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Featured researches published by Reynaldo M. Gómez.


Obstetrics & Gynecology | 2002

Androgen-secreting adrenal adenomas.

Karina Danilowicz; N Albiger; M Vanegas; Reynaldo M. Gómez; Graciela Cross; Oscar D. Bruno

BACKGROUND The androgen source in women with hirsutism and signs of virilism may be the ovary or adrenal gland. CASES Three patients with androgen excess are reported. Two had hyperandrogenemia and Cushing syndrome with an adrenal mass greater than 5.5 cm; the third had a small adrenal adenoma secreting only testosterone and responsive to human chorionic gonadotropin. In all cases, the pathologic report from surgery and the long-term resolution of symptoms confirmed the benign nature of the tumors. CONCLUSION Basal and dynamic hormonal tests cannot precisely differentiate ovarian from adrenal tumors. Adrenal adenomas must be considered as a cause of hyperandrogenic syndrome.


International Journal of Endocrinology | 2015

Temozolomide Therapy for Aggressive Pituitary Tumors: Results in a Small Series of Patients from Argentina

Oscar D. Bruno; Lea Juárez-Allen; Silvia B. Christiansen; Marcos Manavela; Karina Danilowicz; Carlos Vigovich; Reynaldo M. Gómez

We evaluated results of temozolomide (TMZ) therapy in six patients, aged 34–78 years, presenting aggressive pituitary tumors. In all the patients tested O6-methylguanine-DNA methyltransferase (MGMT) immunoexpression in surgical specimens was absent. Patients received temozolomide 140–320 mg/day for 5 days monthly for at least 3 months. In two patients minimum time for evaluation could not be reached because of death in a 76-year-old man with a malignant prolactinoma and of severe neutro-thrombopenia in a 47-year-old woman with nonfunctioning pituitary adenoma. In two patients (a 34-year-old acromegalic woman and a 39-year-old woman with Nelsons syndrome) no response was observed after 4 and 6 months, respectively, and the treatment was stopped. Conversely, two 52- and 42-year-old women with Cushings disease had long-term total clinical and radiological remissions which persisted after stopping temozolomide. We conclude that TMZ therapy may be of variable efficacy depending on—until now—incompletely understood factors. Cooperative work on a greater number of cases of aggressive pituitary tumors should be crucial to establish the indications, doses, and duration of temozolomide administration.


Pituitary | 2004

Spontaneous remission of Cushing's disease after disappearance of a microadenoma attached to the pituitary stalk.

Analía Pignatta; Adriana G. Díaz; Reynaldo M. Gómez; Oscar D. Bruno

Cushing’s disease caused by a microadenoma located near the pituitary stalk is infrequent and spontaneous remission caused by necrosis of a corticotropinoma in such location has not been reported. A 42-year-old woman with ACTH-dependent Cushing’s syndrome presented on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) a 3-mm microadenoma attached to the pituitary stalk. Treatment with ketoconazole normalized urinary free cortisol (UFC) from 433.0 to 66.0 μg/day, although it failed to reduce elevated serum androgen levels (DHEAS 4770 ng/ml). After one year, treatment was stopped and UFC rose again to 936.0 μg/day but one month later the patient presented acute headache and signs of steroid withdrawal syndrome. Endocrine evaluation showed glucocorticoid and androgen deficiency (UFC 5.0 μg/day; DHEAS < 300 ng/ml); control MRI revealed disappearance of the microadenoma. Cushingoid signs subsided and steroid replacement was initiated, proving still necessary over two years after the episode.Infarction or hemorrhage of a corticotrope adenoma could be a probable underlying mechanism although its precipitating factor is unclear. Ketoconazole withdrawal, through abrupt increase in cortisol production and/or the interruption of a hypothetical inhibitory action on cell replication followed by tumor growth and compromise of vascular supply, may be considered as possible triggering factors. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report of spontaneous remission of Cushing’s disease caused by presumed infarction of a microadenoma, unusually located in the superior rim of the pituitary, attached to the stalk.


Archives of Endocrinology and Metabolism | 2015

Screening for primary aldosteronism in an argentinian population: a multicenter prospective study

Mariela Leal Reyna; Reynaldo M. Gómez; Susana Lupi; Susana Belli; Cecilia A. Fenili; Marcela Martinez; Gabriela Ruibal; Maria A. Rossi; Raúl A. Chervin; Dora Cornaló; Liliana N. Contreras; Liliana Costa; María Teresa Nofal; Sergio A. Damilano; Ester Pardes

OBJECTIVES Primary aldosteronism (PA) is characterized by the autonomous overproduction of aldosterone. Its prevalence has increased since the use of the aldosterone (ALD)/plasma renin activity (PRA) ratio (ARR). The objective of this study is to determine ARR and ARC (ALD/plasma renin concentration ratio) cut-off values (COV) and their diagnostic concordance (DC%) in the screening for PA in an Argentinian population.Design multicenter prospective study. SUBJECTS AND METHODS We studied 353 subjects (104 controls and 249 hypertensive patients). Serum aldosterone, PRA and ARR were determined. In 220 randomly selected subjects, 160 hypertensive patients and 60 controls, plasma renin concentration (PRC) was simultaneously measured and ARC was determined. RESULTS According to the 95th percentile of controls, we determined a COV of 36 for ARR and 2.39 for ARC, with ALD ≥ 15 ng/dL. In 31/249 hypertensive patients, ARR was ≥ 36. PA diagnosis was established in 8/31 patients (23/31 patients did not complete confirmatory tests). DC% between ARR and ARC was calculated. A significant correlation between ARR and ARC (r = 0.742; p < 0.0001) was found only with PRA > 0.3 ng/mL/h and PRC > 5 pg/mL. DC% for ARR and ARC above or below 36 and 2.39 was 79.1%, respectively. CONCLUSION This first Argentinian multicenter study determined a COV of 36 for ARR and 2.39 for ARC. Applying an ARR ≥ 36 in the hypertensive group, we confirmed PA in a higher percentage of patients than the previously reported one in our population. As for ARC, further studies are needed for its clinical application, since DC% is acceptable only for medium range renin values.


Hormone Research in Paediatrics | 1991

Long-Term Low-Dose Glucocorticoid Therapy in Hyperandrogenized Women: Utility and Effects on Bone Mineral Content and Hypothalamic-Pituitary-Adrenocorticai Function

Liliana N. Contreras; L. Rizzo; Reynaldo M. Gómez; J.R. Zanchettal; Maria A. Rossi; Martha Krai; Ana M. Masini; Oscar D. Bruno

The effect of chronic low-dose glucocorticoid administration on bone mineral content and corticotrope reserve was investigated in 12 hyperandrogenized women treated with 1–6 mg oral evening doses of 1


Pituitary | 2008

Correction of cortisol overreplacement ameliorates morbidities in patients with hypopituitarism: a pilot study

Karina Danilowicz; Oscar D. Bruno; Marcos Manavela; Reynaldo M. Gómez; Ariel L. Barkan


European Journal of Endocrinology | 1985

Nocturnal high-dose dexamethasone suppression test in the aetiological diagnosis of Cushing's syndrome

Oscar D. Bruno; Maria A. Rossi; Liliana N. Contreras; Reynaldo M. Gómez; G. Galparsoro; E. Cazado; Martha Kral; Beatriz Leber; D. Arias


Pituitary | 2008

Pituitary abscess: a report of two cases.

Karina Danilowicz; Carlos Francisco Sanz; Marcos Manavela; Reynaldo M. Gómez; Oscar D. Bruno


Medicina-buenos Aires | 2007

A study of 34 cases of adrenal incidentaloma

Raúl A. Chervin; Karina Danilowicz; Fabián Pitoia; Reynaldo M. Gómez; Oscar D. Bruno


Medicina-buenos Aires | 2007

Effect of hypercortisolism control on high blood pressure in Cushing's syndrome

Reynaldo M. Gómez; Nora M.E. Albiger; Adriana G. Díaz; Daniel Moncet; Fabián Pitoia; Oscar D. Bruno

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Oscar D. Bruno

Université libre de Bruxelles

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Karina Danilowicz

University of Buenos Aires

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Oscar D. Bruno

Université libre de Bruxelles

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Fabián Pitoia

University of Buenos Aires

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Raúl A. Chervin

University of Buenos Aires

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Adriana G. Díaz

University of Buenos Aires

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Marcos Manavela

University of Buenos Aires

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Daniel Moncet

University of Buenos Aires

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Maria A. Rossi

University of Buenos Aires

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