Summary
Pituitary adenomas are common benign monoclonal neoplasms,
accounting for approximately 10-15% of primary intracranial tumors.
Although histologically benign, pituitary tumors cause significant
morbidity due to their critical location, expanding size, and/ore
inappropriate pituitary hormone expression.
For the average general practitioner, pituitary disorders are
relatively uncommon. However, post-morten and magnetic resonance
imaging studies show t hat approximately 10% of the population may
harbor a pituitary mass, although most are small and non-functioning
Pituitary adenomas can occur in a familial setting in multiple
endocrine neoplasia type I, Carney's complex, and in the context of
isolated familial acromegaly or gigantism, and less frequently, in the
context of a familial predisposition to the development of other pituitary
tumors. Another genetic, but not inherited disorder associated with
growth hormone and prolactin-producing pituitary tumors is McCune-
Although most pituitary tumors are well-differentiated and
histoloigcally benign neoplasms, their clinical behaviors are varied.
Invasive pituitary adenomas have a poorer prognosis than noninvasive
tumors because they are difficult to remove completely. However, these
differences in clinical behavior cannot be discerned from their
Summary
All subtypes of pituitary adenomas may present as microadenomas,
defined as tumors contained within the pituitary fossa and smaller 10mm
in diameter, or as macroadenomas that have extended outside the fossa to
invade adjacent tissues (greater than 10mm in diameter). Tumor
extension outside the pituitary fossa may involve the cavernous sinus
laterally (parasellar extension), the optic chiasm superiorly (suprasellar
extension), or the sphenoid sinus inferiorly (infraselar extension). Rarely,
aggressive tumors may extended along the skull base, even sometimes
causing multiple cranial nerve palsies. Macroadenomas commonly come
to clinical attention through pressure effects, such as headache or
progressive visual failure, whereas microadenomas are usually identified
through investigation of a clinical endocrine syndrome, or may be
discovered as an incidental finding during scanning of the brain for other
Modern treatment of pituitary tumors depends on three signal
advances in medicine that had occurred in the past 40 years. First,
increasingly sensitive tests can now measure picomolar levels of the
entire panoply of pituitary hormones, and can therefore be used to create
a profile of pituitary function that indicates whether the gland is
functioning properly or secreting excessively. Second, surgical
techniques revived by the energy and drive of Jules Hardy, who in the
late 1960s, was the first surgeon to report the successful removal of a
microadenoma. Hardy also developed many of the instruments used in
modern transsphenoidal surgery and repopularized this approach to a
point that it is now used for 95% of pituitary tumor resections. Third, the
introduction of and ongoing improvements in magnetic resonance
imaging have made increasingly earlier diagnosis of such tumors
Summary
possible. Microadenomas as small as 2-3mm can now be detected with
Treatment of a patient with a pituitary adenoma is dependent on the
type of tumor, the effect of tumor on vision, and on pituitary function.
With the exception of prolactin-producing adenomas, the first line of
treatment for most patients is surgical removal of the mass lesion. Despite
the ability to remove and adenoma completely or to debulk the lesion
significantly, many patients require adjunctive medical treatment, and in
some instances, pituitary radiation to control the disease. The goals of
treatment include elimination of the mass effect. The goals of treatment
include elimination of the mass effect, lowering excessive hormone
production to normal, restoration of normal pituitary function, prevention
of recurrence, and administration of necessary hormone replacement.
Medical therapy with dopamine agonists is the treatment of choice
for prolactin-secreting pituitary adenomas. Cabergoline is the first-line
treatment, because it is more effective and better tolerated than the other
available dopamine agonists. Transsphenoidal surgery remains an option
when medical therapy is ineffective, whereas radiotherapy represents the
last option because of the high incidence of major side effects. A small
proportion of prolactinomas that are aggressive or rarely malignant, are
often associated with a poor response to all commonly used treatments.
Early diagnosis and treatment of these atypical forms currently represent
the two major opens issues in the management of prolactinomas.
Tumors excision, usually by the transsphenoidal route, is the most
rapid way of reducing growth hormone concentration in patients with
somatotropinomas. Nevertheless, these levels normalize in only 40-70%
of cases, depending on the size of the tumor, preoperative growth
Summary
hormone concentrations, and the surgeon's experience. Endoscopic
techniques are now currently used in the majority of expert centers.
Although transsphenoidal excision of the adrenocorticotropic
hormone (ACTH)-producing neoplasm is often the treatment of choice in
patients with Cushing's disease, medical management is itself a useful
preoperative temporizing measure, an option for long-term management
in nonsurgical candidates, and an option for patients in whom surgery
and/or radiotherapy have failed. Three pathophysiologically based
medical approaches exist in the research literature: neuromodulation to
limite ACTH levels, adrenal enzyme inhibition, and glucocorticoid
receptor antagonism. Unfortunately, the neuormodulatory approach
involving agents such as bromocriptine, cyproheptadine, octreotide, and
valproate has yielded only suboptimal results. Glucocorticoid receptors
antagonism remains in its infancy, but may overall be limited by side
effects and a resultant increase in ACTH and cortisol levels. Adrenal
enzyme inhibitors, however, offer substantial future promise in the
management of Cushing's disease, but are limited by the potential needed
to use them indefinitely and by dose-tolerance effects.
The transsphenoidal approach is accepted for the time being as the
procedure of choice for the surgical management of most pituitary lesions
(together with non neoplastic intrasellar cysts and selected cases of
craniopharyngiomas). This is based on the fact that it is less traumatic,
lacks visible scars, provides excellent visualization of the pituitary gland
and adjacent pathologies, offers less morbidity and mortality rates, and
Summary
Transcranial approaches have very limited indications for the time
being. They are indicated in case where as transsphenoidal approach is
contraindicated, such as sphenoid sinusitis, ecstatic midline (kissing)
carotid) arteries, and patients who harbor pituitary macroadenomas with
significant lateral and suprasellar extension that cannot be adequately
Pituitary irradiation is effective at reducing tumor growth in the
long term, and is often used as a adjunct to surgery when this has failed to
achieve an adequate cure. Although irradiation is proven to reduce the
risk of postoperative tumor progression, this is almost invariably at the
cost of eventual hypopituitarism, which then requires life-long multiple
hormone replacement therapy. Thus, patients require regular screening
for progressive hypopituitarism, and eventually need substitution therapy
with corticosteroids, growth hormone, thyroxine, and sex steroids (or
BEDMINSTER TOWNSHIP SCHOOL AUTHORIZATION FOR OVER-THE-COUNTER MEDICATIONS (OTC) DURING SCHOOL HOURS Student Name: _________________________________ Date of birth: _______________ Grade: __________ Parent/Guardian Name: ______________________________________________________________________ Home Address: _____________________________________________________________________________
Very often we receive a requests and questions on malaria - where, when and how to protect yourself. We decided to publish this information from Ministry of Health and Social Services of Namibia as a short guideline for your reference. Namibia is a very healthy country and it is unlikely you will have any health issues while travelling here. However it is always worth taking precautions, so h