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Showing papers in "The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism in 1998"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: These data show for the first time that substantial quantities of IL-6 (up to 75 ng/mL) accumulate in the medium during incubations of both adipocytes and adipose tissue.
Abstract: The purpose of this study was to determine whether human adipocytes from different depots of obese subjects produce interleukin-6 (IL-6) and whether IL-6 release is regulated by glucocorticoids. Fragments of omental and abdominal sc adipose tissue released immunodetectable IL-6 into the medium during acute incubations. Omental adipose tissue released 2-3 times more IL-6 than did sc adipose tissue. Isolated adipocytes prepared from these tissues also released IL-6 (omental > sc), but this accounted for only 10% of the total tissue release. Culture of adipose tissue fragments for 7 days with the glucocorticoid dexamethasone markedly suppressed IL-6 production. These data show for the first time that substantial quantities of IL-6 (up to 75 ng/mL) accumulate in the medium during incubations of both adipocytes and adipose tissue. Although little is known about the effects of IL-6 on adipose tissue, one action is a down-regulation of adipose tissue lipoprotein lipase. The regulated production of this multifunctional cytokine may modulate regional adipose tissue metabolism and may contribute to the recently reported correlation between serum IL-6 and the level of obesity.

1,740 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In a consecutive population of unselected women the prevalence of hirsutism varied from 2-8% depending on the chosen cut-off F-G score, with no significant difference between White and Black women.
Abstract: Estimates of the prevalence of the polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) in the general population have ranged from 2-20%. The vast majority of these reports have studied White populations in Europe, used limited definitions of the disorder, and/or used bias populations, such as those seeking medical care. To estimate the prevalence of this disorder in the United States and address these limitations, we prospectively determined the prevalence of PCOS in a reproductive-aged population of 369 consecutive women (174 White and 195 Black; aged 18-45 yr), examined at the time of their preemployment physical. Body measures were obtained, and body hair was quantified by a modified Ferriman-Gallwey (F-G) method. All exams were initially performed by 2 trained nurses, and any subject with an F-G score above 3 was reexamined by a physician, the same for all patients. Of the 369 women, 277 (75.1%) also agreed to complete a questionnaire and have additional blood drawn. Subjects were studied regardless of current estrogen/progestin hormonal use (28.5%). PCOS was defined as 1) oligoovulation, 2) clinical hyperandrogenism (i.e. hirsutism) and/or hyperandrogenemia, and 3) exclusion of other related disorders, such as hyperprolactinemia, thyroid abnormalities, and non-classic adrenal hyperplasia. Hirsutism was defined by a F-G score of 6 or more, and hyperandrogenemia was defined as a total or free testosterone, androstenedione, and/or dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate level above the 95th percentile of control values [i.e. all eumenorrheic women in the study, who had no hirsutism (F-G < or = 5) or acne and were receiving no hormonal therapy; n = 98]. Considering all 369 women studied, White and Black women had similar mean ages (29.4 +/- 7.1 and 31.1 +/- 7.8 yr, respectively), although White women had a lesser body mass than Black women (24.9 +/- 6.1 vs. 29.2 +/- 8.1 kg/m2, respectively; P < 0.001). Of these 7.6%, 4.6%, and 1.9% demonstrated a F-G score of 6 or more, 8 or 10, respectively, and there was no significant racial difference, with hirsutism prevalences of 8.0%, 2.8%, and 1.6% in Whites, and 7.1%, 6.1%, and 2.1% in Blacks, respectively. Of the 277 women consenting to a history and hormonal evaluation, 4.0% had PCOS as defined, 4.7% (6 of 129) of Whites and 3.4% (5 of 148) of Blacks. In conclusion, in our consecutive population of unselected women the prevalence of hirsutism varied from 2-8% depending on the chosen cut-off F-G score, with no significant difference between White and Black women. Using an F-G score of 6 or more as indicative of hirsutism, 3.4% of Blacks and 4.7% of Whites had PCOS as defined. These data suggest that PCOS may be one of most common reproductive endocrinological disorders of women.

1,704 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Interactions between diurnal cortisol secretion related to perceived stress and anthropometric, endocrine, metabolic, and hemodynamic variables seem to occur with apparently normal regulation of the HPA axis.
Abstract: Abdominal obesity has been suggested to be associated with perturbations of the regulation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis. In a population of 51-yr-old men (n = 284) salivary cortisol concentrations were determined on repeated (n = 7) occasions over a random working day, and perceived stress was reported in parallel. Cortisol values were then related to reported stress (stress-related cortisol). A standardized lunch was used as a physiological challenge. A low dose (0.5 mg) dexamethasone suppression test was also performed as well as determinations of testosterone and insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I). Body mass index [weight (kilograms)/height (meters)2]; waist/hip circumference ratio (WHR); sagittal trunk recumbent diameter (D); fasting insulin; blood glucose; triglycerides; and total, low density (LDL), and high density (HDL) lipoprotein cholesterol were also determined. Cortisol concentrations were highest in the morning, and lunch was followed by a peak (P = 0.044). Two types of diurnal cortisol curves were identified, one characterized by a high variability with high morning values, and another with low variability and low morning values. Both correlated strongly with suppression of salivary cortisol by dexamethasone (P < 0.001). Stress-related cortisol secretion was associated with D (P = 0.051), low IGF-I (P = 0.006), and diastolic blood pressure (P = 0.078). When the type of diurnal cortisol curve was taken into consideration by statistical weighting, stress-related cortisol secretion in subjects with high variability showed associations with testosterone (P < 0.001), D, total and LDL cholesterol, diastolic blood pressure (P < 0.001), fasting insulin (P = 0.039), and glucose (P = 0.030) as well as, negatively, triglycerides (P < 0.001). When weighted for a low variability of diurnal cortisol secretion, stress-related cortisol secretion showed strong negative relationships with IGF-I, testosterone, and HDL. Furthermore, strong, consistent relationships (all P < 0.001) were found with obesity factors (body mass index, WHR, and D), and with metabolic (insulin, glucose, triglycerides, and total and LDL cholesterol) as well as hemodynamic variables (systolic and diastolic blood pressure and heart rate). These results clearly show interactions between diurnal cortisol secretion related to perceived stress and anthropometric, endocrine, metabolic, and hemodynamic variables. This seems to occur with apparently normal regulation of the HPA axis (high morning peaks and variability as well as dexamethasone suppression of cortisol), where other endocrine variables are not affected. With a low diurnal cortisol variation and blunted dexamethasone suppression, indicating abnormal regulation of the HPA axis, perceived stress-dependent cortisol values were strongly related to perturbations of other endocrine axes as well as abdominal obesity with metabolic and hemodynamic abnormalities. Perturbations of the regulations of the HPA axis such as those described in combination with low dexamethasone suppressibility are known to follow long term overactivation of the axis by factors such as environmental stress.

978 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is shown that age-related bone loss may be the result of E deficiency not just in postmenopausal women, but also in men, and bioavailable E levels decline significantly with age and are important predictors of BMD in men as well as women.
Abstract: Estrogen (E) deficiency associated with the menopause is the major cause of bone loss in aging women. However, men also lose significant amounts of bone with age, but they do not have the equivalent of menopause, and serum total testosterone (T) and E levels decline only marginally with age in men. Thus, it has been difficult to attribute bone loss in aging men to either T or E deficiency. Here, we show in a population-based, age-stratified sample of 346 men, aged 23-90 yr, that serum total T and E (estradiol plus estrone) levels decreased over the life span by 30% and 12%, respectively, but bioavailable (or nonsex hormone-binding globulin-bound) T and E levels decreased by 64% and 47%, respectively. In these men and in a parallel cohort of 304 women, aged 21-94 yr, serum PTH increased 84% and 64% over the life span, and urinary N-telopeptide of type I collagen (NTx) excretion, a bone resorption marker, increased 77% and 80% between age 50-85 yr in the men and women, respectively. By univariate analyses, serum bioavailable T and E levels correlated positively with bone mineral density (BMD) at the total body, spine, proximal femur, and distal radius and negatively with urinary NTx excretion in men and women. Urinary NTx excretion was also negatively associated with BMD in both sexes. By multivariate analyses, however, serum bioavailable E level was the consistent independent predictor of BMD in both men and postmenopausal women. Thus, bioavailable E levels decline significantly with age and are important predictors of BMD in men as well as women. These studies suggest that in contrast to traditional belief, age-related bone loss may be the result of E deficiency not just in postmenopausal women, but also in men.

943 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Mortality rates due to colon cancer, all malignant disease, cardiovascular disease and overall mortality were increased with higher posttreatment GH leve...
Abstract: Patients with acromegaly have a reduced life expectancy, with the accepted causes for premature death being vascular and respiratory disease. Increased mortality from malignant disease has also been reported. We, therefore, performed a multicenter retrospective cohort study of 1362 patients with acromegaly and investigated the relationships of mortality and cancer incidence with GH levels, duration of disease, and age at diagnosis. The overall cancer incidence rate [standardized incidence ratio, 0.76; 95% confidence interval (CI), 0.60–0.95] was lower than that in the general population of the United Kingdom, and there was no significant increase in site-specific cancer incidence rates. The overall cancer mortality rate was not increased, but the colon cancer mortality rate (standardized mortality ratio, 2.47; 95% CI, 1.31–4.22) was higher than expected. Mortality rates due to colon cancer, all malignant disease, cardiovascular disease and overall mortality were increased with higher posttreatment GH leve...

854 citations



Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Accumulating evidence from molecular and cellular biology experiments, animal studies, and, to a limited extent, human clinical trials suggests that phytoestrogens may potentially confer health benefits related to cardiovascular diseases, cancer, osteoporosis, and menopausal symptoms.
Abstract: Phytoestrogens represent a family of plant compounds that have been shown to have both estrogenic and antiestrogenic properties. A variety of these plant compounds and their mammalian metabolic products have been identified in various human body fluids and fall under two main categories: isoflavones and lignans. A wide range of commonly consumed foods contain appreciable amounts of these different phytoestrogens. For example, soy and flax products are particularly good sources of isoflavones and lignans, respectively. Accumulating evidence from molecular and cellular biology experiments, animal studies, and, to a limited extent, human clinical trials suggests that phytoestrogens may potentially confer health benefits related to cardiovascular diseases, cancer, osteoporosis, and menopausal symptoms. These potential health benefits are consistent with the epidemiological evidence that rates of heart disease, various cancers, osteoporotic fractures, and menopausal symptoms are more favorable among population...

738 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A fasting G:I ratio may be useful as a screening test for insulin resistance in obese non-Hispanic white PCOS women and may be a clinically useful parameter for selecting women most likely to respond to therapeutic interventions that improve insulin sensitivity.
Abstract: Women with polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) are profoundly insulin resistant, and the resultant hyperinsulinemia exacerbates the reproductive abnormalities of the syndrome. Agents that ameliorate insulin resistance and reduce circulating insulin levels could provide a new therapeutic modality for PCOS. Identifying the subset of PCOS women who are most insulin resistant may therefore be useful for selecting women who will respond to this therapy. We examined the correlation of basal and oral glucose-stimulated glucose and insulin levels and fasting and stimulated glucose/insulin (G:I) ratios with parameters of insulin sensitivity obtained by frequently sampled i.v. glucose tolerance test (FSIGT) to assess whether there is a simple screening test for insulin resistance in PCOS. Forty PCOS women (aged 18-40 yr; body mass index, >26 kg/m2) and 15 control women matched for age, weight, and ethnicity underwent both a 75-g oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT) and a FSIGT. The insulin sensitivity index (S(I)) was calculated by application of the minimal model of glucose kinetics to the dynamics of plasma glucose and insulin levels during the FSIGT. The best correlation in PCOS between S(I) and a fasting level was found with fasting G:I ratios (r = 0.73; P < 0.0001). A less substantial, but significant, correlation was found with fasting insulin levels (r = 0.50; P < 0.001), and no significant correlation was found with fasting glucose levels (r = 0.24; P = NS). The fasting G:I was more strongly correlated with S(I) than with integrated glucose and insulin responses during the OGTT. The only stronger correlation was with the OGTT 2 h G:I ratio (r = 0.74; P < 0.001). Stepwise regression analysis with S(I) as the dependent variable and fasting glucose and insulin levels, area under the curve for glucose and insulin, and a fasting G:I ratio showed that only the fasting G:I ratio was significantly predictive of S(I) in the model (F to remove value = 38.1; P < 0.001). When viewed as a screening test for insulin resistance in PCOS, setting a value of the fasting G:I ratio of less than 4.5 as abnormal (using an S(I) value below the 10th percentile of our control population as evidence for insulin resistance), the sensitivity of a fasting G:I ratio was 95%, the specificity was 84%, the positive predictive value was 87%, and the negative predictive value was 94%. Receiver operator curve analysis showed that this fasting G:I ratio was the single best screening measure for detecting insulin resistance. We conclude that a fasting G:I ratio may be useful as a screening test for insulin resistance in obese non-Hispanic white PCOS women. This may be a clinically useful parameter for selecting PCOS women most likely to respond to therapeutic interventions that improve insulin sensitivity.

713 citations



Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This study provides the first evidence that intrauterine programming of the HPAA may be a mechanism underlying the association between low birth weight and the insulin resistance syndrome in adult life and suggests that plasma concentrations of cortisol within the normal range could have an important effect on blood pressure and glucose tolerance.
Abstract: Recent studies have shown that reduced fetal growth is associated with the development of the insulin resistance syndrome in adult life. The mechanisms are not known. However increased activity of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis (HPAA) may underlie this association; the axis is known to be reset by fetal growth retardation in animals, and there is evidence in humans of an association between raised HPAA activity and the insulin resistance syndrome. We have, therefore, examined the relations among size at birth, plasma cortisol concentrations, and components of the insulin resistance syndrome in a sample of healthy men. We measured 0900 h fasting plasma cortisol and corticosteroid-binding globulin levels in 370 men who were born in Hertfordshire, UK, between 1920-1930 and whose birth weights were recorded. Fasting plasma cortisol concentrations varied from 112-702 nmol/L and were related to systolic blood pressure (P = 0.02), fasting and 2-h plasma glucose concentrations after an oral glucose tolerance test (P = 0.0002 and P = 0.04), plasma triglyceride levels (P = 0.009), and insulin resistance (P = 0.006). Plasma cortisol concentrations fell progressively (P = 0.007) from 408 nmol/L in men whose birth weights were 5.5 lb (2.50 kg) or less to 309 nmol/L among those who weighed 9.5 lb (4.31 kg) or more at birth, a trend independent of age and body mass index. These findings suggest that plasma concentrations of cortisol within the normal range could have an important effect on blood pressure and glucose tolerance. Moreover, this study provides the first evidence that intrauterine programming of the HPAA may be a mechanism underlying the association between low birth weight and the insulin resistance syndrome in adult life.

653 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A retrospective review of patients who underwent transsphenoidal surgery at Massachusetts General Hospital between 1978 and 1996 suggests that the decreased survival previously reported to be associated with acromegaly can be normalized by successful surgical and adjunctive therapy.
Abstract: To analyze the long term outcome after multimodality therapy for acromegaly, a retrospective review was performed on 162 patients who underwent transsphenoidal surgery at Massachusetts General Hospital between 1978 and 1996. The surgical cure rate for microadenomas was 91%, that for macroadenomas was 48%, and it was 57% overall. The surgical cure rate was significantly dependent on tumor size, but was not dependent on age or sex. An improvement in the surgical cure rate was noted over the course of the review, from 45% before 1987 to 73% since 1991. Long term follow-up was obtained in 99% of U.S. residents (149 of 151), with a mean follow-up period of 7.8 yr. Adjuvant radiation and/or pharmacological therapy was given to 61 patients. Of the entire group, 83% (124 of 149) were in biochemical remission as determined by normalization of serum insulin-like growth factor I levels or by GH suppression after oral glucose tolerance testing at last contact or at death. The recurrence rate was 6% at 10 yr and 10% at 15 yr after surgery in those patients who initially met the criteria for surgical cure. The 10-yr survival rate was 88%, and there were 12 deaths at postoperative intervals of 2-12 yr, with the most common cause of death being cardiovascular disease. A Cox proportional hazards model showed that patient-years with persistent disease carried a 3.5-fold [95% confidence interval (CI), 1.0-12; P = 0.02] relative mortality risk compared to those patient-years in remission. A Poisson person-years regression analysis showed no significant difference in survival between those 86 patients cured at operation and an age- and sex-matched sample from the U.S. population [standardized mortality ratio (SMR), 0.84; 95% CI, 0.3-2.2; P = 0.35]. A similar analysis on the entire group of 149 patients showed no significant difference in survival from that in a control sample (SMR, 1.16; 95% CI, 0.66-2.0; P = 0.3). Mortality risk for patient-years with persistent active disease after unsuccessful treatment vs. that in the U.S. population sample remained increased (SMR, 1.8; 95% CI, 0.9-3.6; P = .05). This analysis suggests that the decreased survival previously reported to be associated with acromegaly can be normalized by successful surgical and adjunctive therapy.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is suggested that inositolglycans serve as the signal transduction system for insulin's stimulation of human thecal testosterone biosynthesis.
Abstract: To determine whether insulin stimulates human ovarian testosterone production in the polycystic ovary syndrome by activating its own receptor and using inositolglycan mediators as the signal transduction system, thecal cells from polycystic ovary syndrome women were isolated and cultured. Insulin and insulin-like growth factor I stimulated thecal testosterone biosynthesis. Antibody blockade of the insulin receptor abolished insulin's stimulatory action, whereas effective antibody blockade of the insulin-like growth factor I receptor did not alter insulin's stimulation of thecal testosterone biosynthesis. A chiro-inositol containing glycan (INS-2) increased thecal testosterone biosynthesis. Preincubation of cells with an antiinositolglycan antibody (A23939 or alpha IGP) abolished insulin's stimulatory effect, but not that of hCG. These findings suggest that inositolglycans serve as the signal transduction system for insulin's stimulation of human thecal testosterone biosynthesis.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This perspective, although respectful of the profound impact that leptin’s discovery has had upon understanding of obesity and on the field of obesity research, will attempt to deemphasize the physiological status of leptin as an anti-obesity hormone, stressing instead its roles as a signal of energy deficiency and as an integrator of neuroendocrine function.
Abstract: T IDENTIFICATION of the ob gene (1) and the discovery that its encoded protein, leptin, is an adipocytederived hormone that is essential for normal regulation of body weight (2–4) have permanently altered the field of metabolic physiology. Over a 3-yr period, more than 800 papers on leptin have been published, creating a substantial and rapidly changing body of knowledge. As often occurs, however, the initial conception of the physiological role of a newly discovered protein requires revision in the light of emerging information. In this paper, I will review the relevant literature and will propose a modified view of leptin’s physiological role. This perspective, although respectful of the profound impact that leptin’s discovery has had upon our understanding of obesity and on the field of obesity research, will attempt to deemphasize the physiological status of leptin as an anti-obesity hormone, stressing instead its roles as a signal of energy deficiency and as an integrator of neuroendocrine function. Although this field is expanding rapidly, and many of these ideas are clearly works in progress, it is hoped that this perspective will be of value to workers in the field.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Life-long exposure to the mutated allele may be accompanied by an increased BMI and a lowered BMD in the lumbar spine but does not affect blood pressure, and individuals carrying this polymorphism had a higher sensitivity to exogenously administered glucocorticoids.
Abstract: We investigated whether a polymorphism at nucleotide position 1220, resulting in an asparagine-to-serine change at codon 363 in the glucocorticoid receptor (GR) gene is associated with an altered sensitivity to glucocorticoids. In a group of 216 elderly persons, 13 heterozygotes for the N363S polymorphism were identified by PCR/single strand conformation polymorphism analysis. In 2 dexamethasone (DEX) suppression tests (DSTs), using 1 and 0.25 mg DEX, the circulating cortisol and insulin concentrations were compared between N363S carriers and controls. In the 1-mg DST, there were no differences between N363S carriers and controls, with respect to adrenal suppression, but there was a significantly higher (P < 0.05) insulin response in N363S carriers. In the 0.25-mg DST, a significantly larger (P < 0.05) cortisol suppression and higher (P < 0.05) insulin response were seen in N363S carriers. Comparison of blood pressure, body mass index (BMI), and bone mineral density (BMD) between the N363S carriers and controls showed that N363S carriers had a higher (P < 0.05) BMI but normal blood pressure. There was an obvious trend towards lower age-, BMI-, and sex-adjusted BMD in the lumbar spine in N363S carriers. GR characteristics measured in 41 controls and 9 N363S carriers in peripheral mononuclear leucocytes showed no differences between N363S carriers and controls, with respect to GR number and ligand binding affinity. However, there was a trend towards greater sensitivity to DEX in the carriers' lymphocytes, in a mitogen-induced cell proliferation assay. In transfection assays, the capacity of the codon 363 variant to activate mouse mammary tumor virus promotor-mediated transcription in COS-1 cells was unaltered, when compared with the wild-type GR. We conclude that in 6.0% of our study population, a polymorphism in codon 363 of the GR gene was found. Individuals carrying this polymorphism seemed healthy at clinical examination but had a higher sensitivity to exogenously administered glucocorticoids, with respect to both cortisol suppression and insulin response. Life-long exposure to the mutated allele may be accompanied by an increased BMI and a lowered BMD in the lumbar spine but does not affect blood pressure.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This study investigated whether serum TNFα concentrations are elevated in obese subjects, whether they fall after weight loss, and whether this fall parallels the fall in insulin release after glucose challenge.
Abstract: In view of the recent demonstration that obesity in animals and humans is associated with an increase in tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNFalpha) expression, that this expression falls with weight loss, and that TNFalpha may specifically inhibit insulin action, the possibility that TNFalpha may be a mediator of insulin resistance has been raised. We have undertaken this study to investigate whether serum TNFalpha concentrations are elevated in obese subjects, whether they fall after weight loss, and whether this fall parallels the fall in insulin release after glucose challenge. Obese patients (age range: 25-54, weight mean +/- SD: 96.4 +/- 13.8 kg, body mass index: 35.7 +/- 5.6 kg/m2) were started on a diet program. The mean weight fell to 84.5 +/- 11.3 (P < 0.0001) and body mass index to 31.3 +/- 4.9 (P < 0.0001). Plasma TNFalpha concentrations were markedly elevated in the obese (3.45 +/- 0.16 pg/mL), when compared with controls (0.72 +/- 0.28 pg/mL), and fell significantly (2.63 +/- 1.40 pg/mL) after weight loss (P < 0.02). The magnitude of insulin release after glucose (75 g) challenge (area under the curve) also fell significantly (P < 0.01) after weight loss. The magnitude of weight loss and fall in TNFalpha were related to basal body weight (r = 0.57, P < 0.001) and basal TNFalpha (r = 0.55, P < 0.001) concentrations, respectively, but not to each other or to the glucose-induced insulin release (area under the curve). We conclude that obesity is associated with increased plasma TNFalpha concentrations, which fall with weight loss. Because circulating TNFalpha may mediate insulin resistance in the obese, a fall in TNFalpha concentrations may contribute to the restoration of insulin resistance after weight loss, Thus, TNFalpha may be an important circulating cytokine, which may provide a potentially reversible mechanism for mediating insulin resistance.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The RIA method used in this study provided more clinically appropriate serum Tg values in the group of TgAb-positive patients with metastatic DTC and may be an additional clinically useful tumor marker parameter for following T gAb- positive patients.
Abstract: The prevalence of circulating thyroid autoantibodies (TgAb or antithyroid peroxidase) was increased nearly 3-fold in patients with differentiated thyroid cancers (DTC) compared with the general population (40% vs. 14%, respectively). Serum TgAb (with or without antithyroid peroxidase) was present in 25% of DTC patients and 10% of the general population. Serial postsurgical serum TgAb and serum Tg patterns correlated with the presence or absence of disease. Measurements of serum Tg were made in 87 TgAb-positive sera by a RIA and two immunometric assay (IMA) methods to study TgAb interference. TgAb interference, defined as a significant intermethod discordance (>41.7% coefficient of variation) between the Tg RIA and Tg IMA values relative to TgAb-negative sera, was found in 69% of the TgAb-positive sera. TgAb interference was characterized by higher Tg RIA vs. IMA values and was, in general, more frequent and severe in sera containing high TgAb concentrations. However, some sera displayed marked interference when serum TgAb was low (1-2 IU/mL), whereas other sera with very high TgAb values (>1000 IU/mL) displayed no interference. An agglutination method was found to be too insensitive to detect low TgAb concentrations (1-10 IU/mL) causing interference. Exogenous Tg recovery tests were an unreliable means for detecting TgAb interference. Specifically, the exogenous Tg recovered varied with the type and amount of Tg added and the duration of incubation employed. Further, recoveries of more than 80% were found for some sera displaying gross serum RIA/IMA discordances. The measurement of serum Tg in DTC patients with circulating TgAb is currently problematic. It is important to use a Tg method that provides measurements that are concordant with tumor status. IMA methods are prone to underestimate serum when TgAb is present, increasing the risk that persistent or metastatic DTC will be missed. The RIA method used in this study provided more clinically appropriate serum Tg values in the group of TgAb-positive patients with metastatic DTC. Furthermore, as serial serum TgAb measurements paralleled serial serum Tg RIA measurements, TgAb concentrations may be an additional clinically useful tumor marker parameter for following TgAb-positive patients. Disparities between serial serum Tg and TgAb measurements might alert the physician to the possibility of TgAb interference with the serum Tg measurement and prompt a more cautious use of such data for clinical decision-making.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The hypothesis that the frequent concurrence of PP with pronounced adrenarche, FOH, and hyperinsulinemia in girls may result from a common early origin (low birth weight serving as a marker), rather than from a direct interrelationship later in life is corroborated.
Abstract: Pronounced adrenarche with precocious pubarche (PP) in girls has been associated with hyperinsulinism and subsequent functional ovarian hyperandrogenism (FOH). Recently, pronounced adrenarche and insulin resistance have each been related to low birth weight. We have now tested the hypothesis that the frequent concurrence of PP with pronounced adrenarche, FOH, and hyperinsulinemia in girls may be secondary to separate relationships between these conditions and low birth weight. A total of 185 girls (aged 5-18 yr) without endocrinopathy or with PP and pronounced adrenarche with or without FOH were studied; mean serum insulin (MSI) concentrations were determined after a standardized oral glucose tolerance test. Birth weight SD scores [mean (SEM)] of control girls (0.38+/-0.08; n = 83) were higher (P < 0.0001) than those of PP girls (-0.81+/-0.13; n = 102). Among postmenarcheal PP girls, birth weight SD scores of girls without FOH (-0.25+/-0.19; n = 25) were higher (P < 0.0001) than those in girls with FOH (-1.51+/-0.28; n = 23). In pubertal girls (n = 145), MSI levels correlated negatively with birth weight SD scores (r = -0.48; P < 0.05), independently of PP. MSI levels in girls with birth weight below 1 SD (93+/-9 mU/L; n = 33) were higher (P < 0.0001) than those in girls with birth weight between -1 and +1 SD (52+/-2 mU/L; n = 94), whereas glycemia profiles were comparable. Integration of the aforementioned data suggests that there may be a sequence in the associations between reduced fetal growth and components of the postnatal endocrine system; minor fetal growth reduction appears to be associated with amplified adrenarche, whereas more pronounced prenatal growth restriction seem to precede FOH and hyperinsulinemia during adolescence. In conclusion, these findings corroborate the hypothesis that the frequent concurrence of PP (with pronounced adrenarche), FOH, and hyperinsulinemia in girls may result from a common early origin (low birth weight serving as a marker), rather than from a direct interrelationship later in life.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Findings indicate that troglitazone has a potent inhibitory effect on progression of early atherosclerotic lesions probably through the decreased insulin resistance in type 2 diabetes.
Abstract: There is increasing evidence that insulin resistance may be causally related to atherosclerosis. The measurement of common carotid arterial intimal and medial complex thickness (IMT) by B-mode ultrasound technique has been recognized as a powerful and non-invasive method to evaluate early atherosclerotic lesions. We investigated the effect of treatment with troglitazone, an insulin sensitizer, on IMT in a total of 135 Japanese subjects with type 2 diabetes. Troglitazone (400 mg daily) was administered for 6 months in 57 patients. Compared to control group (n = 78), the group given troglitazone showed a significant decrease in IMT as early as 3 months after the administration (IMT change: -0.080[SE 0.016] mm vs. control 0.027[SE 0.007] mm, P < 0.001). The decrease in IMT was also found after 6 months, although further decrease was not observed. Both HbA1c and postprandial serum triglycerides were decreased after troglitazone, but there was no statistically significant relation between a decrease in IMT and those in HbA1c or postprandial triglycerides. These findings indicate that troglitazone has a potent inhibitory effect on progression of early atherosclerotic lesions probably through the decreased insulin resistance in type 2 diabetes.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is shown that leptin is produced by human mammary epithelial cells as revealed by RT/PCR analysis of total RNA from mammary gland and immunohistochemical staining of breast tissue, cultured mammaryocyte cells, and secretory epithel cells present in human milk.
Abstract: Leptin has recently been shown to be produced by the human placenta and potentially plays a role in fetal and neonatal growth. Many functions of the placenta are replaced by the mammary gland in terms of providing critical growth factors for the newborn. In this study, we show that leptin is produced by human mammary epithelial cells as revealed by RT/PCR analysis of total RNA from mammary gland and immunohistochemical staining of breast tissue, cultured mammary epithelial cells, and secretory epithelial cells present in human milk. We also verify that immunoreactive leptin is present in whole milk at 30- to 150-fold higher concentrations than skim milk. We propose that leptin is secreted by mammary epithelial cells in milk fat globules, which partition into the lipid portion of breast milk.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results underscore the importance of IL-6 in the cascade of cytokines for the neuroendocrine response during the acute phase reaction and appear to be involved in changes of sleep and behavior accompanying infection and inflammatory disorders.
Abstract: Interleukin-6 (IL-6) is a proinflammatory cytokine that has been shown to mediate, in addition to immune reactions, various endocrine and central nervous components of the acute phase response. In this context, the present study aimed to specify the contributions of IL-6 to the regulation of pituitary-adrenal secretory activity and GH and TSH secretion, as well as to the regulation of central nervous sleep and mood in healthy men. Effects of a low dose of IL-6 (0.5 microgram/kg body weight) were assessed, inducing plasma IL-6 concentrations closely comparable with those typically observed after infectious challenge. Each of the 16 male subjects participated in two 14-h sessions (between 1800 and 0800 h), receiving either placebo or human recombinant IL-6 sc at 1900 h. Blood was collected repeatedly to determine plasma hormone levels, serum concentrations of cytokines, and C-reactive protein. Moreover, mood was assessed, and sleep recordings were obtained between 2300 and 0700 h. The cytokine induced a prolonged increased in plasma concentrations of ACTH and cortisol (P < 0.001), but led to a decrease in TSH concentrations (P < 0.01). In response to IL-6, subjects reported fatigue and felt more inactive and less capable of concentrating than after placebo. Sleep architecture was altered significantly by the cytokine. Slow-wave sleep was decreased during the first half and increased during the second half of sleep. Rapid eye movement sleep during the entire nocturnal sleep time was significantly decreased. After IL-6, body temperature rose slightly. C-reactive protein concentrations were dramatically increased 12.5 h after substance administration (P < 0.001). IL-6 did not affect serum concentrations of IL-2, IL-8, interferon-alpha, and interferon-gamma. The results underscore the importance of IL-6 in the cascade of cytokines for the neuroendocrine response during the acute phase reaction. In addition, IL-6 appears to be involved in changes of sleep and behavior accompanying infection and inflammatory disorders.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Leptin may play a role in a severe stress state such as acute sepsis in critically ill patients, in addition to its function as an anti-obesity factor.
Abstract: Recent animal and human studies have suggested that leptin secretion is closely linked to the functions of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis and the immune system, both of which are crucial in influencing the course and outcome of critical illness. Therefore, we measured basal plasma leptin levels and examined the circadian secretion of leptin, in parallel with the hormones of the HPA axis and a key cytokine, interleukin-6, in critically ill patients with acute sepsis. Sixteen critically ill patients from the University of Leipzig Intensive Care Unit were recruited for this study. All of these patients fulfilled the standard diagnostic criteria for sepsis. Plasma leptin levels were measured in all patients and controls at 09:00. In addition, in a subgroup of eight critically ill patients and all of the nine controls plasma leptin, cortisol, ACTH and interleukin-6 concentrations were measured every 4 hours for 24 hours. Mean plasma leptin levels were three-fold higher (18.9 +/- 4.5 ng/ml) in critically ill patients than controls (3.8 +/- 1.0 ng/ml, p < 0.05). Similarly, ACTH levels were lower (7.8 +/- 3.4 pmol/l) in patients than in controls (17.1 +/- 1.5 pmol/l, p < .001), while plasma cortisol levels were increased (947.6 +/- 144 nmol/l) in patients compared to controls (361.1 +/- 29, p < 0.001). Morning plasma interleukin-6 levels were markedly elevated in all patients with sepsis (1238.0 +/- 543.1 pg/ml) versus controls (6.4 +/- 1.7, p < 0.001). The controls exhibited a nyctohemeral fluctuation in plasma leptin levels with peak levels at 23:00; in contrast, septic patients, had no nocturnal rise of leptin. In healthy controls, plasma leptin and cortisol had reciprocal circadian rhythms with high nocturnal leptin levels and low nocturnal cortisol concentrations; in critically ill patients, this relation was abolished. Mean leptin levels were three-fold higher in patients who survived the septic episode (25.5 +/- 6.2, n = 10) than in non-survivors (8.0 +/- 3.7, n = 6, p < 0.01). We conclude that in addition to its function as an anti-obesity factor, leptin may play a role in a severe stress state such as acute sepsis.


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TL;DR: Testosterone deficiency in young men is associated with a marked decrease in measures of whole body protein anabolism, decreased strength, decreased fat oxidation, and increased adiposity, suggesting a direct effect of androgens on whole body lipid and protein metabolism.
Abstract: To investigate specific effects of androgens on whole body metabolism, we studied six healthy lean men (mean ± sem age, 23.2 ± 0.5 yr) before and after gonadal steroid suppression with a GnRH analog (Lupron), given twice, 3 weeks apart. Primed infusions of[ 13C]leucine, indirect calorimetry, isokinetic dynamometry, growth factor measurements, and percutaneous muscle biopsies were performed at baseline (D1) and after 10 weeks of treatment (D2); each subject served as his own control. Testosterone concentrations were markedly suppressed after 10 weeks of treatment (D1, 535 ± 141 ng/dL; D2, 31 ± 9). Leucine’s rate of appearance (index of proteolysis) was markedly suppressed after 10 weeks of hypogonadism (−13%; P = 0.01) as well as the nonoxidative leucine disposal, an index of whole body protein synthesis (−13%; P = 0.01) without any changes in plasma amino acid concentrations. All subjects studied after 10 weeks showed a decrease in fat-free mass, as measured by skinfold calipers and dual emission x-ray ab...

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The percentage of people excreting low concentrations of iodine (UI, <5 microg/dL) increased in all age groups, and the findings in 1988-1994 are not indicative of iodine deficiency in the overall U.S. population.
Abstract: Iodine deficiency in a population causes increased prevalence of goiter and, more importantly, may increase the risk for intellectual deficiency in that population. The National Health and Nutrition Examination Surveys [NHANES I (1971–1974) and (NHANES III (1988–1994)] measured urinary iodine (UI) concentrations. UI concentrations are an indicator of the adequacy of iodine intake for a population. The median UI concentrations in iodine-sufficient populations should be greater than 10 μg/dL, and no more than 20% of the population should have UI concentrations less than 5 μg/dL. Median UI concentrations from both NHANES I and NHANES III indicate adequate iodine intake for the overall U.S. population, but the median concentration decreased more than 50% between 1971–1974 (32.0 ± 0.6 μg/dL) and 1988–1994 (14.5 ± 0.3 μg/dL). Low UI concentrations (<5 μg/dL) were found in 11.7% of the 1988–1994 population, a 4.5-fold increase over the proportion in the 1971–1974 population. The percentage of people excreting lo...

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is concluded that phytoestrogens exhibit physiological effects in humans and Mild estrogenic changes occur in postmenopausal women, and Epidemiological, animal, and in vitro data encourage further assessment of the role of phy toestrogens in cancer prevention.
Abstract: We have reviewed the literature regarding the food sources, potency, population intakes, and known biological effects of phytoestrogens in humans using MEDLINE data base from the years 1975-1996 Over 600 articles pertinent to the metabolism of phytoestrogens, including female reproduction (in particular menstruation and menopause), cardiovascular disease, osteoporosis, and cancer were assessed including relevant case control or cohort studies, as well as randomized trials and review articles Epidemiological studies regarding human data were included, as well as human cell line and animal studies when there were no relevant human data available We conclude that phytoestrogens exhibit physiological effects in humans Mild estrogenic changes occur in postmenopausal women Benefits are seen regarding hypercholesterolaemia Epidemiological, animal, and in vitro data encourage further assessment of the role of phytoestrogens in cancer prevention

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Both early and late menopause were found to be significantly influenced by genetic factors, providing convincing evidence for the importance of genetic factors in determining natural and surgicalMenopause.
Abstract: A classical twin study was performed to assess the extent to which genetic factors explain individual differences in age at menopause and (indications for) hysterectomy. It was further examined whether a genetic effect on the timing of the menopause was mediated through a genetic effect on age at menarche. The subjects were 275 monozygotic and 353 dizygotic female twin pairs. Maximum likelihood model fitting was used to estimate genetic and environmental variance components, Kaplan-Meier survival analysis was used to account for censored data, and the Cox proportional hazards model was used to adjust for potential confounders. A model specifying additive genetic and unique environmental factors showed the best fit to the data, yielding a heritability (h2) for age at menopause of 63%. The significance of the genetic effect was confirmed by the survival analysis and was not affected by adjustment for confounders. Both early and late menopause were found to be significantly influenced by genetic factors. Hysterectomy also showed considerable heritability (h2 = 59%), as did its two main indications: fibroids (h2 = 69%) and menorrhagia (h2 = 55%). The genetic contribution to the variance in age at menarche was estimated to be 45%, with the majority (37%) being due to dominant genetic effects. No correlation was found between age at menopause and age at menarche, suggesting different genetic mechanisms. This study provides convincing evidence for the importance of genetic factors in determining natural and surgical menopause. Understanding how genes control the timing of menopause and exploring whether these genes are indirectly associated with disease are important areas for future study.


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Thyroid abnormalities in populations with low iodine intake and those with high iodine intake develop in opposite directions: goiter and thyroid hyperfunction when iodine intake is relatively low, and impaired thyroid function when iodine Intake is relatively high.
Abstract: Thyroid abnormalities are common in all populations, but it is difficult to compare results of epidemiological studies, because different methods have been used for evaluation. We studied the importance of the population iodine intake level for the prevalence rate of various thyroid abnormalities in elderly subjects. Random samples of elderly subjects (68 yr) were selected from the central person registers in Jutland, Denmark, with low (n = 423) and, in Iceland, with longstanding relatively high (n = 100) iodine intake. Females from Jutland had a high prevalence of goiter or previous goiter surgery (12.2%), compared with males from Jutland (3.2%) and females (1.9%) and males (2.2%) from Iceland. Abnormal thyroid function was very common in both areas, with serum TSH outside the reference range in 13.5% of subjects from Jutland and 19% of those from Iceland. In Jutland, it was mainly thyroid hyperfunction (9.7% had low, 3.8% had high serum TSH), whereas in Iceland, it was impaired thyroid function (1% had low, 18% had high serum TSH). All subjects with serum TSH more than 10 mU/L had autoantibodies in serum, but antibodies were, in general, more common in Jutland than in Iceland. Thus, thyroid abnormalities in populations with low iodine intake and those with high iodine intake develop in opposite directions: goiter and thyroid hyperfunction when iodine intake is relatively low, and impaired thyroid function when iodine intake is relatively high. Probably, mild iodine deficiency partly protects against autoimmune thyroid disease. Thyroid autoantibodies may be markers of an autoimmune process in the thyroid or secondary to the development of goiter.

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TL;DR: The results suggest that the capacity to actively transport iodine may be a feature common to several secretory and endocrine tissues, such as parotid gland, mammary gland, and gastric mucosa.
Abstract: The ability to concentrate iodide is a fundamental property of normally functioning thyroid tissue and represents the first step in the production of thyroid hormones. Iodide uptake has been demonstrated in various extrathyroidal tissues, including salivary gland, gastric mucosa, and lactating mammary gland. Recently, cloning and molecular characterization of the human sodium iodide symporter (hNIS) have been reported; however, the patterns of hNIS gene expression in human tissues have remained unidentified. To examine the profiles of human hNIS gene expression in various normal human tissues, we performed high-stringency Northern blot analysis using a 32P-labeled hNIS-specific complementary DNA (cDNA) probe (nucleotides 1184–1667). To detect rare hNIS transcripts in small tissue samples, RT-PCR was performed with a pair of hNIS-specific oligonucleotide primers designed to amplify a portion (nucleotides 1184–1667) of the hNIS gene. hNIS-specific transcripts were confirmed by Southern hybridization using a...

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The sustained elevation of inhibin B to supraadult levels in infant boys indicates that the neonatal period may be a developmental window important for Sertoli cell proliferation and maturation.
Abstract: The gonads are usually considered quiescent organs in infancy and childhood. However, during the first few postnatal months of life, levels of gonadotropins and sex hormones are elevated in humans. Recent epidemiological evidence suggests that environmental factors operating perinatally may influence male reproductive health in adulthood. The early postnatal activity of the Sertoli cell, a testicular cell type that is supposed to play a major role in sperm production in adulthood is largely unknown. Recently, the peptide hormone inhibin B was shown to be a marker of Sertoli cell function in the adult male. In the adult woman, inhibin B is secreted by the granulosa cells. Longitudinal serum levels of inhibin B were measured in healthy boys (n = 15) and girls (n = 15), in cord blood, and every third month during the first 2 yr of life. In addition, serum levels of FSH, LH, and testosterone (boys) were measured in the same group of children. In boys, inhibin B, FSH, LH, and testosterone levels were all elevated at 3 months of age. However, the peak of inhibin B was unexpectedly high, into the supraadult range (mean +/- SE, 378 +/- 23 pg/mL) and persisted much longer than the elevation of FSH, LH, and testosterone. Thus, although levels of FSH, LH, and testosterone decreased into the range observed later in childhood by the age of 6-9 months, serum inhibin B levels remained elevated up to at least the age of 15 months. In girls, the hormonal pattern was generally more complex, with a high interindividual variation in levels of inhibin B, FSH, and LH within each age. In conclusion, the sustained elevation of inhibin B to supraadult levels in infant boys indicates that the neonatal period may be a developmental window important for Sertoli cell proliferation and maturation. Thus, the gonads may be potentially vulnerable to exogenous endocrine interference, e.g. from environmental factors during this period of life. Measurement of serum levels of inhibin B in infants may give clinical clues about developmental deficiencies in the gonads that otherwise only become apparent around puberty or later in life.