| Literature DB >> 3040850 |
I Halperin, M D Rodriguez, C Cardenal, R Casamitjana, M J Martinez Osaba, V Lienas, E Vilardell.
Abstract
Long-acting im bromocriptine was administered to 7 patients with pituitary macroadenomas (4 acromegalics, 1 Nelson's syndrome and 2 prolactinomas), with good tolerance except during the first 24 h. During a 42-day period hormonal, CT-scan and visual field variations were followed. In acromegalics HGH decrease was not evident, except in some isolated sample. In Nelson's syndrome ACTH showed a 94% fall on day 14, even though a spontaneous oscillation cannot be ruled out, and recovery took place from day 21 on. PRL remained undetectable in both. In prolactinomas, PRL suffered a great decrease (91.8% and 96.3% on days 21 and 28 respectively) and remained well below its initial values up to the end of the study, in spite of partial recovery. In these 2 patients CT-scan evidenced shrinkage of tumor mass, which was not observed in the remaining 5 cases. Visual fields did not improve in the 2 cases initially affected (Nelson's syndrome and 1 prolactinoma). Long-acting bromocriptine seems to have the same therapeutic uses of the oral form with the possible advantage of a better tolerance of full initial doses.Entities:
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Year: 1987 PMID: 3040850 DOI: 10.1007/BF03348130
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Endocrinol Invest ISSN: 0391-4097 Impact factor: 4.256