A 7-year-old boy was admitted for a general tonic-clonic seizure with severe hypoglycaemia (1.39 mmol/l). His medical history was remarkable for a congenital left eye strabismus, unilateral cryptorchidism and three previous episodes of hypoglycaemic seizures with inconclusive metabolical and neurological investigations. Physical examination revealed a hoarse tone voice, dry skin, cold extremities and height in the third percentile (target height between 50th and 85th percentile). Left wrist radiography revealed a bone age of 4.5 years ±6 months Laboratory studies confirmed growth hormone deficiency and central hypothyroidism. The brain MRI showed an ectopic neurohypophysis. Neuroophthalmology investigation revealed left optic nerve hypoplasia and septo-optic dysplasia was then diagnosed. Thyroid and recombinant growth hormone replacement were started showing clinical improvement. A detailed clinical history and a careful physical examination in children presenting with multiple clinical signs of hypopituitarism may lead to a timely diagnosis, avoiding clinical morbidity associated to untreated hormonal abnormalities.