan's syndrome (SS) suggesting an autoimmune pituitary involvement in the development of their hypopituitarism, hypothalamic cell anti-hypothalamus antibodies (AHAs) have not been investigated so far.DesignThe aim of this study was to evaluate the presence of AHA and APA in SS patients to verify whether an autoimmune hypothalamic–pituitary process can contribute to their late hypopituitarism.MethodsTwenty women with SS with a duration of disease ranging from 3 to 40 years (median 25.5 years) were enrolled into the study. Out of 20 patients, 12 (60%) had panhypopituitarism and the others had partial hypopituitarism well corrected with appropriate replacement therapy. None of them had clinical central diabetes insipidus. AHA and APA were investigated by immunofluorescence method in all patients. In addition, a four-layer immunofluorescence method was used to verify whether AHA immunostained vasopressin-secreting cells (AVP-c) or not.ResultsAHAs were found in 8 out of 20 (40%) and APAs in 7 out of 20 (35%) patients with titers ranging from 1:32 to 1:128 and 1:16 to 1:32 respectively; however, in none of these positive patients AHA immunostained vasopressin cells. None of controls resulted positive for both antibodies.ConclusionsPatients with SS, even many years after the onset of SS, can show antibodies to pituitary and/or hypothalamic but not AVP-secreting cells. Antibodies to unknown hypothalamic cells (releasing factor-secreting cells) other than APAs suggest that an autoimmune process involving both the hypothalamus and pituitary gland may contribute to late pituitary dysfunction in SS patients.
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- 2008
98. Immunological and clinical aspects of lymphocytic hypophysitis
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Antonio Bizzarro, Gilda Tirelli, Giuseppe Ruocco, Marina Battaglia, Antonio Agostino Sinisi, Concetta Coronella, Giuseppe Bellastella, Annamaria De Bellis, Antonio Bellastella, Elena Pane, Marisa Conte, DE BELLIS, Annamaria, Ruocco, G., Battaglia, M., Conte, M., Coronella, C., Tirelli, G., Bellastella, A., Pane, E., Sinisi, Antonio Agostino, Bizzarro, Antonio, and Bellastella, Giuseppe
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Autoimmune disease ,Pituitary gland ,Hypophysitis ,business.industry ,Pituitary Diseases ,pituitary gland ,autoimmune disease ,Lymphocytosis ,General Medicine ,Disease ,medicine.disease ,Neurosecretory Systems ,Prolactin ,Autoimmune Diseases ,Pathogenesis ,Immune system ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Immunopathology ,Immunology ,LYH ,medicine ,Humans ,business ,Autoantibodies ,antipituitary antibodies - Abstract
LYH (lymphocytic hypophysitis) is an autoimmune disease of the pituitary gland which can present with varying degrees of pituitary hormonal impairment and/or with symptoms related to pituitary enlargement. In this review, we provide an overview of the epidemiology, diagnosis, pathogenesis, treatment, and the role of organ-specific and antipituitary antibodies as potential markers of LYH. In addition, although the mechanisms underlying LYH are not completely understood, the role of prolactin, which plays an important part in maintaining immune system homoeostasis and is increased in the disease, is considered.
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- 2008
99. Antipituitary antibodies against gonadotropin-secreting cells in adult male patients with apparently idiopathic hypogonadotropic hypogonadism
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Marisa Conte, Giuseppe Ruocco, Giuseppe Bellastella, Concetta Coronella, Antonio Bellastella, Dario Esposito, Daniela Pasquali, Annamaria De Bellis, Antonio Bizzarro, Antonio Agostino Sinisi, DE BELLIS, A., Sinisi, Antonio Agostino, Conte, M., Coronella, C., Bellastella, Giuseppe, Esposito, D., Pasquali, Daniela, Ruocco, G., Bizzarro, Antonio, and Bellastella, A.
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.drug_class ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Context (language use) ,medicine.disease_cause ,Biochemistry ,Hypothalamic disease ,Hypogonadotropic hypogonadism ,Autoimmunity ,Antipituitary Antibodie ,Cohort Studies ,Olfaction Disorders ,Endocrinology ,Antibody Specificity ,Seroepidemiologic Studies ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Fluorescent Antibody Technique, Indirect ,Autoantibodies ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Biochemistry (medical) ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,Kallmann Syndrome ,medicine.disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Olfactory Bulb ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Pituitary Gland ,Gonadotropins, Pituitary ,Gonadotropin ,Abnormality ,business ,Cohort study ,Papio - Abstract
J Clin Endocrinol Metab. 2007 Feb;92(2):604-7. Epub 2006 Nov 7. Antipituitary antibodies against gonadotropin-secreting cells in adult male patients with apparently idiopathic hypogonadotropic hypogonadism. De Bellis A, Sinisi AA, Conte M, Coronella C, Bellastella G, Esposito D, Pasquali D, Ruocco G, Bizzarro A, Bellastella A. SourceDepartment of Clinical and Experimental Medicine and Surgery F Magrassi, A Lanzara, Second University of Naples, Naples, Italy. annamaria.debellis@unina2.it Abstract CONTEXT: Hypogonadotropic hypogonadism (HH) can occur at any stage of life as an isolated congenital or acquired abnormality or within a more generalized pituitary or hypothalamic impairment. However, the defect in patients with idiopathic HH is still unknown. OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study was to investigate the prevalence of antipituitary antibodies (APA) in a group of HH patients with or without Kallmann's syndrome and to characterize their pituitary target. DESIGN: We conducted a cross-sectional cohort study. SETTING: The study was performed at the Endocrinology Unit of the Second University of Naples. PATIENTS: Twenty-one HH patients with normal sense of smell (group 1), 10 patients with Kallmann's syndrome (group 2), 13 patients with HH associated with other pituitary hormone deficiencies (group 3), and 50 normal controls were studied. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: APA were evaluated in patients and in controls by indirect immunofluorescence. Moreover, a magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the hypothalamic-pituitary region was performed in all three groups of patients. RESULTS: APA were detected at high titer in eight out of 21 patients in group 1 (38%) and in five of 13 in group 3 (38.4%), and at low titers in two out of 10 in group 2 (20%) and in three of 50 controls (6%). In patients of group 1, APA immunostained selectively gonadotropin-secreting cells, whereas in those of group 3, they immunostained other pituitary hormone-secreting cells also. None of patients in group 1 showed alterations on MRI, whereas all patients in group 2 showed aplasia/hypoplasia of the olfactory bulbs/tracts and/or of olfactory sulci. Among the five APA-positive patients in group 3, three had normal MRI, one had findings of empty sella, and one had findings of autoimmune hypophysitis. CONCLUSIONS: Our results suggest that some apparently idiopathic cases of HH, both isolated and associated with other pituitary impairment, can be caused by an early autoimmune process involving the gonadotrophs at pituitary level. Future longitudinal studies are needed to clarify the natural history of this process and the possible effect of early corticosteroid therapy.
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- 2006
100. Prolactin and autoimmunity
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Gaetano Lombardi, Annamaria De Bellis, Antonio Bellastella, Rosario Pivonello, Antonio Bizzarro, DE BELLIS, Annamaria, Bizzarro, Antonio, Pivonello, R, Lombardi, G, Bellastella, A., A., De Belli, A., Bizzarro, Pivonello, Rosario, Lombardi, Gaetano, and A., Bellastella
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endocrine system ,medicine.medical_specialty ,endocrine system diseases ,Hypophysitis ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,PRL ,Pituitary Diseases ,Autoimmunity ,medicine.disease_cause ,Thyroiditis ,Autoimmune Diseases ,Endocrinology ,Immune system ,Thyroid peroxidase ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Lymphocytes ,Glucocorticoids ,Autoantibodies ,Inflammation ,biology ,business.industry ,Thyroid ,medicine.disease ,Prolactin ,Hyperprolactinemia ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Immune System ,Pituitary Gland ,Immunology ,biology.protein ,Antibody ,business ,hormones, hormone substitutes, and hormone antagonists - Abstract
The interrelationship between prolactin (PRL) and the immune system have been elucitaded in the last decade, opening new important horizons in the field of the immunoendocrinology. PRL is secreted not only by anterior pituitary gland but also by many extrapituitary sites including the immune cells. The endocrine/paracrine PRL has been shown to stimulate the immune cells by binding to PRL receptors. Increased PRL levels, frequently described in autoimmune diseases, could depend on the enhancement of coordinated bi-directional communications between PRL and the immune system observed in these diseases. Hyperprolactinemia has been described in the active phase of some non organ-specific autoimmune diseases, as systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) and rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and organ-specific autoimmune diseases, as celiac disease, type 1 diabetes mellitus, Addison's disease, autoimmune thyroid diseases. In these diseases PRL increases the syntesis of IFNgamma and IL-2 by Th1 lymphocytes. Moreover, PRL activates Th2 lymphocytes with autoantibody production. Of particular interest is the association between hyperprolactinemia and levels of anti DNA antibodies, islet cell antibodies (ICA), thyreoglobulin antibodies (TgAb), thyroperoxidase antibodies (TPOAb), adrenocortical antibodies (ACA), transglutaminase antibodies (tTGAb) in SLE, in type 1 diabetes mellitus, in Hashimoto's thyroiditis, in Addison's disease and in celiac disease, respectively. High levels of PRL have been also frequently detected in patients with lymphocytic hypophysitis (LYH). Several mechanisms have been invoked to explain the hyperprolactinemia in LYH. The PRL increase could be secondary to the inflammatory process of the pituitary gland but, on the other hand, this increase could have a role in enhancing the activity of the immune process in LYH. Moreover, the detection of antipituitary antibodies targeting PRL-secreting cells in some patients with idiopathic hyperprolactinemia suggests the occurrence of a possible silent LYH in these patients. Finally, the role of anti-prolactinemic drugs to inactivate the immune process in LYH is still discussed.
- Published
- 2006
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