Neuroendocrinology
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Observational Study
Typical and atypical pituitary adenomas: a single-center analysis of outcome and prognosis.
In 2004, the World Health Organization defined atypical pituitary adenomas as those with a Ki-67 expression > 3%, an excessive p53 expression and increased mitotic activity. As the usefulness of this classification is controversial, we reviewed typical and atypical pituitary adenomas to compare the clinical and prognostic features. ⋯ In this series, atypical and typical pituitary adenomas did not differ with regard to recurrence and DFST. Pituitary adenomas with a Ki-67 expression ≥ 1.5% showed a higher recurrence risk and a worse DFST as compared to those with a Ki-67 expression < 1.5%. We suggest that a Ki-67 expression ≥ 1.5% may be useful as a prognostic marker, though this will need to be confirmed by prospective, multicenter data.
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Male and female rats differ in their ability to utilize spinal endomorphin 2 (EM2; the predominant mu-opioid receptor ligand in spinal cord) and in the mechanisms that underlie spinal EM2 analgesic responsiveness. We investigated the relevance of spinal estrogen receptors (ERs) to the in vivo regulation of spinal EM2 release. ⋯ These findings underscore the importance of estrogens for the regulation of spinal EM2 activity and, by extension, endogenous spinal EM2 antinociception in females. Components of the spinal estrogenic mechanism(s) that suppress EM2 release could represent novel drug targets for improving utilization of endogenous spinal EM2, and thereby pain management in women.