Cases reported "Lactation Disorders"

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1/6. hyperprolactinemia, galactorrhea and amenorrhea in women with a spinal cord injury.

    Six women with a traumatic spinal cord injury (SCI) developed hyperprolactinemia, amenorrhea and galactorrhea. Five of them had thoracic level lesions and 1 had a lumbosacral lesion. Two were postpartum and 1 was pregnant at the time of injury. Transient diabetes insipidus developed in 1 patient. Temporary administration of bromocriptine decreased prolactin levels, caused cessation of lactation and restored ovulatory cycles. The syndrome disappeared spontaneously in all 6 patients. Pituitary stalk concussion resulting from the trauma might cause this phenomenon, with the level of the cord injury playing a role. Being pregnant or early postpartum can predispose women to develop this syndrome.
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ranking = 1
keywords = cycle
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2/6. Isolated prolactin deficiency in a woman with puerperal alactogenesis.

    Idiopathic PRL deficiency was detected in a parturient woman with otherwise normal pituitary function. This PRL disorder first became manifest postpartum when she had no milk production, and oral metoclopramide failed to raise her serum PRL levels. Her second pregnancy occurred spontaneously after 3 yr of attempts to conceive. During the pregnancy, her serum PRL concentration was very low, varying from 4.5-7.8 ng/ml, and the puerperium was again characterized by alactogenesis. During normal menstrual cycles and after iv GnRH, TRH, metoclopramide, and insulin tolerance tests, serum PRL was only rarely detectable by RIA, at very low concentrations. Bioassay results confirmed the PRL deficiency. The results confirm that PRL is necessary for puerperal lactation and suggest that it is needed for normal ovarian function. The present data also suggest that the maternal pituitary is the main source of serum PRL during pregnancy, and the decidua has only a minor contribution in this respect.
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ranking = 129.73104139895
keywords = menstrual cycle, cycle
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3/6. [Raised serum PRL and androgen levels associated with hyrsutism, amenorrhoea and galactorrhoea]

    This is a report of a case of a case of amenorrhoea-galactorrhoea syndrome with hyperprolactinaemia associated with increase of plasma androstenedione and urinary 17-ketosteroids, gradually developed in a sterile subject. plasma LH and testosterone levels and the results of adrenal suppression and ovarian stimulation tests seem to prove, point towards, the adrenal as the likely source of androgens. Treatment with bromocryptin for 20 weeks brought about a reduction to normal of both PRL and androgens. Resumption of ovulatory cycles followed thereafter and a pregnancy eventually occurred.
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ranking = 1
keywords = cycle
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4/6. Characterization of a pituitary stone.

    Calcification of the pituitary is unusual and functional studies of such cases have not been previously reported. We have been able to document persistent prolactin secretion both in vivo and in vitro in a patient with a severely calcified pituitary adenoma ("pituitary stone"), and have also documented prolactin granules within the calcified tissue mass. Normal menstrual function was restored after surgical removal of the "stone," and galactorrhea subsided although the prolactin response to thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH) remained abnormal. Two years after surgery the menstrual cycle has remained regular, but galactorrhea has recurred, emphasizing the need for prolonged follow-up in patients with prolactin-producing adenomas, despite apparent surgical cure. The in vitro studies showed that human pituitary tissue is secretory in culture and thus may serve as a useful tool for physiologic studies of the pituitary cell.
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ranking = 129.73104139895
keywords = menstrual cycle, cycle
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5/6. pregnancy following thyroid hormone treatment in a patient with amenorrhea-galactorrhea due to primary hypothyroidism.

    A 32-year-old female with amenorrhea-galactorrhea due to primary hypothyroidism was treated with thyroid hormones, and serum levels of thyrotropin (TSH), prolactin (PRL), triiodothyronine (T3), thyroxin (T4), and T3 resin sponge uptake (RT3U) were measured throughout the course of treatment. The elevated serum levels of TSH and PRL fell into the normal range following T3 treatment. Subsequently, the menstrual cycle was restored within 1 month, and galactorrhea completely ceased and conception was achieved within 3 months. Desiccated thyroid was administered during pregnancy, and the patient gave birth to a female infant. Impaired secretion of PRL during pregnancy and poor milk secretion with blunted response of PRL to the suckling stimulus during the puerperium were noted.
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ranking = 129.73104139895
keywords = menstrual cycle, cycle
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6/6. pregnancy following 2-bromo-alpha-ergocryptine (CB-154)-induced ovulation in an acromegalic patient with galactorrhea and amenorrhea.

    An acromegalic patient with galactorrhea-amenorrhea who conceived following long-term 2-bromo-alpha-ergocryptine (CB-154) therapy is described. During CB-154 therapy, determinations of serum prolactin (PRL), luteinizing hormone (LH)-human chorionic gonadotropin, follicle-stimulating hormone a reduction in PRL level followed by an LH peak, a rise in basal body temperature and menstruation. The patient became pregnant during the next cycle, but therapeutic abortion was performed because of the active acromegaly. These results demonstrate that CB-154 can restore ovulatory function not only to the patient with a hypothalamic disorder but also to the acromegalic patient with an enlarged sella turcica.
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ranking = 1
keywords = cycle
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