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Spontaneous remission of acromegaly after infarctive apoplexy with a possible relation to MRI and diabetes mellitus.
Neuro Endocrinol Lett. 2013; 34(5):339-42.NE

Abstract

OBJECTIVES

Pituitary apoplexy is a rare clinical syndrome associated with rapid enlargement of a pituitary mass. We report the initial presentation, subsequent course and outcome of an acromegalic patient who developed spontaneous remission following pituitary apoplexy with pathologic findings of tumor infarction.

CLINICAL PRESENTATION

A 38 year-old man with typical acromegalic features was referred to our hospital. He had been diabetic and hypertensive. His basal GH and IGF-1 levels were high (80 µg/L and 747 ng/mL respectively). Sella MRI showed a macroadenoma about 19×20 mm in size. He admitted to emergency department with complains of severe frontal headache accompanied by nausea and vomiting two days after MRI was taken. His neurological examination and visual field test were normal. Emergent MRI of the sella disclosed an enhancing intrasellar mass of 24×23 mm compressing the optic chiasm. The patient underwent transsphenoidal decompression of the lesion. Histological examination revealed an adenomatous tissue showing nonhemorrhagic coagulation necrosis. Before surgery, his GH levels declined to 2.72 µg/L spontaneously and after surgery he was in remission even leading to a state of growth hormone deficiency.

CONCLUSION

When apoplexy occurs in functioning adenomas, it may cause spontaneous remission. However pituitary apoplexy due to tumor infarction is very rare. Various precipitating factors have been reported in 25-30% of pituitary apoplexy patients. Diabetes mellitus and diabetic ketoacidosis are one of these. The presence of contrast media induced endothelial swelling with the result of hypoperfusion and diabetes mellitus associated vasculopathy might be a precipitating factor in this patient.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Department of Endocrinology and Metabolism, Hacettepe University School of Medicine, Ankara, Turkey. cinarnese@gmail.com.No affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Case Reports
Journal Article

Language

eng

PubMed ID

23922047

Citation

Cinar, Nese, et al. "Spontaneous Remission of Acromegaly After Infarctive Apoplexy With a Possible Relation to MRI and Diabetes Mellitus." Neuro Endocrinology Letters, vol. 34, no. 5, 2013, pp. 339-42.
Cinar N, Metin Y, Dagdelen S, et al. Spontaneous remission of acromegaly after infarctive apoplexy with a possible relation to MRI and diabetes mellitus. Neuro Endocrinol Lett. 2013;34(5):339-42.
Cinar, N., Metin, Y., Dagdelen, S., Ziyal, M. I., Soylemezoglu, F., & Erbas, T. (2013). Spontaneous remission of acromegaly after infarctive apoplexy with a possible relation to MRI and diabetes mellitus. Neuro Endocrinology Letters, 34(5), 339-42.
Cinar N, et al. Spontaneous Remission of Acromegaly After Infarctive Apoplexy With a Possible Relation to MRI and Diabetes Mellitus. Neuro Endocrinol Lett. 2013;34(5):339-42. PubMed PMID: 23922047.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Spontaneous remission of acromegaly after infarctive apoplexy with a possible relation to MRI and diabetes mellitus. AU - Cinar,Nese, AU - Metin,Yavuz, AU - Dagdelen,Selcuk, AU - Ziyal,M Ibrahim, AU - Soylemezoglu,Figen, AU - Erbas,Tomris, PY - 2012/08/16/received PY - 2013/02/28/accepted PY - 2013/8/8/entrez PY - 2013/8/8/pubmed PY - 2013/11/16/medline SP - 339 EP - 42 JF - Neuro endocrinology letters JO - Neuro Endocrinol Lett VL - 34 IS - 5 N2 - OBJECTIVES: Pituitary apoplexy is a rare clinical syndrome associated with rapid enlargement of a pituitary mass. We report the initial presentation, subsequent course and outcome of an acromegalic patient who developed spontaneous remission following pituitary apoplexy with pathologic findings of tumor infarction. CLINICAL PRESENTATION: A 38 year-old man with typical acromegalic features was referred to our hospital. He had been diabetic and hypertensive. His basal GH and IGF-1 levels were high (80 µg/L and 747 ng/mL respectively). Sella MRI showed a macroadenoma about 19×20 mm in size. He admitted to emergency department with complains of severe frontal headache accompanied by nausea and vomiting two days after MRI was taken. His neurological examination and visual field test were normal. Emergent MRI of the sella disclosed an enhancing intrasellar mass of 24×23 mm compressing the optic chiasm. The patient underwent transsphenoidal decompression of the lesion. Histological examination revealed an adenomatous tissue showing nonhemorrhagic coagulation necrosis. Before surgery, his GH levels declined to 2.72 µg/L spontaneously and after surgery he was in remission even leading to a state of growth hormone deficiency. CONCLUSION: When apoplexy occurs in functioning adenomas, it may cause spontaneous remission. However pituitary apoplexy due to tumor infarction is very rare. Various precipitating factors have been reported in 25-30% of pituitary apoplexy patients. Diabetes mellitus and diabetic ketoacidosis are one of these. The presence of contrast media induced endothelial swelling with the result of hypoperfusion and diabetes mellitus associated vasculopathy might be a precipitating factor in this patient. SN - 0172-780X UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/23922047/Spontaneous_remission_of_acromegaly_after_infarctive_apoplexy_with_a_possible_relation_to_MRI_and_diabetes_mellitus_ L2 - http://www.diseaseinfosearch.org/result/162 DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -