ACTA ENDOCRINOLOGICA (BUC)

The International Journal of Romanian Society of Endocrinology / Registered in 1938

in Web of Science Master Journal List

Acta Endocrinologica(Bucharest) is live in PubMed Central

Journal Impact Factor - click here.

Year Volume Issue First page
10.4183/aeb.
Author
Title
Abstract/Title
From through

  • Endocrine Care

    Mesci B, Oguz A, Coksert Kilic D, Celik S, Sahin G, Tekin M, Sariisik A, Koroglu G, Takir M, Sagun G, Tamer G

    Triple oral antidiabetic or metformin-basal insulin combination: testing two diffrent approches of consensus algorithm in adjusting antidiabetic therapy. An open-label, randomized study

    Acta Endo (Buc) 2012 8(4): 587-594 doi: 10.4183/aeb.2012.587

    Abstract
    Objective. The aim of this study was to compare the clinical effects of a triple oral antidiabetic combination versus basal insulin and metformin combination treatment in patients with poorly controlled type 2 diabetes.\r\nMethods. Eighty patients with type 2 diabetes, who were treated by metformin and sulphonylurea combination, and had\r\nHbA1c values between 7.5 and 10 % (58 and 86 mmol/L), were randomized into two groups. The first group was given triple oral antidiabetic therapy (pioglitazone, metformin, and sulphonylurea) and the second group was given metformin and a bedtime basal insulin (insulin detemir) combination for 12 weeks. Metabolic parameters were evaluated.\r\nResults. The mean fasting plasma glucose and HbA1c levels decreased in both groups. The decrease in HbA1c was slightly\r\nhigher in triple oral antidiabetic group (p=0.046). The patients in triple oral combination group gained 0.2 kg (p=0.881) and those in the metformin-insulin detemir combination group lost 1.7 kg (p=0.001) in 12 weeks (p=0.29 between groups). The frequency of hypoglycemia was higher in\r\ntriple oral antidiabetic group (11 vs. 2 episodes, respectively).\r\nConclusion. Both sulphonyureametformin-pioglitazone and insulin detemir-metformin therapies provided significant improvements in glycemic control. However, sulphonylurea,\r\npioglitazone and metformin combination led to more frequent hypoglycemic events, and weight management seemed in favor of insulin detemir-metformin combination.
  • Case Report

    Harza MC, Preda AT, Ismail G, Voinea S, Dudu CE, Baston C, Olaru V, Badescu B, Vladutescu CM, Lupescu I, Hortopan M, Sinescu I

    Challenges and Limits in Paraganglioma

    Acta Endo (Buc) 2013 9(4): 613-621 doi: 10.4183/aeb.2013.613

    Abstract
    Background. Paraganglioma develop from embryological neural crest cells from the base of the skull, mediastinum, retroperitoneum, urinary bladder and scrotum. The most common location of the retroperitoneal form is situated between the aorta and vena cava, at the level of left renal vein, or more distally, to the aortic bifurcation. The care of patients with paraganglioma is a challenge for many physicians and surgeons because of its clinical features and therapeutic implications. Case presentation. We report the case of a 22-years old female patient with symptomatic retroperitoneal paraganglioma who was successfully treated with complete surgical excision. The pathological report confirmed the presence of chromaffin tumours. Postoperative care was uneventful, the patient being discharged after 10 days. Follow-up evaluation showed no recurrence after 4 years. Conclusion. Although a very rare condition, retroperitoneal paraganglioma has to be considered in the differential diagnosis of retroperitoneal tumours. Complete surgical resection is crucial for treatment and histological assessment as these tumours are potentially curable if they are diagnosed correctly. In our experience, the best surgical approach is open surgical excision for large masses located in the interaortocaval region, with a clear operatory field and good control over the major blood vessels. Follow-up is strongly recommended.
  • Endocrine Care

    Atmaca M, Ozturk M, Ozbay MF, Ergenç E, Gönüllü E, Çokluk E

    TSH Levels in Pregnant Women with Iodine Deficiency before Spontaneous Abortus

    Acta Endo (Buc) 2014 10(4): 621-628 doi: 10.4183/aeb.2014.621

    Abstract
    Background. Iodine deficiency and/or thyroid autoimmunity are the most common causes of hypothyroidism development among pregnant women. In this study, we aimed to investigate the effect of iodine consumption and thyroid autoimmunity on TSH levels and abortus. The study sample consisted of 104 patients, 79 in abortus and 25 in control groups. TSH, free T4, free T3, anti-TPO, anti-Tg, spot urinary iodine concentrations, and thyroid volumes of the cases were measured by ultrasonography. The spot urine concentration was below 100 μg/L in 93% of the cases included in the study. The TSH levels of the abortus group cases were significantly higher than those of the controls (p=0.025). The percentage of subclinical hypothyroid cases were significantly higher among the cases evaluated due to abortus compared to the control group (p<0.001). Abortus and control groups did not differ statistically with respect to the presence of autoimmune thyroid diseases (p=0.424). Spot urine iodine concentrations of abortus cases with subclinical hypothyroid were significantly lower than those with TSH levels below the defined range (p=0.001). Spot urine iodine concentrations of the cases with subclinical abortus with negative thyroid autoantibodies were also significantly lower than those with TSH levels below the defined range (p=0.017). TSH levels above 1 μIU/mL for the first trimester and 2 μIU/mL for the second trimester may be indicators of iodine nutrition in pregnancy losses.
  • Endocrine Care

    Wu YC, Huang CN, Chen YJ, Kornelius E, Lu YL, Lin YT, Li CL, Yang YS

    Application of Self-Regulatory Behavioral Management in Postprandial Self-Blood Glucose Monitoring for Noninsulin Treated Type 2 Diabetic Patients

    Acta Endo (Buc) 2014 10(4): 629-639 doi: 10.4183/aeb.2014.629

    Abstract
    Aim. The purpose of this study is to investigate the effect of self-monitoring of blood glucose (SMBG) on glycemic control in insulin-naive type 2 diabetic patients comparing SMBG plus self-regulatory behavioral education, and SMBG plus individual education. Methods. Participants with glycated hemoglobin A1C (HbA1C) of 7.5-12% were enrolled in this 24-week, prospective study. Forty-two and forty participants received SMBG plus selfregulatory behavioral education, and SMBG plus individual education, respectively. The glycemic and behavioral attitudes outcomes were evaluated. Results. The A1C level decreased in both groups, from 9.41± 1.7% to 7.84± 0.83% in the SMBG plus self-regulatory behavioral education and 9.62 ±1.08% to 9.09± 1.1% in the SMBG plus individual education. However, the postprandial glucose (PPG) level sustained more significant decreases from 277.1 ±80.1 to 175.7 ±53.9 mg/dL in the SMBG plus self-regulatory behavioral education, and from 261.2 ±80.5 to 221.6 ±41.2 mg/dL in the SMBG plus individual education. The frequency of PPG monitoring increased from 0.1 ± 0.81 to 3.46 ± 2.81 times/week in SMBG plus self-regulatory behavioral education, whereas it increased from 0.13± 0.78 to 1.01± 0.89 in SMBG plus individual education. The amount of carbohydrates consumed per day decreased and the amount of physical activity performed per week increased significantly in self-regulatory behavioral education group. Conclusions. The use of this model of SMBG plus self-regulatory behavior education appears to have resulted in superior improvements in glycemic control and behavioral outcomes compared with those achieved by SMBG plus individual education.
  • Case Report

    Aksu O, Ersoy I H,Altuntas A , Koroglu B K,Ciris I M, Tamer M N, Sezer MT

    Long term addison disease associated with new onset minimal change disease

    Acta Endo (Buc) 2012 8(4): 633-638 doi: 10.4183/aeb.2012.633

    Abstract
    A 40-year-old woman has been followed up for 19 years by the\r\nendocrinology clinic with the diagnoses of Addison disease and primary hypothyroidism. During the most recent\r\nvisit of the patient, she complained about fatigue and malaise with pretibial edema. In albumin analysis: 2.2 gr/dL and 5.8 g/day proteinuria were detected. In terms of\r\nnephrotic syndrome etiology, renal biopsy was performed and it was considered as minimal change disease. The dose of 7.5\r\nmg/day methyl prednisolone was potentiated to a dose of 1mg/kg/day. During her control, the proteinuria did not regress and 150 mg/day cyclophosphamide was added to the treatment. During the control, her proteinuria regressed from 5.8 r/day to 1.95 mg/day.
  • Case Report

    Civan N, Erem C, Coskun H, Kocak M, Nuhoglu I, Ersoz HO

    Hypoparathyroidism, Deafness, and Renal Dysplasia

    Acta Endo (Buc) 2014 10(4): 687-692 doi: 10.4183/aeb.2014.687

    Abstract
    Background. HDR syndrome is an autosomal dominant disorder characterized by hypoparathyroidism, sensorineural deafness, and renal dysplasia caused by mutation of the GATA3 gene. Case report. We describe a case of HDR syndrome diagnosed in a 46-yearold male patient. He had hand numbness, intermittent dizziness, and imbalance due to hypocalcemia. Physical examination was slim in appearance, had marfanoid features, and presented the typical apathetic face. He had a narrow rib cage and pectus excavatum deformity. Laboratory findings included serum calcium of 7.4 mg/dL, phosphorus of 4.87 mg/dL, albumin of 4.5 g/dL, intact parathormone (iPTH) of 13.3 pg/mL, 25(OH) D3 vitamin of 16.3 μg/L, daily urinary calcium excretion of 23.4 mg/day. Noncontrast computerized tomography (CT) of the brain showed bilateral basal ganglia calcification. Abdominal ultrasonography and CT showed the absence of renal tissue in the left kidney site and pelvis (left renal aplasia). Audiometry revealed mild sensorineural hearing loss at high frequencies. Conclusions. The patients with HDR syndrome are often diagnosed when they are examined for symptomatic hypoparathyroidism and deafness. To the best our knowledge, the present case is the second case of Barakat Syndrome reported from Turkey. The treatment of HDR syndrome is focused on clinical symptoms. The prognosis of the disease correlates with hypoparathyroidism and the severity of renal disease. HDR syndrome has an autosomaldominant inheritance, screening of family members is recommended for early diagnosis and treatment.