Literature DB >> 24322605

Prospective investigation of anterior pituitary function in the acute phase and 12 months after pediatric traumatic brain injury.

Halil Ulutabanca1, Nihal Hatipoglu, Fatih Tanriverdi, Abdülkerim Gökoglu, Mehmet Keskin, Ahmet Selcuklu, Selim Kurtoglu, Fahrettin Kelestimur.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: Although head trauma is common in childhood, there is no enough prospective study investigating both acute phase and 12 months after injury. Therefore, a prospective clinical trial was planned to evaluate the pituitary function in childhood in the acute and chronic phase after traumatic brain injury (TBI).
METHODS: Forty-one children (27 boys and 14 girls, mean age 7 ± 4.3), who were admitted to neurosurgery intensive care unit due to head trauma, were included. Twenty-one (51.2 %) patients had mild, 10 (24.4 %) had moderate, and 10 (24.4 %) had severe TBI. Twenty-two of them were reevaluated 12 months after TBI. Basal pituitary hormone levels were measured during acute (first 24 h) and chronic phase of TBI. Additionally, in the chronic phase, GHRH-arginine test was used for the diagnosis of growth hormone (GH) deficiency.
RESULTS: In the acute phase, 10 patients (24.4 %) had ACTH deficiency, and the overall 44.3 % of patients had at least one pituitary hormone dysfunction. All the pituitary hormone deficiencies during the acute phase were recovered after 12 months. Two patients (9.1 %) had new-onset GH deficiency in the chronic phase, and in one of them, ACTH deficiency was also present.
CONCLUSIONS: Present prospective data clearly demonstrated that most of the hormonal changes in the early acute phase were transient, suggesting an adaptive response, and these changes did not predict the hormone deficiencies after 1 year. In the chronic phase, although GH deficiency was present, the frequency of TBI-induced hypopituitarism was clearly lower than the adult patients.

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Year:  2013        PMID: 24322605     DOI: 10.1007/s00381-013-2334-y

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Childs Nerv Syst        ISSN: 0256-7040            Impact factor:   1.475


  66 in total

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