Cases reported "Diabetes Insipidus"

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1/80. acromegaly: report of two patients with an unusual presentation.

    The presenting features of functionally active pituitary tumours depend on the specific hormone which is overproduced. growth hormone (GH) producing tumours usually present with the clinical manifestations of acromegaly due to excessive GH secretion or symptoms resulting from mass effects of the enlarging tumour. The changes in physical features and the increase in tumour size are usually insidiously slow and therefore, recognition of the disease is delayed. In this report two patients with acromegaly are described with an atypical presentation due to acute onset of symptoms. The first patient presented with central diabetes insipidus. The diagnosis acromegaly was made on physical examination. The second patient presented with a generalized seizure during sleep. On CT-scanning a large tumour protruding into the left temporal lobe connected to the pituitary gland was seen. immunohistochemistry of the tumour after partial transcranial resection confirmed the clinical diagnosis of acromegaly. At a later stage transsphenoidal resection of the pituitary tumour was performed with full recovery and without loss of pituitary function.
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2/80. Rosai-Dorfman disease presenting as a pituitary tumour.

    A 45-year-old woman had pyrexia, headaches, collapse and hyponatraemia. Intracerebral abscess, bacterial meningitis and subarachnoid haemorrhage were excluded. She was given intravenous antibiotics and gradually recovered. One month later she was readmitted with diplopia, headache and vomiting. serum sodium was low (107 mmol/l) and a diagnosis of inappropriate ADH secretion was made. MRI scan showed a suprasellar tumour arising from the posterior pituitary gland. A skin rash gradually faded. serum cortisol, prolactin, gonadotrophins and thyroid hormone levels were low. A pituitary tumour was removed trans-sphenoidally, she had external pituitary radiotherapy, and replacement hydrocortisone and thyroxine. She was well for 12 months when she developed progressive weakness and numbness of both legs. Examination suggested spinal cord compression at the level of T2 where MRI scanning showed an intradural enhancing mass. This spinal tumour was removed and her neurological symptoms disappeared. Nine months after this she developed facial pain and nasal obstruction. CT scan showed tumour growth into the sphenoid sinus and nasal cavities. A right Cauldwell-Luc operation was done and residual tumour in the nasal passages was treated by fractionated external radiotherapy and prednisolone. Histological examination of the specimens from pituitary, spinal mass, and nasal sinuses showed Rosai-Dorfman disease, a rare entity characterized by histiocytic proliferation, emperipolesis (lymphophagocytosis) and lymphadenopathy. aged 48 she developed cranial diabetes insipidus. Although Rosai-Dorfman syndrome is rare, it is being reported with increasing frequency, and should be borne in mind as a possible cause of a pituitary tumour.
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3/80. Pregnant woman with transient diabetes insipidus resistant to 1-desamino-8-D-arginine vasopressin.

    We encountered a pregnant woman with transient diabetes insipidus which developed during the third trimester. A hypertonic saline infusion study did not concentrate the osmolality of urine. Her laboratory data showed hypokalemia, hyperreninemia, an increased concentration of plasma aldosterone and an increased urinary excretion rate of prostaglandin E2, which resembled hyperprostaglandin E-syndrome. T1-weighted magnetic resonance imaging of the posterior pituitary gland revealed decreased intensity. polyuria reached 4-6 L daily, and urine osmolality remained dilute despite a lapse of four days since treatment with intranasal 1-desamino-8-D-arginine vasopressin (dDAVP: 10-25 microg every 12 h). The patient was conservatively managed without medical treatment, then delivered in the 38th week of pregnancy without complication. The osmolality of the patient's urine was higher than that of the plasma when tested 3 days postpartum. The abnormality of magnetic resonance imaging of the posterior pituitary gland disappeared at 6 months after delivery. We consider that subclinical nephrogenic diabetes insipidus in our patient was exacerbated during pregnancy.
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4/80. Multifocal fibrosclerosis as a possible cause of panhypopituitarism with central diabetes insipidus.

    Multifocal fibrosclerosis denotes a combination of similar fibrous disorders occurring at different anatomical sites. We encountered a 53-year-old male patient with orbital pseudotumor, chronic paranasal sinusitis, fibrous nodules of the lungs, intracranial pachymeningitis, and panhypopituitarism with central diabetes insipidus (DI) as a possible manifestation of multifocal fibrosclerosis. It has been reported that intracranial pachymeningitis or orbital pseudotumor associated with multifocal fibrosclerosis could invade the sella turcica causing a variety of anterior and/or posterior pituitary dysfunctions. In our case, intracranial pachymeningitis apparently involved the pituitary stalk and gland. Isolated gonadotropin deficiency, in addition to central DI, preceded panhypopituitarism. Although panhypopituitarism with central DI due to multifocal fibrosclerosis is quite rare and only one case has ever been reported, this systemic fibrotic disorder can be a possible cause of panhypopituitarism with central DI.
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5/80. Lymphocytic hypophysitis masking a suprasellar germinoma in a 12-year-old girl--a case report.

    Case history, light and electron microscopic findings of a case of a lymphocytic hypophysitis in coincidence with a suprasellar germinoma in a 12-year-old girl are reported. The girl presented with a long time case history of diabetes insipidus and subsequent panhypopituitarism. Two years after the diagnosis of diabetes insipidus magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) showed a tumorous enlargement of the sellar content and pituitary stalk. A transnasal exploration was initially performed and revealed a lymphocytic hypophysitis. light microscopy showed a dense infiltration of mature lymphocytes and plasma cells in the interstitium of the anterior pituitary gland. The stalk area could not be exposed to exclude a germinoma. One year later the lesion relapsed despite dexamethason therapy and a second operation by another neurosurgeon had to be performed. light microscopy showed lymphocytic infiltrates, fibrosis and necrosis. The diagnosis was a lymphocytic hypophysitis again. Though transcranially exposed only pituitary tissue was removed. No infundibular mass became visible at surgery as shown by MRI. The girl developed five months later multiple cerebral lesions, which revealed to be a germinoma. Lymphocytic hypophysitis in children is very rare and a coincidence with a germinoma has not been described from histopathological aspect until now. The origin of the pituitary infiltration is discussed.
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6/80. Idiopathic giant-cell granulomatous hypophysitis. Report of a case with autopsy follow-up.

    Idiopathic granulomatous inflammation of the pituitary gland occurs rarely, and is usually identified as an incidental finding at autopsy. However, it may present during life as a mass lesion that clinically mimics other more common pituitary gland lesions. We report a 54-year-old woman presenting with acute onset diabetes insipidus whose MRI showed a 1.1 cm pituitary mass, with infundibular thickening and meningeal enhancement. biopsy demonstrated granulomatous hypophysitis with multinucleate histiocytes. Special studies for infectious organisms were negative. The patient's disease progressed following biopsy, causing complete loss of vision in the right eye. This responded to high-dose steroids and local lowdose radiation. She later developed an acute inferior myocardial infarction. Laboratory tests failed to demonstrate an underlying autoimmune process. While recovering from this myocardial infarction, she succumbed to pulmonary embolism. autopsy revealed moderate residual chronic infundibular inflammation. No evidence of systemic or residual pituitary granulomatous disease was identified. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first case of idiopathic granulomatous hypophysitis initially diagnosed by biopsy to have post-mortem neuropathologic examination.
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7/80. diabetes insipidus and anterior pituitary insufficiency as presenting features of Wegener's granulomatosis.

    Central diabetes insipidus (DI) is a rare complication of Wegener's granulomatosis (WG), which usually presents after pulmonary or kidney involvement. Anterior pituitary dysfunction secondary to WG has been extremely rare, documented in only three cases. We report a case of a 47-year-old postmenopausal woman who was diagnosed with hypopituitarism in November 1999 and started on vasopressin, thyroxine, and hydrocortisone. She sought treatment at the Mayo Clinic in February 2000 with a purpuric rash, fever, cough, shortness of breath, and blood in the sputum. Computed tomography of the chest showed a 6-cm irregular mass in the right lower lobe, and a biopsy of the mass showed marked reactive atypia and necrosis. Positive C-antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibodies (ANCA) and skin biopsy of a purpuric lesion showing leukocytoclastic vasculitis confirmed the diagnosis of WG. Hormonal studies showed low gonadotropins, thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH), and prolactin. magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the head showed cystic enlargement of the pituitary gland that did not enhance with gadolinium. Two months into the treatment with cyclophosphamide and prednisone, she had persistent pituitary dysfunction, despite the normal appearance of the pituitary gland on repeat MRI. We conclude that WG should be included in the differential diagnosis of DI and anterior pituitary dysfunction in the proper clinical setting. early diagnosis and treatment may be crucial in preventing pituitary gland destruction and long-term endocrine sequelae. We suggest screening for anterior pituitary failure in the presence of the WG-associated DI.
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8/80. Langerhans cell histiocytosis involving the thyroid and parathyroid glands.

    Langerhans cell histiocytosis (LCH) is a rare illness, and the disease afflicting the thyroid gland is very uncommon, even in the presence of multisystem involvement. In this report, we document histologically, for the first time, concurrent involvement of the thyroid and parathyroid glands by LCH. A young Chinese woman with a history of diabetes insipidus and hypogonadism underwent a total thyroidectomy for enlarged thyroid gland secondary to LCH causing airway obstruction. Microscopic examination of the excised specimen disclosed CD1a- and S-100-positive LCH cells involving the thyroid and parathyroid glands. In a patient with LCH affecting the thyroid gland, parathyroid gland disease should be suspected when the serum calcium levels are depressed in association with an inappropriate serum parathyroid hormone level, such as a normal parathyroid hormone level in this case.
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9/80. Idiopathic giant cell granulomatous hypophysitis with hypopituitarism, right abducens nerve paresis and masked diabetes insipidus.

    A 38-year-old man presented with headache, fever, and double vision associated with right abducens nerve paresis. He had neither nuchal rigidity nor visual field defect. Laboratory data revealed elevated erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR), eosinophilia, and lymphocytic pleocytosis in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF). Provocation tests of pituitary hormones showed partial hypopituitarism. magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) revealed swelling of the hypophysis and a mass lesion expanding into the right cavernous sinus. The supplement dose of dexamethasone for hypothalamic hypocortisolism manifested diabetes insipidus. biopsy, carried out through the transsphenoidal approach, revealed giant cell granuloma. Systemic granulomatous diseases were ruled out, and the lesion was considered to be idiopathic giant cell granulomatous hypophysitis. Right abducens nerve paresis, diabetes insipidus and dysfunction of the anterior lobe were amended by the treatment with prednisolone for 4 months, and findings of the pituitary gland and stalk were normalized. The present case shows that glucocorticoid has an effect on amendment of idiopathic giant cell granulomatous hypophysitis.
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10/80. A case of Rathke's Cleft Cyst inflammation presenting with diabetes insipidus.

    Rathke's Cleft Cyst (RCC), which is located at the intrasellar region, is considered to be the distended remnants of Rathke's pouch, an invagination of the stomodeum. Lined with columnar or cuboidal epithelium of ectodermal origin, RCC usually contains mucoid material and it is found in 13-22% of normal pituitary glands. The cyst rarely leads to the development of symptoms but, when it does, the most common presenting symptoms are headache, visual impairment, hypopituitarism and hypothalamic dysfunction. However, in some cases it presents symptoms of diabetes insipidus, decreased libido and impotence. Recently we experienced a case of RCC inflammation presenting with diabetes insipidus and treated with transsphenoidal surgery. To our knowledge, this is the first report of RCC presenting with symptoms of diabetes insipidus in korea.
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