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Query: UMLS:C0018681 (headache)
56,091 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The effect of surgery alone or followed by radiotherapy in recovering visual abnormalities, debulking tumor mass and restoring hormone impairments was evaluated in 84 patients with clinical nonfunctioning pituitary adenomas (NFPA) subjected to 1-10 yr follow-up. All patients underwent surgery via transsphenoidal (in 69) or transcranic-pterional approach (in 15). Radiotherapy was performed after surgery in 59 of 72 patients with incomplete tumor removal. The assessment of pituitary function was performed in all patients before and every 1-2 yr after surgery and/or radiotherapy. Radiological and ophthalmologic assessment was performed before and 3, 6 and 12 months after surgery, then yearly. At diagnosis, headache and visual disturbances occurred in 63 and 58 patients, respectively, while deficiency of GH, TSH, ACTH, FSH, LH and ADH was documented in 55, 7, 19 47 and 6 patients, respectively. After surgery, gonadal function recovered in 12 women, visual disturbances improved in 43 patients (15 regained normal vision), pituitary function improved in 8 of 62 patients, worsened in 34 patients. At MRI, complete tumor removal was documented in 12 of 84 patients. After surgery alone, tumor regrowth was observed in 7 patients between 3-7 yr. After radiotherapy, vision improved in 9, remained unchanged in 49 and worsened in 1 of 59 patients. After radiotherapy, tumor regrowth was documented in 9 patients between 2-12 yr and the prevalence of hypopituitarism raised from 28.8% to 92% after 1 and 10 yr. In conclusion, surgery alone is effective only in a minority of patients (14.3%) and radiotherapy causes hypopituitarism in rather the totality of patients after 10 yr. The prevalence of tumor regrowth was similar in irradiated ones (15%) and non irradiated patients (28%; chi(2), p = 0.4). Therefore, a careful radiological followup is suggested after surgery so that radiotherapy can be performed promptly on the basis of clinical data, tumor regrowth and/or invasiveness documented at histology.
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PMID:Effect of surgery and radiotherapy on visual and endocrine function in nonfunctioning pituitary adenomas. 964 49

A 56-year-old female presented with idiopathic hypertrophic cranial pachymeningitis manifesting as headache, hypopituitarism, and diabetes insipidus, mimicking lymphocytic hypophysitis. Five months later, she complained of double vision and unusual right facial sensation. The diagnosis was based on magnetic resonance imaging, angiography, and meningeal biopsy via transsphenoidal surgery, and exclusion of other know causes of pachymeningitis. Despite initial response to steroid treatment, her symptoms recurred repeatedly and she became steroid-dependent. Repetition of short-term steroid pulse therapy restrained the deterioration of her condition. The clinical presentation of idiopathic hypertrophic cranial pachymeningitis is variable, and it may develop with signs of adjacent tissue involvement. Resultant secondary hypophysitis must be differentiated from lymphocytic hypophysitis. Initial steroid therapy is effective in improving symptoms, but should be carefully considered since the natural course of this disease seems to be self-limited.
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PMID:Idiopathic hypertrophic cranial pachymeningitis of the cavernous sinus mimicking lymphocytic hypophysitis. 968 25

Many studies have been done in the later course of Sheehan's syndrome, but very few have documented the acute phase with clinical, endocrine and imaging data. We present the case of a young woman complaining of severe headache after delivery, who developed hypopituitarism. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) disclosed the presence of an enlarged non haemorrhagic pituitary gland. Follow-up MRI showed a spontaneous and rapid shrinkage of the pituitary, within 20 days, which appeared as an empty sella 3 months later. Sheehan's syndrome may initially closely mimic hypophysitis, or the necrosis of an adenoma. We discuss the differential diagnoses, important for the best therapeutic management.
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PMID:Sheehan's syndrome: differential diagnosis in the acute phase. 974 50

We report a case of epidermal (or epidermoid) cyst, in a 36-year-old man which developed in the third ventricle. Clinical manifestations were headaches and memory disturbances. On CT scan the tumor occupied the entire third ventricle but was mainly developed on the left side. On CT reconstructed images, the floor of the third ventricle was clearly visible. Using a trans-ventricular approach, the tumor, closely related to the left part of hypothalamus, was totally removed. Later on, because of persistent hydrocephalus, a ventricular shunt was inserted. An aseptic meningitis occurred and resolved spontaneously. The patient exhibited a postoperative transitory Korsakoff's syndrome. Postoperative endocrine investigations showed hypopituitarism. Some intra-ventricular epidermal cysts have been reported, especially involving the fourth ventricle. Their development into the third ventricle is unusual, and in early reports their precise origin appears doubtful. Although they have no characteristic radiological features, the location of epidermal cysts is clearly defined by the CT scan and especially MRI. It would be possible to totally remove epidermal cysts of the third ventricle, avoiding the risk of recurrence.
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PMID:[Epidermoid cyst of the third ventricle. Report of a case]. 986 2

A patient of craniopharyngioma associated with intratumoral bleeding was reported. A 44-year-old female was admitted to our department with sudden onset of headache suggesting pituitary apoplexy. On admission, she complained of mild bifrontalgia and neurological examination revealed no abnormality except bitemporal hemianopsia. Hormonal examination indicated hypopituitarism with masked diabetes insipidus and chronic thyroiditis. MRI showed a cystic 12 x 10 x 10 mm tumor with an enhanced rim at the intra- and suprasellar region. The MRI findings of the cyst suggested intratumoral bleeding with various stages. CT and plain tomography revealed plane calcification adjusting or aligning itself to the floor of the sellar. This calcification was difficult to distinguish from the sellar floor on MRI. Under the diagnosis of craniopharyngioma, almost all of the tumor was removed, using the transsphenoidal approach. The cyst consisted of old hematoma and cholesterin. The histological examination revealed a stratified squamous epithelia with numerous immature blood vessels. Such findings are unusual in cases of craniopharyngioma. Craniopharyngioma is rarely associated with intratumoral hemorrhage. The mechanism of this hemorrhage was discussed with reference to the literature on this subject.
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PMID:[A case of craniopharyngioma with intratumoral hemorrhage]. 1002 88

Primary empty sella syndrome (ESS) is an anatomo-radiological picture characterized by the presence of an arachnoid herniation filled with liquor that compresses the pituitary against the sellar wall. ESS occurs particularly in obese, hypertensive, cephalgic women, it is often asymptomatic but it may be associated with ophthalmologic, neurologic and sometime non-characterizing endocrine disorders. We report here 71 cases of primary ESS observed and assessed during the last fourteen years. The following endocrinological diagnostic procedures were carried out: hormonal (RIA) basal profile: FT3, FT4, TSH, PRL, ACTH, FSH, LH, 8.00 a.m. and p.m. cortisolemia, Aldo, PRA, DHEA-S, FTe, E2, P, PTH, CT, and calcemia and phosphoremia; provocative tests: TRH, GnRH, insulin hypoglycemia, etc.; inhibition tests: "overnight" and high dose dexamethasone. Clinical, radiological (skull radiographs, CT and/or MRI) and ophthalmologic (fundus, visual fields) assessment were made. We found principally cephalgia (52/71: 73.2%), hypertension (42/71: 59.1%), obesity (47/71: 66.1%). But we found especially mental disorders (57/71: 80.2%), in our knowledge not previously reported in the literature, as anxiety or dysthymic disorders with behavioural disturbances (chiefly oral compulsion). We found endocrinopathies in 36/71 (50.7%), isolated or coexisting in some patients: hyperPRL (14%), hypopituitarism (10.4%), hypogonadism (7%), diabetes insipidus (2.8%), hyperACTH (1.4%), hypoGH (15.4%), pituitary adenomas (8.4%). Several hypothalamic illness show a clinical picture including mental disorders and obesity. The Authors hypothesize that the ESS may be a "new" hypothalamic syndrome (compression/stretching on hypophysis and/or hypophyseal stalk by arachnoidocele; disorder of some hormones and neurotransmitters as leptin, neuropeptide Y, orexins, POMC-derived peptides, etc).
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PMID:[Primary empty sella syndrome. Observations on 71 cases]. 1020 96

The clinical, radiographic findings in 12 patients with symptomatic Rathke cleft cysts (RCC) are presented. The mean age of these patients was 52 years, and 9 of the patients were female. Visual disturbance was the most common symptom, followed by headache. Magnetic resonance images (MRIs) were reviewed in 11 cases. In two cases, the cyst fluid had low signal intensity on T1-weighted images and high intensity on T2-weighted images. In eight cases the cyst fluid had iso-to-high intensity on both T1 and T2-weighted images. On dynamic MRI study using Gd-DTPA, normal anterior pituitary gland was seen superior to the RCC in 4 cases, anterior in 4, and inferior in 2 cases. In accordance with the MRI findings, transcranial approach was chosen in 4 cases and the transsphenoidal route was used in eight cases. Most symptoms and signs improved or resolved following surgery with the exception of those cases with a long-standing history of hypopituitarism. We experienced two cases of recurrence at 7 months, and 65 months respectively requiring a second operation, and the mean follow-up period for all cases was 78 months. Differential diagnosis between RCC and craniopharyngioma should be carefully made in the recurrent cases by surgical specimens of the cyst wall. Partial resection of the cyst wall and drainage of the contents via the transsphenoidal route is a safe and effective procedure in the majority of cases, but the transcranial approach is the treatment of choice in cases in which the cyst is entirely located in the suprasellar region.
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PMID:[Clinical study of symptomatic Rathke cleft cyst]. 1044 36

A 32-year-old woman presented with severe headache, photophobia, fever, nausea, vomiting, and worsening vision. She had also noted several months of amenorrhea. She was febrile to 38.9 degrees C. Laboratory evaluation revealed a markedly elevated erythrocyte sedimentation rate. Lumbar puncture revealed a cerebrospinal fluid lymphocytic pleocytosis and an elevated protein level. Endocrine studies revealed evidence of panhypopituitarism without diabetes insipidus. A magnetic resonance imaging study showed a 2-cm pituitary mass with optic chiasmal compression. The patient had a trans-sphenoidal resection of the mass. Pathology revealed multinucleated giant cells in necrotic debris, but no evidence of pituitary tumor. Studies looking for evidence of systemic granulomatous disease were negative. The patient was considered to have idiopathic giant-cell granulomatous hypophysitis. After surgery, the patient's vision improved and hormone replacement therapy was initiated. This case illustrates that idiopathic giant-cell granulomatous hypophysitis should be considered in the differential diagnosis of a patient presenting with a pituitary mass, hypopituitarism, and meningitis-like symptoms.
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PMID:Idiopathic giant-cell granulomatous hypophysitis mimicking acute meningitis. 1055 98

The distinction among craniopharyngioma (CR), Rathke's cleft cyst (RCC), and intrasellar arachnoid cyst (AC) remains a difficult preoperative problem. Accurate diagnosis of these rare pituitary lesions is important to determine the type of treatment and predict prognostic outcome. The majority of the literature describes the clinical manifestations and management of only one of CR, RCC, or AC, rendering comparisons difficult. We conducted a study to 1) investigate distinguishing preoperative clinical, biochemical, and radiographic features of patients with CR, RCC, and AC; and 2) identify clinicopathological features that independently predict recurrence in CR and RCC in adults. Fifty-two adult patients included 21 patients with CR (mean age at initial surgery, 35 +/- 14 yr), 26 patients with RCC (mean age, 37 +/- 14 yr), and 5 patients with AC (mean age, 53 +/- 12 yr). Mean follow-up duration was 70 +/- 13 months. Patients with CR presented with hypopituitarism in 95% of cases and hyperprolactinemia in 38%. These patients also had more preoperative neurological deficits (67%), ophthalmological complaints (67%), and significantly higher psychiatric manifestations (33%; P = 0.003) than those with RCC or AC. Patients with AC presented with headaches (60%), visual field deficits (60%), or impotence (50%) in the absence of other specific endocrine dysfunction symptoms. Using biochemical criteria, the percentage of patients with two or more pituitary hormonal axes impaired preoperatively was 67% for CR and 62% for RCC, significantly greater (P = 0.03) than that for the AC patients who had pituitary dysfunction of only one axis. The composition of CR lesions was cystic (38%), solid (10%), or mixed solid and cystic (43%). Patients with RCC or AC groups had a significantly greater proportion (P = 0.006) of purely cystic lesions (88% and 100%, respectively). Calcification detectable on computed tomographic scanning was present in 87% of patients with CR, a significantly greater proportion (P < 0.001) compared to those with RCC (13%) or AC (0%). No significant differences were found between the groups based on computed tomography density, the presence of postcontrast enhancement, or magnetic resonance imaging. Recurrence rate was 62% for CR, 19% for RCC, and 20% for AC. Surgical intervention statistically improved most neurological, ophthalmological, and psychiatric manifestations; in contrast, galactorrhea, menstrual dysfunction, and diabetes insipidus (52% CR; 31% RCC) did not improve or became worse postoperatively. A significantly higher percentage of patients with CR required postoperative hormone replacement. Similarly, there was a biochemical trend suggesting that a smaller proportion of patients with CR improved in at least one pituitary axis after surgery (P = 0.08) compared to those with RCC or AC. There was a positive correlation between cyst size and recurrence rate (r = 0.689; P < 0.01) and between cyst size and time to recurrence (r = 0.582; P = 0.037) for all three groups. We describe the largest clinical, biochemical, radiographic, and histological series of adult patients with cystic disease of the sella turcica. Patients with AC tended to be older at initial diagnosis than CR or RCC patients. Mass effects, such as visual problems and headaches, are common symptoms of all three cystic lesions, but psychiatric deficits favor a diagnosis of CR. Calcification or solid components on neuroimaging characterize CR. Endocrinological deficits, especially diabetes insipidus, had the worst prognosis after surgery. Low recurrence rates can be expected for RCC and AC. These data have direct implications for the management and monitoring of patients with cystic lesions of the sella turcica.
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PMID:Cystic lesions of the pituitary: clinicopathological features distinguishing craniopharyngioma, Rathke's cleft cyst, and arachnoid cyst. 1056 36

Pituicytoma is a rare, poorly characterized tumor of the sella and suprasellar region that is distinct morphologically from other local tumors and is thought to be derived from neurohypophyseal pituicytes. Clinical data, neuroimaging studies, and microsections were reviewed from nine such low-grade gliomas. Immunostains for glial, neuronal, and proliferation markers were performed on all nine tumors and six control neurohypophyses. Three tumors were studied ultrastructurally. Six men and three women, age 30 to 83 years (mean, 48 years), presented with visual symptoms, headache, or hypopituitarism. Magnetic resonance images showed solid, discrete, contrast-enhancing masses, four within the sella and five in the suprasellar space. The tumors consisted of sheets and/or fascicles of plump spindle cells with slightly fibrillar cytoplasm and slightly pleomorphic, oval-to-elongate nuclei with pinpoint nucleoli. Extracellular mucin was prominent in one tumor. Rosenthal fibers, granular bodies, and Herring bodies (granular axonal dilatations characteristic of the normal neurohypophysis) were lacking. Mitoses were rare or absent. MIB-1 labeling indices were low (0.5-2%). Tumor cells were strongly reactive for vimentin and S-100 protein, variably positive for glial fibrillary acidic protein, and nonreactive for synaptophysin and neurofilament protein. Cytoplasm varied in electron density and contained intermediate filaments. Neither meningothelial nor ependymal features were noted. Two tumors recurred at 20 and 26 months after subtotal resection, but none of the six completely resected tumors have done so. Pituicytomas are discrete, largely noninfiltrative low-grade gliomas of the sellar region that occur in adults. Their histologic appearance is distinct from pilocytic and ordinary, infiltrative astrocytomas. The distinction between pituicytoma and normal neurohypophysis is aided by the latter's content of axons, Herring bodies, and perivascular anucleate zones rich in axonal terminations. Although curable by total excision, subtotal resection can be associated with recurrence.
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PMID:Pituicytoma: a distinctive low-grade glioma of the neurohypophysis. 1071 49


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