ChemPath - Pituitary Flashcards

1
Q

Explain why pituitary failure does not cause hypotension

A

It is the loss of aldosterone that would cause hypotension
In pituitary failure, the adrenals are still able to produce aldosterone

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2
Q

What hormones are produced by the hypothalamus and pituitary gland

A

GHRH → GH
TRH → TSH, prolactin
GnRH → FSH, LH, prolactin
CRH → ACTH
Dopamine - prolactin (-ve)

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3
Q

How do patients with pituitary failure present

A

Very few signs

Galactorrhoea
Amenorrhoea
Bitemporal hemianopia (>1cm macroadenoma)

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4
Q

What level of prolactin is suggestive of prolactinoma and why may prolactinoma become a problem

A

> 6000 prolactin - only cause will be a prolactinoma
Usually not a problem until it grows and interferes with production of the other hormones

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5
Q

What is the combined pituitary function test (Triple Test)

A

Used to measure pituitary function via measurement of glucose, cortisol, GH, FSH, LH, TSH, prolactin, and T4 after giving stimulatory hormones

  1. Insulin → hypoglycaemic stress
    - CRH ↑ → ACTH ↑→ Cortisol ↑
    - GHRH ↑ → GH ↑
  2. TRH
    - TSH ↑ + prolactin ↑ → T4 ↑
  3. GnRH/LHRH
    - LH, FSH ↑
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6
Q

What are the precautions taken before a combined pituitary function test

A

Check glucose regularly
Ensure an adequate hypoglycaemia (<2.2mM) to trigger stress
If severe hypoglycaemia occurs (or unconsciousness), rescue patient with 50mL of 20% dextrose
Check they are NOT epileptic (CI)
Check ECG prior to testing (CI)

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7
Q

Describe the method for the combined pituitary function test

A
  1. Fast patient overnight
  2. Ensure good IV access
  3. Weight pt. and calculate dose of insulin required
  4. Mix and IV Inject the following (patient may vomit on injection):
    i. Insulin 0.15U/kg
    ii. TRH 200mcg
    iii. LHRH/GnRH 100mcg
  5. Take bloods at 0, 30 and 60 minutes of glucose, cortisol, GH, LH, FSH, TSH, prolactin and T4
  6. Take bloods at 90 and 120 minutes of glucose, cortisol and GH
  7. Replacement: hydrocortison
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8
Q

What can be done to induce stress in children instead of insulin

A

Exercise

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9
Q

How is hypoglycaemia defined and how may it present

A

<2mM
1. Aggression
2. loss of consciousness/confusion

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10
Q

What is the management for a large prolactinoma that is causing pituitary failure

A

Macro: Trans-sphenoidal resection
+ replacement
1. Hydrocortisone (URGENT)
2. Thyroxine replacement
3. Oestrogen replacement
4. GH replacement (if young and growing)

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11
Q

How would you differentiate between a prolactinoma and non-functioning pituitary adenoma

A

Prolactinoma - prolactin levels >6000

NFPA - prolactin is raised, but not >6000
This is due to the adenoma pressing on the pituitary stalk and preventing dopamine from reaching the anterior pituitary → no -ve inhibition on prolactin release → secondary hyperprolactinaemia

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12
Q

How do you test for acromegaly

A

OGTT (75g glucose after fasting→ measure in 2h)
- GH should drop after being given glucose but in acromegaly there is a paradoxical rise

IGF-1 levels
- Produced in the liver in response to glucose

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13
Q

What is the management of acromegaly

A

Pituitary surgery (the best treatment option)
Pituitary radiotherapy
Cabergoline
Octreotide (somatostatin analogue; good at reducing the size of the tumour)

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14
Q

What are the contraindications to the combined pituitary function test

A

Epilepsy
Cardiac disease
Untreated hypothyroidism

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15
Q

What is the expected response from the combined pituitary function test

A

Insulin → ↓glucose, ↑GH, ACTH, cortisol (170-500)
TRH → ↑TSH (>5), prolactin
GnRH → ↑FSH (>10), LH (>2)

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16
Q

What is suggested if after combined pituitary function test there is a really high increase in TSH or FSH

A

Hypothyroidism

17
Q

What differentiates macroadenoma and microadenoma

A

Micro <10mm, usually benign
Macro >10mm, usually aggressive

18
Q

What are the causes of prolactinaemia

A

<1000: stress-induced, recent breast/vaginal exam, hypothyroidism, PCOR
1000-5000: antipsychotics, PCOS, microadenoma, NFPA, breastfeedng
>5000: macroadenoma

19
Q

What is the management for a microadenoma

A

Micro: dopamine agonist (bromocriptine, cabergolin)

20
Q

What are the causes of raised and reduced ADH

A

ADH raised: drugs e.g. carbamazepine, anti-D, small cell lung tumour, SIADH

Reduced: Dehydration, diabetes insipidus