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147,016 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The case of woman with diagnosis on non-hemorrhagic pituitary macroadenoma producing reversible occlusion of the internal carotid artery is presented. The obstruction of the internal carotid artery by a pituitary tumor is rare, particularly in the absence of hypophyseal apoplexy. The neuroradiological correlation becomes fundamentally important to demonstrate the complete occlusion or thrombosis of the affected vessel. The complete reestablishment of blood flow of the internal carotid artery after surgery becomes imperative for the complete symptomatological regression.
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PMID:[Non-hemorrhagic pituitary macroadenoma producing reversible internal carotid artery occlusion: case report]. 962 23

We report the case of a 31-year-old woman with a pituitary adenoma who suffered symptomatic pituitary apoplexy. The patient developed a severe headache 2 min after undergoing a combined anterior pituitary function (CAP) test. Emergent computed tomography revealed a hemorrhagic pituitary tumor with evidence of a small subarachnoid hemorrhage. The headache improved spontaneously within half a day. Transsphenoidal surgery was performed 4 days later. Histologic examination demonstrated that the tumor was an eosinophilic adenoma with areas of diffuse hemorrhage. Although pituitary apoplexy caused by endocrinological testing has been reported in only 28 patients, apoplexy caused by a CAP test has been reported in only 1 patient. All of the previous cases had pituitary macroadenomas, 69% of which were involved in suprasellar extension. Non-functioning adenomas (24%) and prolactinomas (24%) were the most often affected by endocrine stimulation tests. With respect to the stimulants of pituitary adenomas, gonadotropin-releasing hormone (76%), TSH-releasing hormone (69%), and insulin (34%) were primarily responsible for the apoplexy. This case report with the literature review suggests that routine testing on pituitary function should be ordered cautiously given the risk of possible apoplexy.
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PMID:Pituitary apoplexy induced by a combined anterior pituitary test: case report and literature review. 979 Feb 75

A 60-year-old female and a 66-year-old male presented with post-traumatic pituitary apoplexy associated with clinically asymptomatic pituitary macroadenoma manifesting as severe visual disturbance that had not developed immediately after the head injury. Skull radiography showed a unilateral linear occipital fracture. Magnetic resonance imaging revealed pituitary tumor with dumbbell-shaped suprasellar extension and fresh intratumoral hemorrhage. Transsphenoidal surgery was performed in the first patient, and the visual disturbance subsided. Decompressive craniectomy was performed in the second patient to treat brain contusion and part of the tumor was removed to decompress the optic nerves. The mechanism of post-traumatic pituitary apoplexy may occur as follows. The intrasellar part of the tumor is fixed by the bony structure forming the sella, and the suprasellar part is free to move, so a rotational force acting on the occipital region on one side will create a shearing strain between the intra- and suprasellar part of the tumor, resulting in pituitary apoplexy. Recovery of visual function, no matter how severely impaired, can be expected if an emergency operation is performed to decompress the optic nerves. Transsphenoidal surgery is the most advantageous procedure, as even partial removal of the tumor may be adequate to decompress the optic nerves in the acute stage. Staged transsphenoidal surgery is indicated to achieve total removal later.
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PMID:Post-traumatic pituitary apoplexy--two case reports. 1009 59

Pituitary apoplexy has been reported as a very rare complication of combined tests of anterior pituitary function and of TRH or gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) administration in pituitary tumor. A 34-year-old man with a GH-secreting pituitary macroadenoma and diabetes mellitus received an injection of 400 microg TRH, 100 microg GnRH, and 0.15 U/Kg regular insulin. Twenty minutes later, he complained of a severe headache and vomited. Visual acuity and visual field did not change and his headache was persistent during the next 24 hours of conservative management. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the sella turcica done the day after the event showed definitive elevation of the optic chiasm and slight enlargement of tumor and focal areas of mixed high signal and low signal intensities in the macroadenoma on noncontrast T1-weighted images. Headache subsided markedly within a day of octreotide therapy. Transsphenoidal removal of the pituitary tumor was performed 9 days after the hormone study. Ischemic necrosis and hemorrhage were confirmed in the acidophilic adenoma with positive immunostaining for GH. Postoperative course was uneventful and his serum insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-1) level and blood glucose levels were normalized. Three months after the surgery the dynamic test was repeated without adverse effects. To our knowledge, this is a very rare case of apoplexy of GH-secreting pituitary adenoma after a combined stimulation test of anterior pituitary function.
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PMID:Apoplexy of pituitary macroadenoma after combined test of anterior pituitary function. 1103 77

We reported the case of a 55-year-old man with metastatic tumor of the pituitary gland who suffered from symptomatic pituitary apoplexy with subarachnoid hemorrhage. The patient, who had sigmoid colon carcinoma and left parietal metastatic brain tumor, developed severe headache and decrease of right visual acuity. CT showed a pituitary mass with subarachnoid hemorrhage. Transsphenoidal surgery was performed after replacement therapy with corticosteroids. Histological examination revealed metastasis of adenocarcinoma. Pituitary apoplexy is an unusual manifestation of metastatic pituitary tumor. The case of metastatic tumor of the pituitary gland presenting as subarachnoid hemorrhage such as this case is especial rare.
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PMID:[A case of metastatic tumor of the pituitary gland presenting as a subarachnoid hemorrhage]. 1119 35

A 63-year-old man, who presented with visual field loss due to pituitary tumor, received an intravenous bolus injection of thyrotropin and gonadotropin releasing hormones and insulin as a preoperative evaluation. He complained of severe headache and nausea 2 hours after injection. Emergent CT scan showed no evidence of intratumoral hemorrhage. The next day, his visual field became null. MR images revealed heterogeneous mixed intensity lesions. Under diagnosis of pituitary apoplexy, he underwent transsphenoidal tumor removal 30 hours after onset. Intraoperative and pathological findings showed tumor hemorrhage and adjacent necrotic change. Fourteen cases with sufficient clinical detail in the literature are reviewed: All of the cases had macroadenoma with suprasellar extension. Testing agents were gonadotropin and thyrotropin releasing hormones in 92.9% and 85.7% of cases, respectively. Headache was an initial symptom and started within two hours in all cases but one. Half of the cases showed no change on CT scan. However, tumor hemorrhage was evidenced in 92.9% of cases with or without necrosis due to ischemic change, intraoperatively or pathologically. It is speculated that pituitary apoplexy often starts with infarction possibly due to vasoactive effect of testing agents and later develops into hemorrhage. Therefore, it is necessary to observe patients closely at least a few hours after endocrine stimulation test, and MR imaging may make an earlier diagnosis for the pituitary apoplexy since CT scan often shows no density change in the pituitary adenoma.
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PMID:Infarction followed by hemorrhage in pituitary adenoma due to endocrine stimulation test. 1160 73

Histologically, cholesterol clefts are often observed in craniopharyngioma, Rathke's cleft cyst, and various granulomas. However, pituitary adenomas with cholesterol clefts are rare. A 46-year-old woman developed visual field disturbance. She had no history of severe headache that would suggest pituitary apoplexy. She presented with homonymous bitemporal hemianopsia and galactorrhea. Blood prolactin level was 63.1 ng/mL Other hypophysial hormone levels were within normal range. Magnetic resonance imaging revealed a pituitary tumor with intratumoral cyst. The cyst showed high intensity on T1- and T2-weighted images. The tumor was demonstrated with iso intensity on T1-weighted image and with high intensity on 12-weighted image. She underwent trans-sphenoidal surgery. The tumor was soft, with yellowish, oily fluid, probably the cyst content. By light microscopy with hematoxylin and eosin staining, a typical chromophobic adenoma of the pituitary was identified. Immunostaining revealed immunoreactivity for ACTH in several cells. Many cholesterol clefts and several hemosiderin pigment containing macrophages were observed. Electron microscopy demonstrated a pituitary adenoma with sparse and small secretory granules and numerous lysosomes. The cyst was most likely caused by focal hemorrhagic infarction, followed by the formation of cholesterol crystals, the appearance of hemosiderin containing macrophages, foreign body product cells, and accumulation of lysosomes.
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PMID:Pituitary Adenoma with Cholesterol Clefts. 1211 66

The present study reports a rare case of full-blown Cushing's disease several years after an episode of pituitary apoplexy. A 60 year-old woman complained of muscular weakness and generalized malaise. Ten years ago she had an episode of pituitary apoplexy. Diabetes mellitus was diagnosed at age 56, and thereafter she had been controlled her plasma glucose with diet therapy and oral hypoglycemic agents. She exhibited cushingoid feature of moon face and central obesity. Both plasma ACTH and serum cortisol levels were elevated to 170 pg/ml and 19.6 microg/dl, respectively. Dexamethasone suppression test showed that a large dose of 8 mg dexamethasone, but not a small dose of 2 mg, suppressed the pituitary-adrenocortical axis. CRH and methyrapone caused increases in plasma ACTH and serum cortisol levels. Brain T(1)-weighted magnetic resonance imaging depicted a low signal of pituitary tumor, which was not enhanced by gadolinium. The pituitary tumor was removed by transsphenoidal adenomectomy, and immunohistochemistry revealed an ACTH-producing adenoma. The evidence suggested the possibility that the two pituitary tumors with dormant period of several years were a recurrence of ACTH-producing tumors in the present patient.
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PMID:Full-blown Cushing's disease after an episode of pituitary apoplexy. 1461 5

Pituitary tumor apoplexy is an uncommon event heralded by abrupt onset of severe headache, restriction of visual fields, deterioration of visual acuity, and weakness of ocular motility frequently coupled with clinical indications of decreased endocrine function. Hemorrhage into or necrosis of a preexisting sellar mass, usually a pituitary macroadenoma, produces an expansion of sellar contents. Compression of adjacent structures elicits the variable expression of symptoms referable to displacement of the optic nerves and chiasm and impingement of the third, fourth, and sixth cranial nerves. Damage to or destruction of the anterior pituitary leads to multiple acute and/or chronic hormone deficiencies in many patients. Medical management may be used in rare cases in which the signs and symptoms are mild and restricted to meningismus or ophthalmoplegia deemed to be stable. In patients with visual or oculomotor lability or an altered level of consciousness, expeditious surgical decompression, accomplished most commonly through a transsphenoidal approach, should be performed to save life and vision and to optimize the chance of regaining or maintaining pituitary function.
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PMID:Pituitary tumor apoplexy: characteristics, treatment, and outcomes. 1519 35

The dominant mechanism for hypopituitarism and hyperprolactinemia commonly observed in patients with pituitary macroadenomas was postulated to be increased intrasellar pressure (ISP) caused by the slow and gradual expansion of adenomas within the sella turcica. Hemorrhagic infarction of adenomas (pituitary tumor apoplexy) is associated with a rapid, rather than gradual, increase in intrasellar contents. The impacts of the sudden increase in intrasellar contents on ISP and pituitary function are unknown. ISP and pituitary function were determined in 13 patients with pituitary tumor apoplexy who had surgical decompression within 1 wk of symptoms' onset. ISP measurements were remarkably high (median, 47 mm Hg), whereas serum prolactin (PRL) concentrations were generally low (median, 3.5 microg/liter). There was an inverse correlation (r = -0.76; P < 0.01) between ISP measurements and serum PRL concentrations. Postoperatively, partial recovery or maintenance of pituitary function was noted in seven of 13 patients. These seven patients had higher (P = 0.013) serum PRL levels (9.3 +/- 7.4 microg/liter) and lower (P < 0.001) ISP measurements (35.9 +/- 7.3 mm Hg) than the respective values in the remaining six with persistent postoperative hypopituitarism (1.6 +/- 0.6 microg/liter and 55.9 +/- 2.4 mm Hg, respectively). The low serum PRL levels in patients with tumor apoplexy suggested that ischemic necrosis of the anterior pituitary resulting from sudden and extreme elevation of ISP was commonly observed in this setting. A normal or elevated serum PRL level in patients with non-PRL-secreting macroadenomas indicates the presence of viable pituitary cells and the high likelihood of postoperative recovery of pituitary function.
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PMID:Extreme elevation of intrasellar pressure in patients with pituitary tumor apoplexy: relation to pituitary function. 1553 24


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