| Literature DB >> 21479815 |
Angelika Gutenberg1, Patrizio Caturegli, Imke Metz, Ramon Martinez, Alexander Mohr, Wolfgang Brück, Veit Rohde.
Abstract
We report a young woman with sudden and severe retroorbital headache, neck pain, and a large sellar mass extending to the suprasellar cistern. A presumptive diagnosis of non-secreting pituitary macroadenoma undergoing apoplexy was made and transphenoidal surgery performed. Histopathology revealed mononuclear infiltration and marked non-hemorrhagic necrosis of the anterior pituitary consistent with a diagnosis of necrotizing infundibulo-hypophysitis. The possible pathogenesis of this rare variant of hypophysitis is discussed.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 21479815 PMCID: PMC3358537 DOI: 10.1007/s11102-011-0307-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pituitary ISSN: 1386-341X Impact factor: 4.107
Etiology of pituitary necrosis
| Tumorous | Pituitary adenoma |
| Pituitary metastases | |
| Ischemic | Sheehan syndrome |
| Thrombotic/Hypercoagulative | Antepartum necrosis of gestational diabetes |
| Septic shock | |
| Autoimmune | Hypophysitis |
| Mechanical | Elevated intracranial pressure (secondary to subarachnoidal hemorrhage, basilar artery thrombosis) |
| Miscellaneous | Pituitary stimulation test |
| Spinal anesthesia | |
| Snake venom poisoning |
Fig. 1Magnetic resonance imaging before surgery. The 22 × 20 × 16 mm pituitary mass is iso- to hyperintense on T2 with suprasellar extension (a) and hyperintense in T1-weighted, non-enhanced images. The typical posterior pituitary bright spot is absent (d). After i.v. contrast (c), only slight to moderate and inhomogeneous enhancement occurs, most pronounced at the periphery of the mass. The pituitary stalk and infundibulum are slightly thickened showing avid enhancement (d)
Endocrinological characteristics before and after pituitary surgery
| Hormone | Reference value | Method | 2 days before surgery | 3 months after surgery | 6 months after surgery |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Prolactin | 91–552 mU/l | ECLIA |
|
| 108 |
| LH | 0.8–8.3 mU/ml | ECLIA |
|
|
|
| FSH | 1.2–10.1 mU/ml | ECLIA |
|
|
|
| Estradiol | 30–330 pg/ml | ECLIA | < | < | 116.8a |
| TSH | 0.45–3.20 mU/l | ECLIA | 0.87 | 3.81 | 0.50 |
| fT3 | 2.4–4.4 ng/l | ECLIA | 2.9 | 2.9 | 2.5 |
| fT4 | 8.9–17.0 ng/l | ECLIA | 12.7 | 9.5 |
|
| ACTH | 7.2–63.3 μg/l | ECLIA | 10.3 |
| < |
| Cortisol (baseline) | 5–25 μg/dl | ECLIA | 72 | 84c | 415b |
| Cortisol (30 min after 250 μg ACTH) | >30 μg/dl | ECLIA | nm |
| nm |
| Cortisol (60 min after 250 μg ACTH) | >70 μg/dl | ECLIA | nm |
| nm |
| GH | <6.88 μg/l | CLA | 1.1 | nm | nm |
| IGF-1 | 108–247 μg/l | CLA | nm | 156 |
|
nm: not measured
ECLIA: electrochemiluminescencs assay (Roche Diagnostics, Mannheim, Germany)
CLIA: chemiluminescens immuno assay (DiaSorin, Dietzenbach, Germany)
Italics within this table are used for pathological values
aUnder estradiol substitution
a,bUnder hydrocortisone substitution
cTwo days after discontinuing hydrocortisone
Fig. 3Necrosis and T cell inflammation of pituitary. Anterior pituitary shows partial necrosis (a, HE ×40) with infiltration by numerous macrophages (b, KiM1P ×40). Necrotic areas in the upper part are marked by arrows. T cell infiltrates with high numbers of cytotoxic T cells are found in the anterior pituitary (c, CD3 ×40, and d, CD8 ×40) as well as posterior pituitary (e, CD3 ×40 and f, CD8 ×40). Original magnification: a, b ×10, c–f ×20. Scale bar 100 μm
Fig. 2Magnetic resonance imaging at 6 and 9 months after surgery. Six months after surgery, MRI revealed a left intrasellar cyst of 4 × 7 × 6 mm (a) with normal-appearing anterior pituitary and pituitary stalk, not enhancing after gadolinium (b). There is still no normal T1 hyperintense signal of the posterior pituitary (c). Nine months after surgery MRI demonstrates a normal anterior pituitary and pituitary stalk with normal enhancement (d–f), but the normal posterior pituitary bright spot in non-enhanced T1 images is still lacking (not shown)