Cases reported "Adenoma, Chromophobe"

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1/146. pregnancy following bromocryptine therapy for the amenorrhoea-galactorrhoea syndrome due to a pituitary tumour.

    A woman developed amenorrhoea and galactorrhoea after partial removal of a pituitary tumor during pregnancy. Hyperprolactinaemia was supressed by therapy with bromocryptine (CB 154, Sandoz) resulting in cessation of galactorrhoea in two months, spontaneous menstruation after eight months, and pregnancy after twelve months.
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2/146. Pituitary adenoma with neuronal choristoma: a report of two rare cases.

    Two rare cases of pituitary adenoma with neuronal choristoma are described. Both patients were female and presented with features of acromegaly with elevated growth hormone and prolactin levels. Radiologically, both lesions were predominantly intrasellar in location with extension into suprasellar region, but hypothalamus was not involved. Histopathological examination revealed a mixture of chromophobe pituitary adenoma cells and neuronal cells. In both cases, the adenoma component was positive for growth hormone and prolactin. Interestingly, immunopositivity for alpha-subunit, cytokeratin and prolactin was seen in the adenoma and neuronal cells in one case. Our findings support the hypothesis that the neuronal cells possibly arise from adenoma cells as a result of metaplasia.
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3/146. galactorrhea may be clue to serious problems. patients deserve a thorough workup.

    Three cases of nonphysiologic hyperprolactinemia associated with pituitary disease evidenced by galactorrhea are presented. Two patients had significant pituitary disease associated with low-level prolactin elevations. The third patient had only a history of infertility and expressible galactorrhea on examination. This patient was found to have high prolactin levels and a locally invasive pituitary tumor. physicians need to be aware of the serious conditions associated with galactorrhea so that appropriate diagnostic studies can be done and treatment instituted.
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keywords = pituitary
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4/146. retinitis pigmentosa in association with acromegaly: a case report.

    Retinal abnormalities, unrelated to visual pathway compression, in acromegalic patients were originally described by Small in 1972 (Smail JM. Primary pigmentary degeneration of the retina and acromegaly in a case of pituitary adenoma. Br J Ophthalmol 1972; 56: 25-31). He illustrated a case of primary pigmentary degeneration of the retina occurring in a patient with a chromophobe adenoma of the pituitary gland. To the best of our knowledge this remains the sole, published case of this association. We report on two male patients, with an acromegalic appearance, one caused by a pituitary adenoma, the other associated with a Rathke's cleft cyst, presenting to our department of ophthalmology with the clinical picture of pigmentary degeneration of the retina.
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keywords = pituitary, pituitary gland, gland
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5/146. Spontaneous pneumoventriculogram following radiation of a pituitary adenoma.

    Three years after radiation therapy for an intrasellar tumor, a 42-year-old housewife presented with headache, lethargy, and remarkable plain skull roentgenograms, in which dilated lateral and third ventricles were filled with air. air apparently had entered the cranium through the sphenoid sinus and eroded sellar floor, extending directly through intrasellar remnants of the chromophobe adenoma and into the floor of the third ventricle. Frontal exploration showed an empty sella turcica and no residual tumor. She made an excellent recovery and has done well for 5 years after operative closure of the defect.
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6/146. Unilateral exophthalmos. Occurrence after treatment for perichiasmatic neoplasms.

    Unilateral exophthalmos developed shortly after treatment in three patients with chromophobe adenoma of the pituitary gland and craniopharyngioma. In two patients, the exophthalmos followed surgery, while in the third it did not appear until after radiation treatment. The pathogenesis of the exophthalmos in these cases in obscure. However, the other findings and subsequent course indicate that the exophthalmos is not due to recurrence of the neoplasm nor to a complication of therapy.
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ranking = 0.25268772790146
keywords = pituitary, pituitary gland, gland
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7/146. A TSH secreting pituitary tumour causing hyperthyroidism: presentation of a case and review of the literature.

    A 45 year old male with a 12 year history of mild hyperthyroidism and a pituitary tumour is presented. He had both clinical and laboratory evidence of hyperthyroidism and his serum TSH was persistently and markedly elevated. A TRH test resulted in no further rise in serum TSH. No evidence of pituitary or peripheral endocrine deficiencies existed and prolactin levels were normal. craniotomy was performed and a pituitary adenoma was removed. On light microscopy, it was mostly composed of chromophobes. However, occasional granulated cells were observed, and on electron microscopy, most of the cells contained fine granules, which suggested possible thyrotroph origin of the tumour. One week post-operatively the patient's serum TSH returned to normal. Again, TRH produced no response in TSH. The patient became hypothyroid by clinical and laboratory findings and is currently on thyroid replacement therapy. The previously reported TSH secreting tumours associated with hyperthyroidism are reviewed.
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ranking = 1.4
keywords = pituitary
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8/146. Visual failure from pituitary and parasellar tumours occurring with favourable outcome in pregnant women.

    Very few cases have been reported of a successful outcome after relief by operation of severe visual failure from a pituitary or other parasellar tumour during the late stages of pregnancy. Two such cases are recorded here together with the obstetric features and follow-up studies of more than three years. Usually the deterioration of vi sion occurs in the latter half of the pregnancy and recovers rapidly after delivery, whether the onset of labour has occurred spontaneously or after induction. In subsequent pregnancies vision deteriorates at an earlier stage and becomes even more marked. Some cases are now occurring even in pregnancies induced by modern fertility drugs. The treatment of choice whenever vision is seriously threatened at any stage of pregnancy is a surgical attack on the pituitary, followed by suitable replacement therapy to ensure that the pregnancy continues.
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ranking = 1.2
keywords = pituitary
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9/146. Atypical tentorial meningioma 30 years after radiotherapy for a pituitary adenoma.

    Although the human central nervous system used to be considered relatively resistant to the carcinogenic action of ionizing radiation, several lines of evidence now document a high incidence of secondary tumors in irradiated patients. The numerous reports of radiation-induced cerebral meningiomas generally distinguish those induced by high-dose radiation from those induced by low-dose radiation. We describe the case of patient who underwent subtotal resection of a chromophobe pituitary adenoma at the age of 18 years, who was successively treated by conventional fractionated radiotherapy with gamma rays emitted by a source of 60Co until a total dose of 41 Gy. Over the next 30 years the patient experienced all the known late effects of radiation, including panhypopituitarism, cranial-nerve deficits (II, III and VI), massive radiation necrosis involving the left cerebral hemisphere and causing right hemiparesis and aphasia and, ultimately, an atypical tentorial meningioma with early recurrence after total resection.
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10/146. Simultaneous treatment of a pituitary adenoma and an internal carotid artery aneurysm through a supraorbital keyhole approach.

    We describe a case in which an incidental left carotid aneurysm was found during the preoperative evaluation of a pituitary adenoma. After magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and angiography delineated their characteristics, we chose to treat both lesions simultaneously through a left supraorbital keyhole approach. The aneurysm clipping was followed by intracapsular resection of the tumor that was identified later as a non-secretory adenoma. The postoperative course was uneventful. This case shows that in carefully selected patients it is possible to treat successfully concurrent conditions through a minimally invasive approach, with the well known advantages of low morbidity and a short hospital stay.
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