| Literature DB >> 33935971 |
Henrik Falhammar1,2, Sofia Tornvall3, Charlotte Höybye1,2.
Abstract
Purpose: Acute symptomatic pituitary apoplexy is a rare and potentially life-threatening condition. However, pituitary apoplexy can also present with milder symptoms and stable hemodynamics. Due to the rarity of this inhomogeneous condition, clinical studies are important to increase the knowledge.Entities:
Keywords: hormone deficiency; incidence; management; pituitary apoplexy; survival; symptom
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33935971 PMCID: PMC8082680 DOI: 10.3389/fendo.2021.656950
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Endocrinol (Lausanne) ISSN: 1664-2392 Impact factor: 5.555
Characteristics, presentation and surgery of all consecutive cases of pituitary apoplexy admitted at the Karolinska University Hospital during a 15-year-period.
| Total n = 33 | Women n = 15 | Men n = 18 | P-value | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age at onset, mean | 46.5 ± 17.2 | 40.3 ± 13.6 | 51.6 ± 18.4 | 0.060 |
| Men, n (%) | 18 (55%) | |||
| Acute surgery, n | 11 (33%) | 3 (20%) | 8 (44%) | 0.2659 |
| Acute severe, n | 24 (73%) | 10 (67%) | 15 (83%) | 0.4184 |
| Anticoagulants, n* | 7 (21%) | 1 (7%) | 6 (35%) | 0.0 881 |
| Visual disturbances, n | 13 (39%) | 3 (20%) | 10 (56%) | 0.0724 |
| Hormonal deficiency, n** | 18 (55%) | 3 (21%) | 15 (83%) | 0.0009 |
| Headache, n | 27 (82%) | 12 (80%) | 15 (83%) | 1 |
| Nausea, n | 12 (36%) | 4 (27%) | 8 (44%) | 0.4688 |
*2 were excluded due to missing data.
**1 was excluded due to missing data.
Specification of the hormonal deficiencies encountered in 33 patients with pituitary apoplexy.
| Hormonal deficiency, n | All, n = 18 | Women, n = 3 | Men, n = 15 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Panhypopituitarism, n | 5 (28%) | 1 (33%) | 4 (27%) |
| ACTH, n | 9 (50%) | 2 (67%) | 7 (47%) |
| TSH, n | 12 (67%) | 2 (67%) | 10 (67%) |
| FSH/LH, n | 15 (83%) | 1 (33%) | 14 (93%) |
| GH, n | 7 (39%) | 1 (33%) | 6 (40%) |
| Prolactin, n | 7 (39%) | 1 (33%) | 6 (40%) |
Note that many patients had multiple hormonal deficiencies, thus the total number of deficiencies is larger than the number of patients. The percentages of the individual hormonal deficiencies are from the total number of patients with hormonal deficiencies (i.e., 18, 3 and 15, respectively).