Results 201 to 210 of about 16,228 (236)
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Cushing's Syndrome

New England Journal of Medicine, 1995
Cushing's syndrome is usually caused by the secretion of corticotropin or cortisol by a pituitary or adrenal tumor, respectively, or by ectopic secretion of corticotropin. It is possible to determine the specific abnormality in most patients, but it can sometimes be difficult to decide whether the patient has hypercortisolism and whether it is primary ...
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Subclinical Cushing’s syndrome

Best Practice & Research Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism, 2012
The routine use of abdominal procedure has significantly increased the incidental finding of adrenal masses. The prevalence of these tumors, commonly defined as adrenal incidentalomas, ranges between 2-3% in autopsy and 4% in radiological series, reaching 5-8% in oncological studies and increasing with patients age. Although clinically silent, in 5-20%
De Leo M   +3 more
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The Cushing Syndromes

Pediatric Clinics of North America, 1990
The 10 years since this journal's last review of CS have seen extraordinary advances in our understanding of many aspects of its causes, diagnosis, and treatment. The spectrum of what are now called the Cushing syndromes has expanded considerably to include CD, multiple sources of ectopic ACTH secretion, and an apparent autoimmune cause.
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Androgens in Cushing’s Syndrome

2019
Although polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) is the most common androgen excess disorder, screening for Cushing's Syndrome (CS) should be considered in women with PCOS phenotype, particularly if they are also affected by other disturbances that increase their pretest probability (e.g., osteoporosis/bone fractures).
Arnaldi G., Martino M.
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Cushing's syndrome in pregnancy

International Journal of Gynecology & Obstetrics, 1982
Abstract A diagnosis of Cushing's syndrome due to an adrenal adenoma was made at 32 weeks of gestation in a 26-year-old woman. Of particular interest were the very low levels of urinary estriol. At 36 weeks of gestation she spontaneously ruptured the membranes and delivered a 1.64 kg small-for-gestational-age male infant who was noted to have a minor
H, Khakoo   +3 more
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Adrenalectomy for Cushing's syndrome

The American Journal of Surgery, 1960
Abstract 1. 1. During a twenty-six-year period forty patients with proved Cushing's disease have been treated at The New York Hospital-Cornell Medical Center. 2. 2. Thirty-eight patients received some form of surgical therapy. There were no operative deaths. 3. 3. Two patients treated prior to 1948 died without surgery.
H, MANNIX, R, KARL, F, GLENN
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Cyclic cushing's syndrome

The American Journal of Medicine, 1984
Cyclic Cushing's syndrome is a rare but increasingly recognized disorder of periodic fluctuations of adrenal steroid production. A case of cyclic Cushing's syndrome due to a pituitary adenoma is described. The patient demonstrated a prolonged cycle length of approximately six months, during which a spontaneous remission occurred both clinically and ...
R, Sakiyama   +2 more
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FAMILIAL CUSHING'S SYNDROME

Acta Endocrinologica, 1978
ABSTRACT Cushing's syndrome has been demonstrated in four of seven siblings with clinical manifestations appearing around puberty in three of the four siblings. The only other associated findings in these cases were short stature and disturbed carbohydrate metabolism.
B, Arce, M, Licea, S, Hung, R, Padrón
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Cushing's Syndrome and Dermatomycosis

Archives of Dermatology, 1959
Introduction Cushing's syndrome, whether it reflects primary adrenal cortical hyperfunction, or hypercorticalism secondary to pituitary basophilism, is a rare disease. A review of the records at the Bronx Veterans Administration Hospital for the period 1948—1958 produced a total of only eight such cases.
O, CANIZARES, H, SHATIN, A J, KELLERT
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Factitious Cushing's Syndrome

The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism, 1985
A woman with pituitary-dependent Cushing's disease remained hypercortisolemic after bilateral adrenalectomy. A search for an adrenal remnant by venous catheterization study suggested persistent cortisol-secreting tissue in the left adrenal bed. During ACTH stimulation, plasma corticosterone concentrations remained low and cortisol remained high ...
D M, Cook, A W, Meikle
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