Abstract. Gamma radiation from 60Co delivered with stereotactic technique was given to the pituitary gland in 35 patients, aged 18–65 years, with Cushing's disease. The doses were 70– 100 Gy in each single irradiation. The size of the sella turcica was normal in the majority of the patients. The observation time was 3–9 years in 29 patients. Out of them, 14 (48%) obtained clinical remission and normal urinary cortisol after one irradiation. Eight achieved remission after two to four irradiations. In total, 22 out of 29 patients (76%) obtained remission. In 12 of them remission was obtained in 1 year and in another 10 within 3 years. No recurrences were observed. Improvement was seen in 2 patients after one and three irradiations. Bilateral adrenalectomy was performed in 5 patients owing to unsatisfactory effect of irradiation. Pituitary insufficiency with gonadotropin, thyrotropin or corticotropin failure was demonstrated in 12 of 22 patients in remission. This occurred 4 months to 7 years after the first irradiation. Another 6 patients were followed less than 3 years after the first irradiation. Two obtained remission after the first treatment, whereas the other 4 improved. Stereotactic pituitary irradiation is suggested as a non-invasive therapeutic alternative in Cushing's disease for example in patients with considerable surgical risk or as a supplement to pituitary microsurgery.
Thirteen patients with cluster headache in an active stage were investigated with orbital phlebography. About 60% of the patients showed pathologic changes on the phlebograms, such as changes in the appearance of the superior ophthalmic vein. Five patients had pathologic changes on both sides and three patients on one side only. All patients with unilateral pathologic findings on orbital phlebography had the attacks on the same side. The phlebographic findings in these patients with cluster headache were very similar to those of patients with the Tolosa-Hunt syndrome. There is also some similarity in the symptoms in the two disorders. It has previously been suggested that the Tolosa-Hunt syndrome is caused by venous vasculitis, and the present findings to some extent support the idea that cluster headache may have the same etiology.
Abstract. Thirty-five women with prolactinoma have been investigated during 41 pregnancies and 35 lactation periods. Nine of the women had a macroadenoma; 4 of them underwent transsphenoidal microsurgery and one was treated with external pituitary irradiation before pregnancy. All nine were given bromocriptine to induce ovulation. Four women with a microadenoma became pregnant without medical treatment, one shortly after pituitary microsurgery. The other 22 women were treated with bromocriptine only for varying periods before conception. Tumour complications developed in 7 women (20%); 3 had signs of optical nerve compression and 4 showed increased sella volume after pregnancy. All women with tumour complications had been treated with bromocriptine for less than 12 months before conception. Serum prolactin (Prl) was measured every four weeks during pregnancy and after cessation of lactation. In contrast to normal pregnancy, the mean serum Prl did not increase during the second and third trimester of pregnancy in women with pretreatment serum Prl levels above 60 μg/l. The lactation period did not have any harmful influence on tumour development. It is concluded that neither pretreatment serum Prl nor radiological changes of the sella turcica can predict tumour development during pregnancy. Treatment with bromocriptine for more than 12 months before conception seems to reduce the risk of tumour progress.
Orbital phlebography has been reported to be pathologic in some patients with Tolosa-Hunt's syndrome (recurrent painful ophthalmoplegia). A systematic study of the phlebographic findings in Tolosa-Hunt's syndrome in comparison with a normal material seems not to have been performed. In this investigation, orbital phlebography was performed in 19 patients with Tolosa-Hunt's syndrome and in a reference group of 23 persons without the disease. In 13 of 19 patients (68%) with Tolosa-Hunt's syndrome, the phlebography was pathologic (narrowing or occlusion of particularly the third segment of the superior ophthalmic vein, partial occlusion of the cavernous sinus). Orbital phlebography was normal in all but one of the subjects in the reference group. The medical history of this subject in retrospect revealed symptoms other than painful ophthalmoplegia commonly found in patients with Tolosa-Hunt' syndrome, suggesting that he suffered from a variant of the disease causing the syndrome. In one patient with recurrent painful ophthalmoplegia a biopsy from an eye muscle showed venous vasculitis, probably indicating the basic pathology behind the phlebographic changes in patients with Tolosa-Hunt's syndrome.
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