1.Medical Treatment of Acromegaly.
Journal of Korean Society of Endocrinology 1999;14(3):453-457
No abstract available.
Acromegaly*
2.An Unusual Early Oral Presentation of Acromegaly: A Case Report
Archives of Orofacial Sciences 2021;16(2):253-258
ABSTRACT
Acromegaly is a devastating chronic slowly progressive disease. Its early diagnosis is a challenging
issue that necessitates clinical suspicion of signs and symptoms as a first step. This report introduces
an unusual early sign in the oral cavity that lead to the early diagnosis of an acromegaly case. A case
of a healthy 40-year-old male patient presented with progressively growing multiple hard swellings in
the upper and lower jaws. Clinical examination revealed bony hard multiple small spiky exostosis-like
swellings, located at the maxillary and mandibular alveolar bones. An array of investigations revealed a
2-mm diameter pituitary tumour in MRI of sella. To the best of the author’s knowledge, this is the first
report of spiky exostosis-like growths in the alveolar bone as an early sign of acromegaly. In this case,
thorough examination of oral signs and symptoms was the first step for early diagnosis and hence, better
prognosis for acromegaly.
Acromegaly--diagnosis
3.A case of acromegaly in McCune-Albright syndrome.
Hyeon KIM ; Jin Hyung JANG ; Dong Myung LIM ; Dae Cheol WEE ; Cheol Seung YOUN ; Sun Ho KIM ; Jung Kyu LEEM ; Jin Deug HEO
Journal of Korean Society of Endocrinology 1992;7(4):402-408
No abstract available.
Acromegaly*
;
Fibrous Dysplasia, Polyostotic*
4.Preoperative treatment of acromegaly with long-acting somatostatin analog octreotide.
Seok In LEE ; Hyun Kyu KIM ; Kyung Soo KO ; Kyong Soo PARK ; Seong Yeon KIM ; Bo Youn CHO ; Hong Kyu LEE ; Chang Soon KOH ; Hun Ki MIN ; Hyun Jip KIM ; Heu Won JEONG ; Dae Hee HAN
Journal of Korean Society of Endocrinology 1993;8(1):35-41
No abstract available.
Acromegaly*
;
Octreotide*
;
Somatostatin*
5.Coexistence of neurofibromatosis and acromegaly in a 17-year-old man .
Uk Kyun HONG ; Hyeon Man KIM ; Jee Young HAN
Journal of Korean Society of Endocrinology 1991;6(4):371-376
No abstract available.
Acromegaly*
;
Adolescent*
;
Humans
;
Neurofibromatoses*
6.Pachydermoperiostosis mimicking acromegaly.
Hong Kyu LEE ; Jong Ho KIM ; Jong You KIM ; Hye Young PARK ; Eon Soo SHIN ; Hwan Joon CHANG ; In Soo HAN ; Moon Ho KANG
Journal of Korean Society of Endocrinology 1993;8(4):439-444
No abstract available.
Acromegaly*
;
Osteoarthropathy, Primary Hypertrophic*
7.Successful primary medical therapy with somatostatin receptor ligand in acromegaly with thyroid cancer
Shalini Sree Dharan ; Nor Azmi Kamaruddin
Journal of the ASEAN Federation of Endocrine Societies 2017;32(2):169-172
Acromegaly is a rare disease with an annual incidence of 3 to 4 cases in a million.[1] Diagnosis is often delayed due to the slow progression of the disease. Persistent elevation of growth hormone (GH) in acromegaly causes a reduction in life expectancy by 10 years. Aside from multiple cardiovascular, respiratory and metabolic co-morbidities, it has also been proven to cause an increased incidence of cancer. The main treatment of acromegaly is surgical excision of the functioning pituitary adenoma. Multiple comorbidities, including obstructive sleep apnea (OSA), left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) and soft tissue swelling, make surgery complicated, if not impossible. Medical therapy to reduce co-morbidities may be indicated in certain situations. Somatostatin receptor ligands (SRL) are able to reduce, and possibly normalize, IGF-1 levels.[2] Reduction of insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-1), the main mediator of GH, is able to resolve headache, sweating, fatigue and soft tissue swelling, and also reduce ventricular hypertrophy. This case report illustrates the successful use of the SRL octreotide LAR in treating acromegaly. It also confirms the observation from several case series that thyroid cancer is the most common malignancy in acromegaly.
Acromegaly
;
Thyroid Cancer, Papillary
8.Malaysian consensus statement for the diagnosis and management of acromegaly.
Zanariah Hussein ; Mohamed Long Bidin ; Azmi Alias ; Muthukkumaran Thiagarajan ; Kartikasalwah Abdul Latif ; Jeyakantha Ratnasingam ; Wan Juani Wan Seman ; Azraai Nasruddin
Journal of the ASEAN Federation of Endocrine Societies 2019;34(1):8-14
In Malaysia, acromegaly is under-recognised with only 10-15% of the expected number of cases from prevalence estimates, having been diagnosed and managed in established endocrine centres with access to multidisciplinary care. This is mainly due to lack of awareness and standardised approach in diagnosing this disease resulting in delay in diagnosis and management with suboptimal treatment outcomes. This first Malaysian consensus statement on the diagnosis and management of acromegaly addresses these issues and is based on current best practices and latest available evidence so as to reduce the disease burden on acromegaly patients managed in the Malaysian healthcare system.
Human ; Acromegaly ; Consensus ; Malaysia
9.The sleeping giant: An atypical case of a giant Pituitary Adenoma presenting as Acromegaly with minimal symptoms of mass effect
Catherine Jordan ; Carmen Carina Cabrera ; Evelyn Esposo ; Reynaldo Rosales ; Rachelle Diane Maravilla
Journal of the ASEAN Federation of Endocrine Societies 2019;34(2):76-
Introduction:
This is a case of patient with giant pituitary adenoma (GPA) presenting with acromegalic features, minimal symptoms of mass effect who underwent surgical resection via transcranial approach with minimal surgical morbidity.
Case:
A 40-year-old female presented with typical acromegalic features over 14 years, occasional mild frontal headaches and blurred vision. She had elevated growth hormone (GH) and insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-1). Cranial MRI revealed a 6.4x7x5.5 cm lobulated pituitary mass with cystic degeneration, areas of necrosis with mass effect on several intracranial structures. Excision via craniotomy reduced mass size to 5.9x5.8x4.7 cm. Histopathology revealed a mixed GH- and prolactin-secreting pituitary adenoma. She was maintained on bromocriptine and underwent radiotherapy. Repeat IGF-1 levels remained elevated but symptoms did not progress
Conclusion
This is a case of a patient with GPA with minimal symptom of mass effect, with no hormonal improvement post-surgery and radiotherapy. Ideally, a multi-staged surgery can be done with optimization of medical management. In the absence of these medications locally and reluctance of patient for re-surgery, the team opted to monitor tumor size, hormone levels and maximize management of co-morbidities.
Acromegaly
;
Pituitary Neoplasms
10.Patient characteristics, disease burden, treatment patterns and outcomes in patients with acromegaly: Real-world evidence from the Malaysian acromegaly registry
Mohamed Badrulnizam Long Bidin ; Abdul Mueed Khan ; Florence Hui Sieng Tan ; Nor Azizah Aziz ; Norhaliza Mohd Ali ; Nor Azmi Kamaruddin ; Shireene Vethakkan ; Balraj Sethi ; Zanariah Hussein
Journal of the ASEAN Federation of Endocrine Societies 2023;38(1):75-80
Objective:
This study aims to report the demographic features of patients with acromegaly the disease burden, and the corresponding treatment patterns and outcomes in Malaysia.
Methodology:
This is a retrospective study that included patients from the Malaysian Acromegaly registry who were diagnosed with acromegaly from 1970 onwards. Data collected included patient demographics, clinical manifestations of acromegaly, biochemical results and imaging findings. Information regarding treatment modalities and their outcomes was also obtained.
Results:
Registry data was collected from 2013 to 2016 and included 140 patients with acromegaly from 12 participating hospitals. Median disease duration was 5.5 years (range 1.0 – 41.0 years). Most patients had macroadenoma (67%), while 15% were diagnosed with microadenoma. Hypertension (49.3%), diabetes (37.1%) and hypopituitarism (27.9%) were the most common co-morbidities for patients with acromegaly. Majority of patients had surgical intervention as primary treatment (65.9%) while 20.7% were treated medically, mainly with dopamine agonists (18.5%). Most patients had inadequate disease control after first-line treatment regardless of treatment modality (79.4%).
Conclusion
This registry study provides epidemiological data on patients with acromegaly in Malaysia and serves as an initial step for further population-based studies.
acromegaly
;
treatment outcomes