Pituitary Flashcards
What hormones does the anterior pituitary secrete? Under what influence?
Growth hormone
- Growth hormone releasing hormone
Adrenocorticotrophic hormone
- Corticotrophin releasing hormone
Luteinising hormone and Follicular stimulating hormone
- Gonadotrophin releasing hormone
Prolactin
- Dopamine
- Thyrotropin releasing hormone
Thyroid stimulating hormone
- Thyrotropin releasing hormone
What is the combined pituitary function test? What are the contraindications? What are the side effects?
An assessment of the pituitary across all the hormones it releases. Insulin, TRH and GnRH are given, with levels of pituitary hormones measured at 0 minutes, and again every half an hour:
- GH, blood glucose and cortisol: up to 120 minutes
- LH/FSH, TSH, Prolactin: up to 60 minutes
It is contraindicated in ischaemic heart disease, untreated hypothyroidism and epilepsy.
Side effects of the insulin given are sweating, palpitations and loss of consciousness; nausea and vomiting result from the TRH and GnRH
What are the normal results of the combined pituitary function test?
GH: rises to above 10
Blood glucose: needs to go below 2.2 for the test to work, should rise back to normal by 120 minutes
Cortisol: peaks at 30/60 minutes, and should go above 550
LH: should rise above 10
FH: should rise above 2
Prolactin: should gradually rise but stay below 3000
What does a prolactin of above 6000 suggest?
Prolactinoma; no other disease can raise the prolactin so high
What can cause panhypopituitarism?
The most common cause is a non-secreting pituitary adenoma, which presses on the pituitary to reduce the hormone secretion. Adenomas can also secrete any combination of the hormones.
What is the classification of pituitary adenomas?
- Microadenomas <10mm
- Macroadenomas >10mm
What is the side effect of a large pituitary adenoma?
Optic chiasm compression, leading to bitemporal hemianopia
What is the treatment for a prolactinoma?
Cabergoline; this should shrink the adenoma, removing the need for surgery
What is the treatment for acromegaly?
1) Surgery
2) Radiation
3) Cabergoline
4) Octreotide
What is the test for acromegaly?
Glucose tolerance test
IGF 1
What hormone replacement should be given to someone who has hypopituitarism?
- Hydrocortisone
- Thyroxine
- Oestrogen
- Growth hormone
Hydrocortisone is the most urgent
What does the posterior pituitary secrete?
- ADH
- Oxytocin
What are the causes of excess ADH?
Lungs: small cell cancers, pneumonia
Brain: injury, meningism, tumours
Iatrogenic: SSRIs, PPIs
What does excess ADH cause?
SIADH: euvolaemic hyponatraemia
What can cause ADH deficiency?
Diabetes insipidus:
- Cranial: failure of production
- Nephrogenic: failure of sensitivity