| Literature DB >> 33933049 |
Nipun Lakshitha de Silva1, Noel Somasundaram2, Roshana Constantine3, Himashi Kularatna4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Patients with Crooke cell tumours present with features of Cushing syndrome or mass effect. There are few reports of patients with Crooke cell tumours presenting due to apoplexy. All of them had silent tumours. Patients with Cushing syndrome caused by Crooke cell tumours have not been reported to present with apoplexy. CASEEntities:
Keywords: Apoplexy; Case report; Crooke cell tumour; Cushing
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33933049 PMCID: PMC8088723 DOI: 10.1186/s12902-021-00761-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Endocr Disord ISSN: 1472-6823 Impact factor: 3.263
Fig. 1Photographs of the face and upper body taken on initial presentation (a and b) and four months post-operatively (c and d). Round face, multiple monomorphic acne over the face and upper chest and dark skin complexion have improved
Fig. 2Temporal visual field loss of the right eye is shown in the visual perimetry performed during initial presentation (a). Left eye was not tested since there was complete blindness of that eye. Four months after surgery, there is improvement in visual fields with residual bitemporal hemianopia (b)
Summary of Laboratory investigations on presentation
| Investigation | Result | Reference range |
|---|---|---|
| Haemoglobin (g/dL) | 11.6 | 11–16 |
| White Cell Count (× 109/L) | 7.34 | 4–11 |
| Platelet Count (×109/L) | 161 | 150–450 |
| C- Reactive Protein (mg/L) | < 2 | < 6 |
| Serum Creatinine (mg/dL) | 0.59 | 0.5–1.1 |
| Sodium (mmol/L) | 141 | 135–145 |
| Potassium (mmol/L) | 2.2 | 3.5–5.1 |
| 24 h urinary potassium excretion (mmol/24 h) | 34.56 | 25–125 |
| Urinalysis | normal | |
| Aspartate transaminase (U/L) | 41 | < 40 |
| Alanine transaminase (U/L) | 52 | < 40 |
| Albumin (g/dL) | 3.8 | 3.5–4.5 |
| Globulin (g/dL) | 2.3 | 2.2–3.5 |
| Bilirubin (mg/dL) | 1 | 0.5–1.1 |
| Fasting blood glucose (mg/dL) | 135 | < 100 |
| HbA1C (%) | 5.8 | 4–5.7 |
| Arterial blood pH | 7.57 | 7.35–7.45 |
| Arterial Bicarbonate (mmol/L) | 35 | 24–28 |
| Thyroid stimulating hormone (mIU/l) | 0.116 | 0.5–4.7 |
| Free T4 (ng/dl) | 1.04 | 0.89–1.76 |
| 9 am cortisol (nmol/l) | 1451 | 118–618 |
| Prolactin (mIU/l) | 237 | 102–496 |
| Follicle stimulating hormone (IU/L) | < 0.3 | |
| Luteinising hormone (IU/L) | < 0.07 | |
| Insulin like growth factor-1 (ng/ml) | 87 | 81–278 |
| Dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry | Bone mineral Density (g/cm2) Lumbar spine: 0.814 Right hip: 1.017 Left hip: 0.979 | Z-score Lumbar spine: −2.0 Right hip: 0.6 Left hip: 0.4 |
Cortisol day curve before and 2 weeks after surgery
| Time | Cortisol value (Pre-op) nmol/l | Cortisol value (Post-op) nmol/l |
|---|---|---|
| 9 am | 1451 | 261 |
| 11 am | 1094 | 309 |
| 1 pm | 1477 | 300 |
| 3 pm | 1394 | 210 |
| 5 pm | 1358 | 187 |
Fig. 3T1 weighted coronal post contrast (a) and T2 weighted sagittal (b) MRI images before surgery showing large heterogeneously enhancing sellar lesion extending to suprasellar region causing compression of the Optic chiasm and bleeding inside. Displacement of bilateral cavernous sinuses and carotid arteries and compression of third ventricle are seen. T1 weighted coronal post-contrast (c) and T2 weighted sagittal (d) MRI images of the pituitary region done 3 months after surgery showing no residual tumour in the sellar region. Post-operative changes are noted
Fig. 4Low power view of H&E staining of surgical specimen showing features suggestive of pituitary neuroendocrine tumour and areas of necrosis and haemorrhage (a). High power view of H&E shows cells with basophilic, granular cytoplasm and round nuclei. Some cells showed homogenous pink cytoplasm. b. Immunohistochemistry with ACTH staining shows margination of ACTH reactivity to the cell periphery and perinuclear region (c). Cytokeratin stain (AE1/AE3) shows diffuse ring like positivity in majority of the cells (d)
Timeline of events with diagnostic tests and interventions
| Month/year | Events | Diagnostic tests | Interventions |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2009 | Secondary amenorrhoea | None | None |
| From beginning of 2019 | weight gain, darkening of skin, multiple acne and difficulty in getting up from squatting position | None | None |
| August/2019 | Sudden onset headache and blindness | Visual assessment: complete blindness of left eye and finger counting from right eye with temporal visual loss MRI-pituitary: giant pituitary tumour with bleeding Biochemistry: hypokalaemia, elevated cortisol, central hypothyroidism, low FSH, LH | Trans-sphenoidal excision of the pituitary tumour Histology: Crooke cell tumour Started levothyroxine and hydrocortisone replacement |
| November/2019 | Follow up | MRI-pituitary: No residual tumour Visual field: bitemporal hemianopia (improved) Twenty four hour urinary cortisol: normal 9 am cortisol: 181 nmol/L | Started cyclical oestrogen and progesterone, levothyroxine continued |
| September/2020 | Follow up | MRI-pituitary: No residual tumour Twenty four hour urinary cortisol: normal | Continued same treatment |