Dexamethasone suppression and multiple hormonal responses (TSH,prolactin and growth hormone) to TRH in some psychiatric disorders |
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Authors: | Csaba M. Banki Maria Vojnik Mihaly Arato Zsuzsa Papp Zsuzsa Kovacs |
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Affiliation: | (1) The Regional Neuropsychiatric Institute, P. O. Box 37, H-4321 Nagykallo, Hungary;(2) Hamilton Psychiatric Hospital, L8N 3K7 Hamilton, Ontario, Canada;(3) National Institute for Nervous and Mental Diseases, Budapest;(4) Endocrinological Laboratory, Postgraduate Medical School, Budapest, Hungary |
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Abstract: | Summary Baseline and TRH-induced changes of thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH), prolactin (PRL), and growth hormone (GH) were measured in 15 healthy control subjects and 63 psychiatric inpatients with DSM-III diagnoses of major depression (n = 19), schizophrenic disorder (n = 20), alcohol dependence (n = 10), and adjustment disorder (n = 14); baseline and postdexamethasone cortisol (CS) were also determined 3–6 days after the TRH-challenge. All patients and controls were women of similar mean age, weight, height, and they were free from interfering illness or drugs.Baseline TSH and PRL were lower in depression, TRH-induced TSH and PRL responses were lower in the whole patient group, but most markedly in depression and alcohol dependence. Postdexamethasone CS was significantly higher in depression, schizophrenia and alcohol dependence. Basal GH did not differentiate the subgroups; TRH-induced pathological GH responses were sometimes found in the patient groups. The differences were most marked quantitatively in major depression: a multivariate analysis of variance showed that TSH, postdexamethasone CS and PRL were the most important variables in separating patients from controls. A discriminant function derived from these variables classified all controls and 18 of 19 depressed patients correctly; however, 25 of the 44 other patients were also classified with depression.It was confirmed that psychiatric patients show significantly more endocrine disturbances than controls, and this was seen not only in major depression but also in at least three other conditions. Further work is needed to identify other neuroendocrine patterns more specific to depressive disorder. |
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Keywords: | Depression Schizophrenia Alcohol dependence DST TRH TSH Prolactin Growth hormone |
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