Lymphoma of the pituitary gland: An unusual presentation of central nervous system lymphoma in AIDS

1996 ◽  
Vol 101 (5) ◽  
pp. 563-564 ◽  
Author(s):  
Magnus Gottfredsson ◽  
Tim D. Oury ◽  
Crystal Bernstein ◽  
Christopher Carpenter ◽  
John A. Bartlett
Author(s):  
Anita Cassoli Cortez ◽  
Márcia Torresan Delamain ◽  
Leandro Luiz Lopes de Freitas ◽  
André Almeida Schenka ◽  
Fabiano Reis

1963 ◽  
Vol 44 (3) ◽  
pp. 475-480 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Grinberg

ABSTRACT Radiologically thyroidectomized female Swiss mice were injected intraperitoneally with 131I-labeled thyroxine (T4*), and were studied at time intervals of 30 minutes and 4, 28, 48 and 72 hours after injection, 10 mice for each time interval. The organs of the central nervous system and the pituitary glands were chromatographed, and likewise serum from the same animal. The chromatographic studies revealed a compound with the same mobility as 131I-labeled triiodothyronine in the organs of the CNS and in the pituitary gland, but this compound was not present in the serum. In most of the chromatographic studies, the peaks for I, T4 and T3 coincided with those for the standards. In several instances, however, such an exact coincidence was lacking. A tentative explanation for the presence of T3* in the pituitary gland following the injection of T4* is a deiodinating system in the pituitary gland or else the capacity of the pituitary gland to concentrate T3* formed in other organs. The presence of T3* is apparently a characteristic of most of the CNS (brain, midbrain, medulla and spinal cord); but in the case of the optic nerve, the compound is not present under the conditions of this study.


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