Pituitary irradiation is an effective and well-tolerated treatment for patients with Cushing's disease in whom transsphenoidal surgery is unsuccessful.
Our report illustrates the high incidence of endocrine deficits in patients with craniopharyngioma. Additional hypothalamic-pituitary dysfunction usually occurs following surgical treatment of these tumours.
A series of 35 patients with non-functioning pituitary adenomas undergoing transsphenoidal surgery is presented. In most cases, the presenting symptoms were related to the mass effect of the tumor. There was no operative mortality. Before surgery, visual field defects were documented in 21 patients (60%). After surgery, excluding 3 patients with preoperative blindness, 28% regained normal vision and 67% showed variable improvement. Preoperatively, 24 patients (69%) had abnormal pituitary function, 24 (69%) had hypogonadism, 7 (20%) adrenal insufficiency, 8 (23%) hypothyroidism and 2 (6%) panhypopituitarism. After pituitary surgery, all but one patient with normal preoperative function retained it. Of the patients with hypopituitarism, 11 (46%) had variable improvement and 13 (54%) had persistent deficits. After surgery, 4 patients (57%) with adrenal insufficiency recovered normal adrenal function, 7 patients (29%) with hypogonadism recovered gonadal function and 1 patient (13%) with hypothyroidism recovered thyroid function. Prior to surgery, the presence of a normal or slightly elevated PRL and a rise in TSH after TRH and in LH after GnRH stimulation were of value in predicting possible recovery of pituitary function after surgery. These observations suggest the presence of viable pituitary tissue in these cases and point out that, in some instances, the mechanism of hypopituitarism may be compression of the portal circulation, rather than destruction of the normal pituitary gland.
Only when a significant IPS:P ACTH ratio is present can Cushing's disease be established by IPS sampling. The absence of a significant IPS: P ACTH ratio does not necessarily imply ectopic secretion of ACTH, nor does it exclude Cushing's disease. The results of lateralization by IPS sampling do not remove the need for a thorough transsphenoidal examination of the contents of the sella turcica.
Objective: ACTH-independent macronodular adrenal hyperplasia is a rare cause of Cushing's syndrome. Bilateral adrenalectomy is considered the treatment of choice, but the patient is obliged to receive lifetime steroid replacement therapy and is susceptible to adrenal insufficiency crisis. New therapeutic alternatives are being proposed as new etiopathological features of the disease are known. Unilateral adrenalectomy of the largest gland can be a safe and effective alternative, but only short-term follow-up is reported in the literature. We present four consecutive patients with ACTH-independent macronodular hyperplasia and long-term remission of Cushing's syndrome after unilateral adrenalectomy. Subjects: Four consecutive patients (two males and two females, mean age 50.3 years) with Cushing's syndrome due to ACTH-independent macronodular adrenal hyperplasia underwent unilateral adrenalectomy of the largest gland. Results: The weight of the resected glands ranged from 26.8 to 210 g. Two patients suffered transient post-surgical adrenal insufficiency and had steroid replacement therapy for 60 and 14 months respectively. After a mean follow-up of 78.8 months (range 30-137 months) all the patients persist without any evidence of Cushing's syndrome. Urinary free cortisol and serum cortisol, after the adrenal insufficiency stage, have always stayed within their normal ranges, but cortisol circadian rhythm and suppressibility after dexamethasone have never normalized. No further enlargement of the contralateral gland has been documented 62 to 126 months after surgery in three of the four patients. Conclusions: Unilateral adrenalectomy can be an effective and safe alternative treatment for ACTH-independent macronodular adrenal hyperplasia, and can achieve long-term remission of Cushing's syndrome.
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