Searchable abstracts of presentations at key conferences in endocrinology

ea0026mte18 | (1) | ECE2011

Weird thyroid function tests

Gurnell Mark , Chatterjee Krish

Although overt thyroid disease is easily recognised, lesser disturbances of thyroid function can prove difficult to diagnose and be mimicked by other endocrine and non-endocrine disorders. Establishing the correct diagnosis depends on accurate interpretation of thyroid function tests (TFTs), which is usually straightforward; however, in a minority of situations, the results of FT4, FT3 and TSH measurement either do not ‘fit’ with the clinical picture and/or appear di...

ea0031oc5.4 | Pituitary and neoplasia | SFEBES2013

Clinical, metabolic, biochemical and radiological characterisation of patients with thyrotropinomas reveals a highly variable phenotype

Koulouri Olympia , Moran Carla , Kandasamy Narayanan , Halsall David , Chatterjee Krish , Gurnell Mark

Background: Thyrotropinomas (TSHomas) are traditionally considered a rare albeit important cause of thyrotoxicosis, accounting for ∼1% of all pituitary adenomas. Although early case series reported a preponderance of macroadenomas, emerging evidence suggests microadenomas are being increasingly diagnosed. In addition, the clinical/biochemical phenotype appears to be more variable than previously suspected. We therefore examined the clinical, metabolic, biochemical and ra...

ea0013p85 | Clinical practice/governance and case reports | SFEBES2007

Long term follow up following focused parathyroidectomy for primary hyperparathyroidism

Simpson Helen , Fisher Simon , Gurnell Ellie , McFarlane Ian , Berman Lawrence , Balan K , Chatterjee Krish , Wishart Gordon

Aim: Focussed parathyroidectomy is an established technique in subjects where imaging has identified a single parathyroid lesion. The aim of this study was to examine the long-term cure rate following this procedure.Method: Of 188 patients undergoing surgery for primary hyperparathyroidism between 2001 and 2006, 150 had a single parathyroid lesion on imaging using sestamibi +/− neck ultrasound. These patients were treated by focused parathyroidecto...

ea0013p90 | Clinical practice/governance and case reports | SFEBES2007

Primary hyperparathyroidism in pregnancy-an increasingly common condition?

Chandran Shanthi , Wood Diana , Gurnell Mark , Chatterjee Krish , Wishart Gordon , Simpson Helen

Primary hyperparathyroidism in pregnancy is reported as being rare rare. It can be associated with significant complications. Maternal complications include symptomatic hypercalcaemia, renal calculi, hyperemesis, muscle weakness, and pre-eclampsia. Fetal complications include IUGR, low birth weight, preterm delivery, intrauterine death, neonatal tetany and fits.Patient 1 presented with asthma and was found to have primary hyperparathyroidism, corrected c...

ea0013p223 | AMEND Young Investigator's Award | SFEBES2007

Ectopic ACTH-management difficulties

Yeow Toh-Peng , Balan K , Wood Diana , Gurnell Mark , Chatterjee Krish , Simpson Helen

A 44 yr old IT systems analyst, presented in 2003 with a six month history of weight gain, diabetes and hypertension. On examination he was floridly Cushingoid. Investigations showed raised 9AM cortisol (1887 nmol/l) with failure to suppress following low and high dose dexamethasone, together with elevated 24 h urinary free cortisol (3300 nmol) and circulating ACTH (130 ng/l) levels. CT scan demonstrated a complex 11.5×9 cm lesion in the left lobe of liver and biopsy indi...

ea0037gp.20.09 | Pituitary – Hypopituitarism | ECE2015

Thyrotropinoma: diagnosis and management of a rare but increasingly recognised pituitary tumour – novel insights from a large prospective UK study

Koulouri Olympia , Moran Carla , Powlson Andrew , Antoun Nagui , Donnelly Neil , Mannion Richard , Pickrd John , Halsall David , Chatterjee Krish , Gurnell Mark

Background: Thyrotropinomas (TSHomas) are traditionally considered a rare, albeit important cause of thyrotoxicosis. Although early case series reported a predominance of invasive macroadenomas, emerging evidence suggests microadenomas are being increasingly diagnosed, and the clinical/biochemical phenotype appears to be more variable than previously suspected. We therefore performed detailed phenotyping of patients referred to our centre with a diagnosis of TSHoma over a 4-ye...

ea0044p151 | Neuroendocrinology and pituitary | SFEBES2016

MicroTSHoma: an emerging clinical entity with ‘atypical’ biochemical features and often ‘normal’ imaging characteristics on MRI

Koulouri Olympia , Moran Carla , Heard Sarah , Lyons Greta , Smith Rob , Aigbirhio Franklin , Antoun Nagui , Cheow Heok , Halsall David , Chatterjee Krish , Gurnell Mark

Background: Heightened awareness, as well as frequent thyroid function testing, have contributed to a recent rise in the incidence of thyrotropinomas. Microadenomas are now increasingly being recognized. The classical textbook description of thyrotropinomas is based on historically reported features in patients who typically had large/invasive lesions. The phenotype of microTSHomas could therefore differ.Methods: We reviewed the records of all TSHomas re...

ea0031p263 | Pituitary | SFEBES2013

11C-methionine PET–CT co-registered with volume MRI identifies residual functioning tumour in acromegaly

Koulouri Olympia , Kandasamy Narayanan , Moran Carla , Chatterjee Krish , Halsall David , Cheow HK , Antoun Nagui , Hoole Andrew , Burnet Neil , Donnelly Neil , Mannion Richard , Pickard John , Gurnell Mark

Although MRI remains the investigation of choice for pituitary imaging, it does not reliably identify all secretory microadenomas, and cannot always discriminate residual tumour from post-surgical change following hypophysectomy. We hypothesised that i) imaging with the PET ligand 11C-methionine, which is taken up at sites of peptide/protein synthesis, would permit more reliable identification of functioning pituitary adenoma, and ii) co-registration of PET–CT ...