Searchable abstracts of presentations at key conferences in endocrinology

ea0025p319 | Thyroid | SFEBES2011

Audit on follow up of thyroid function tests done during osteoporosis screening

Santhakumar A , Sugathan H , Woods D

Background: National osteoporosis guideline group recommend routine measurement of thyroid function tests. However it is well recognised that abnormal thyroid function tests done during acute hospital stays is not always suggestive of thyroid dysfunction and that they need to be repeated to determine the need for further management.Aim: To identify and assess the follow up of thyroid function tests (TFTs) done between June 2009 and Feb 2010 in the orthop...

ea0019p60 | Clinical practice/governance and case reports | SFEBES2009

Non-classic congenital adrenal hyperplasia and the 18 week wait

Woods D , Chandran S , Putta-Manohar S , Strey C

Targets such as the ‘18 week wait’ may help reduce diagnostic and treatment delay. However, we report two cases of supposed non-classic congenital adrenal hyperplasia (CAH) that perhaps highlight the benefit of time and hindsight as diagnostic tools.Case 1 A previously unknown 61-year-old contacted our department requesting alternatives to biphosphonate therapy. ‘Mild’ CAH had been diagnosed in 1974 on the basis of elevated urinary 17...

ea0012p31 | Clinical case reports/Governance | SFE2006

Severe hyponatremia and subsequent extra-pontine myelinolysis as a presentation of addison’s disease

Strey C , Gurnell M , Chatterjee K , Woods D , Simpson H

A 39 yr-old female with a past medical history of a non-metastatic ductal breast carcinoma, presented to hospital with a two-week history of vomiting and dizziness. Clinical examination was essentially normal apart from pigmentation of her mastectomy scar, palmar creases and buccal mucosa. Investigations revealed a plasma sodium (Na) 102 mmol/l, potassium 4.9 mmol/l, plasma osmolality 219 mOsm/kg, urine osmolality 173 mOsm/kg and urine Na 36 mmol/kg. She was treated with fluid...

ea0010p12 | Clinical case reports/Governance | SFE2005

Cushing’s syndrome without the cortisol

Woods D , Arun C , Corris P , Perros P

Adrenal suppression and iatrogenic Cushing’s secondary to concomitant inhaled steroid and itraconazole is a potentially common and serious drug interaction. A 55 year old patient with bronchiectasis and asthma developed an exacerbation of allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillosis (ABPA). He had been on inhaled fluticasone for over 2 years. He was commenced on itraconazole. The patient was on holiday 6 weeks after itraconazole was commenced when he noted that his face had be...

ea0010p65 | Reproduction | SFE2005

PCOS responsive to metformin therapy despite very low BMI

Thomas R , Woods D , Michael E , Quinton R

Clinical CaseA 19-year old ethnic Pakistani presented with severe, longstanding hirsutes without virilisation. Menarche had occurred at age 14, following which she had experienced 4-6 periods a year. She had always been “underweight” by UK/WHO criteria and, given a BMI of 16.5 kg.m−2, there were concerns about hypothalamic oligomenorrhoea.InvestigationsFasting glucose 5.5 mmol/L &#...

ea0003p145 | Endocrine Tumours and Neoplasia | BES2002

Clinical and biochemical findings in paragangliomas

Peaston R , Ibrahim I , Woods D , Senior P , Perros P

Paragangliomas are rare tumours that arise from extra-adrenal chromaffin cells within the sympathetic paraganglionic axis. While neoplasms of the adrenal medulla, (phaeochromocytomas) are normally characterized by catecholamine (CA) hypersecretion, paragangliomas can be nonfunctional. We report our findings from 5 patients (4 males, 1 female) with paragangliomas. In 4 out of 5 patients the initial presentation was related to the space-occupying effect of the tumour. Episodic s...

ea0004p6 | Clinical case reports | SFE2002

BILATERAL LAPARASCOPIC ADRENALECTOMY FOR ECTOPIC ACTH PRODUCTION IN AGGRESSIVE SMALL CELL CARCINOMA OF THE LUNG

Kierstan J , Woods D , Peaston R , Frewin S , Lennard T , Bliss R , Perros P

Bilateral laparoscopic adrenalectomy is a treatment option for ACTH-dependent Cushing's syndrome after failed pituitary surgery (Cushing's disease) or when the ACTH source cannot be resected or localized (ectopic ACTH syndrome). It has not, to our knowledge, been reported in the treatment of ectopic ACTH secretion in patients with small cell lung cancer.A 47 year old presented with haemoptysis and a right hilar mass, biopsy of which confirmed inoperable ...

ea0003p154 | Genetics | BES2002

The angiotensin II response to an acute exercise stimulus and the angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) genotype

Woods D , Jones A , Sanders J , Hurel S , Jamshidi Y , Hawe E , Goldstone J , Gohlke P , Humphries S , Montgomery H

The ACE I/D polymorphism is associated with resting ACE activity such that DD>ID>II. The D allele is strongly associated with increased exercise-induced left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) and cardiovascular risk.Objective: Examine the relation between ACE genotype, exercise, circulating ACE and angiotensin II.Ethical approval was obtained and 17 (9DD, 8II) healthy, male (22.9+/-1.9 years, 178.6+/-2.8cm, 71.9+/-2.2kg) Caucasi...

ea0002p45 | Genetics | SFE2001

Exercise-induced, ACE genotype-dependent rise in serum Angiotensin I-Converting Enzyme

Woods D , Saunders J , Jones A , Hurel S , Jamshidi Y , Hawe E , Goldstone J , Gohlke P , Humphries S , Montgomery H

Background: The ACE I/D polymorphism of the ACE gene, associated with cardiovascular risk and athletic performance, accounts for half the variation in resting ACE. DD subjects have the greatest, ID intermediate, and II subjects the lowest serum ACE. Exercise stimulates the renin-angiotensin system, producing a rise in angiotensin II. 3 small (n=6-8) lab studies suggest serum ACE does not change with exercise, despite a rise in angiotensin II, whereas 2 other studies have demon...

ea0031p43 | Clinical biochemistry | SFEBES2013

High pulmonary artery pressure is associated with BNP and NT-proBNP in lowlanders acclimatising to high altitude

Mellor A , Hill N E , Boos C , Holdsworth D , Begley J , Stacey M , Hall D , Lumley A , Hawkins A , Foxen S , Hara J O' , Smith C , Ball S , Woods D

Background: We have previously demonstrated that the natriuretic peptides BNP and NT-proBNP rise with ascent to high altitude (HA). Both peptides are classically markers of congestive cardiac failure but have also recently been found to be associated with pulmonary hypertension at sea-level (SL). As pulmonary hypertension is central to the risk of high altitude pulmonary oedema we aimed to establish if there was any association between high pulmonary artery systolic pressure (...