Literature DB >> 8308540

Evaluation of three-dimensional MRI exploration of prolactin-secreting microadenomas.

N Girard1, L Cortesi, V Chabert-Orsini, P Maman, T Brue, P Jaquet, C Raybaud.   

Abstract

Over an 8-month period (July 1990-to February 1991), we explored 21 women presenting with a clinical and laboratory profile of prolactin-secreting microadenoma of the pituitary gland. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is undoubtedly the most efficient method to explore microadenomas, especially when carried out in the absence of any treatment. In 8 cases, MRI was performed in the absence of medical treatment and gave a positive result, i.e. always showed a focal lesion. In the remaining 13 cases the patients had been treated before the exploration, and MRI detected a microadenoma in only 4 cases. The duration of treatment and the time elapsed between its withdrawal and the MRI examination did not seem to influence the positivity or negativity of the imaging results. Among the 9 cases where MRI failed to show a focal lesion, the image was normal in 3 cases and displayed an arachnoidocele in 3 cases; the pituitary gland was convex and homogeneous in 1 case and convex and heterogenous in 3 cases, which raised the problem of the effects of bromocriptine on the MRI images. As regards signals, in 5 cases the microadenoma was hyperintense on the spin-echo sequence without contrast injection; it was undetectable on the same sequence in 2 cases. In 4 cases the lesion was contrast-enhanced after gadolinium injection. Using millimetric sections enables small-size adenomas (2.5 x 3 mm) to be visualized.

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Year:  1993        PMID: 8308540

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Neuroradiol        ISSN: 0150-9861            Impact factor:   3.447


  1 in total

1.  MRI of pituitary hyperplasia in hypothyroidism.

Authors:  L J Wolansky; G D Leavitt; B J Elias; H J Lee; A Dasmahapatra; W Byrne
Journal:  Neuroradiology       Date:  1996-01       Impact factor: 2.804

  1 in total

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