Pituitary Disorders Flashcards
This deck covers
Hypersecretion disorders:
- Cushing’s Disease
- Hyperprolactinaemia
- Acromegaly
Hyposecretion
including Cranial Diabetes Insipidus
What is Acromegaly?
Excess production of Growth Hormone after the long bones fuse (i.e. in adults)
How does acromegaly present?
- Enlarged hands/feet (rings dont fit, shoe size increases)
- Coarse facial features
- Thick lips & tongue
- Carpal Tunnel Syndrome
- Sweating
What complications can arise from excess GH?
- Headaches
- Chiasmal Compression
- DM
- Hypertension
- Cardiomyopathy
- Sleep Apnoea
- Accelerated Osteoarthritis
- Colonic Polyps & adenoma
How would you test someone for Acromegaly?
Visual Field Testing (chiasmal compression –> Bitemporal Hemianopia)
Screen potential patients for IGF-1 Elevation.
Confirm diagnosis with an OGTT, normally glucose loading suppresses GH.
MRI for pituitary tumour
What is hyperprolactinaemia?
Excessive prolactin in the blood
What can cause hyperprolactinaemia?
Physiological - Pregnancy/lactation/stress
Pharmacological - Dopamine antagonists/oestrogens/antidepressants
Pathological - Primary hypothyroidism or Pituitary tumour
How do we classify the scales of prolactinoma?
A microprolactinoma is <10mm
A macroprolactinoma is >10mm
How does hyperprolactinaemia present?
Women:
- Galactorrhoea
- Menstrual irregularity
- Infertility
Men:
- Impotence
- Visual field abnormalities
- Headache
- Extraocular muscle weakness
- Other pituitary malfunction
- Eventual galactorhea
Men present later due to less obvious early warning symptoms
How do you manage hyperprolactinaemia/ how do you treat?
Test Serum PRL
Elevated? –> Pituitary MRI
Treat
- dopamine agonist: Cabergoline
- TRH replacement therapy
- surgery for prolactinoma if medication does not work.
What is the primary management for all pituitary tumours?
Transphenoidal surgery to remove it +/- radiotherapy
Prolactinoma is the only one where we use drugs first
What drug therapies are there for acromegaly?
Somatostatin Analogues
GH receptor antagonists
What are the signs of hypopituitarism?
Tiredness Weight gain Depression Lost libido Impotence Menstrual problems Skin pallor Reduced body hair
What is Cranial Diabetes Insipidus?
A specific type of hypopituitarism in what there is no vasopressin released.
How does CDI present?
No vasopressin means huge amounts of urine and consequent thirst
Risk of dehydration & hypokalemia