Cases reported "Hypopituitarism"

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1/30. hyponatremia-induced metabolic encephalopathy caused by Rathke's cleft cyst: a case report.

    Rathke's cleft cysts are sometimes associated with aseptic meningitis or metabolic encephalopathy due to hyponatremia. We treated such a case manifest by lethargy, fever and electroencephalographic abnormalities. A 68-year-old man was admitted to our ward after experiencing general malaise, nausea and vomiting and then high fever and lethargy. On admission, he was drowsy and had nuchal rigidity and Kernig's sign. Physically, he was pale with dry, thickened skin. He had lost 5.0 kg of body weight in the last month. His serum sodium was 115 mEq/l. He had a low serum osmotic pressure (235 mOsmol/l) and a high urine osmotic pressure (520 mOsmol/l). His urine volume was 1200-1900 ml/24 h with a specific gravity of 1008-1015. The urine sodium was 210 mEq/l. He did not have an elevated level of antidiuretic hormone. Electroencephalograms showed periodic delta waves over a background of theta waves. With sodium replacement, the patient become alert and symptom free, and his electroencephalographic findings normalized. However, the serum sodium level did not stabilize, sometimes falling with a recurrence of symptoms. magnetic resonance imaging clearly delineated a dumbbell-shaped intrasellar and suprasellar cyst. The suprasellar component subsequently shrunk spontaneously and finally disappeared. An endocrinologic evaluation showed panhypopituitarism. The patient was given glucocorticoid and thyroxine replacement therapy, which stabilized his serum sodium level and permanently relieved his symptoms. A transsphenoidal approach was performed. A greenish cyst was punctured, and a yellow fluid was aspirated. The cyst proved to be simple or cubic stratified epithelium, and a diagnosis of Rathke's cleft cyst was made. The patient was discharged in good condition with a continuation of hormonal therapy. Rathke's cleft cyst can cause aseptic meningitis if the cyst ruptures and its contents spill into the subarachnoid space. Metabolic encephalopathy induced by hyponatremia due to salt wasting also can occur if the lesion injures the hypothalamus and pituitary gland.
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2/30. sodium and water disturbances in patients with Sheehan's syndrome.

    Sheehan's syndrome has been attributed to ischemic damage of the pituitary gland or hypothalamic-pituitary stalk during the peripartum period. Well-described clinical features of Sheehan's syndrome include hypothyroidism, adrenal insufficiency, hypogonadism, growth hormone deficiency, hypoprolactinemia, and different sodium and water disturbances. The occurrence of sodium and water disturbances associated with Sheehan's syndrome depends on the degree of pituitary damage, time of onset since the initial pituitary insult, and concurrent medical conditions that also may play a role in sodium and water balance. We present a patient with Sheehan's syndrome with severe chronic hyponatremia; discuss a potential problem in the patient's management; and review the literature for various sodium and water disturbances, including acute and chronic hyponatremia as well as overt and subclinical central diabetes insipidus. Although Sheehan's syndrome is more prevalent in developing countries, the increasingly large immigrant population within the united states warrants better awareness of this syndrome and its potential complicating sodium and water disturbances. Prompt diagnosis and an understanding of the pathogenic mechanisms of sodium and water disturbances associated with Sheehan's syndrome may avoid potential treatment-related complications.
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3/30. Preoperative hyponatremia as a clinical characteristic in elderly patients with large pituitary tumor.

    This study investigated the pathophysiology of preoperative hyponatremia in elderly patients with a large pituitary tumor. The tumor size, initial symptoms, and preoperative pituitary hormonal function were analyzed in 96 patients, consisting of 82 younger than 70 years old (mean age 49.7 years) and 14 older than 70 years old (mean age 72.0 years). There was no difference in tumor size between the two age groups. The initial symptom of all younger patients was visual disturbance. Preoperative hormonal evaluations revealed subclinical panhypopituitarism in four patients (4.9%). Five of the 14 older patients had severe hyponatremia (107-117 mEq/l) based on panhypopituitarism, and four of these five patients showed consciousness disturbance as the initial symptom, initiated by physical and/or psychological stress, or occurrence of intratumoral hemorrhage. Preoperative subclinical panhypopituitarism was found in another patient. The overall occurrence rate of preoperative panhypopituitarism in the older patients was 42.9%. The difference in the frequency of preoperative panhypopituitarism was statistically significant between the two groups. Preoperative severe hyponatremia associated with a large pituitary tumor is characteristic of elderly patients. The number of receptors for adrenocorticotropic hormone in the adrenal cortex decreases during the aging process. Additional physical and/or psychological stress prompts pituitary dysfunction in such patients, causing the manifestation of acute symptoms of adrenal insufficiency based on panhypopituitarism. Primary care using high dose hydrocortisone and electrolyte fluid is critical.
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keywords = hyponatremia
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4/30. Isolated adrenocorticotropin deficiency presenting with impaired renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system and suppressed parathyroid hormone-vitamin d axis.

    We report here a 47-year-old woman with isolated adrenocorticotropin (ACTH) deficiency (IAD). She presented impaired renin-angiotensin-aldosterone (R-A-A) system and suppressed parathyroid hormone (PTH)-vitamin d system. She showed severe hyponatremia due to secondary adrenocortical insufficiency, which was deteriorated by hypoaldosteronism. She also showed hyperphosphatemia and relative hypercalcemia with suppressed PTH-vitamin d axis. Moreover, she showed hypothyroidism, which was thought to be important to maintain normal Ca levels under secondary hypoadrenalism via decrease in bone resorption by T3. Replacement with glucocorticoid completely normalized PTH-vitamin d axis and R-A-A system. Thus, the present case implicates that severe adrenocortical deficiency due to IAD might affect both R-A-A system and PTH-vitamin d axis. These findings suggest that the ACTH-cortisol axis has an important role in mineral metabolism in vivo.
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5/30. A relapsed non-Hodgkin lymphoma presenting as panhypopituitarism successfully treated by chemotherapy.

    We report a case of relapsed large B-cell non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL) affecting the anterior pituitary. The NHL relapsed after three years in complete remission. The patient was a 72-year-old woman who presented fever, weakness, hyponatremia, and hypotension. The levels of thyroid-stimulating hormone and gonadotropins were very low and magnetic resonance imaging showed infiltration of the pituitary gland and stalk. After controlling the hormonal deficiencies with substitution using hydroxycortisone and levothyroxin, the patient was treated with combination chemotherapy using cyclophosphamide, vincristine, mitoxantrone, etoposide, and bleomycin (VNCOP-B regimen), achieving a complete regression of the pituitary mass and partial recovery of the endocrine function. lymphoproliferative disorders affecting the anterior pituitary are exceedingly rare, with only six cases in immunocompetent adults reported in the literature. To our knowledge this is the first report of a relapsed NHL presenting by hypopituitarism.
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6/30. hyponatremia and hypoglycemia in acute Sheehan's syndrome.

    We report the case of a 23-year-old Saudi Arabian woman who presented to the medical intensive care unit with severe hyponatremia and hypoglycemia following a cesarean section delivery complicated by hemorrhage due to disseminated intravascular coagulopathy. She was treated successfully for adrenal insufficiency acutely, and was later discharged on hormone replacement therapy. To our knowledge, this is the first case report of acute Sheehan's syndrome presenting with both hyponatremia and suggestive hypoglycemia. Pituitary necrosis is an uncommon complication of peripartum hemorrhagic shock. Since the initial description by Sheehan in 1937, the incidence of the syndrome has gradually declined through improved management of hemodynamic complications leading to the infarction of the gland. There are many studies describing complications of late Sheehan's syndrome; however, relatively few contain descriptions of the acute phase. In addition, the diagnosis of this syndrome is often determined after resolution of the acute process with resultant lack of data regarding immediate endocrine and imaging abnormalities. In this report, we describe the complete endocrine and imaging assessment of a patient presenting in critical condition due to necrosis of the pituitary gland in the immediate postpartum period.
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ranking = 1
keywords = hyponatremia
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7/30. Panhypopituitarism induced by cholesterol granuloma in the sellar region--case report.

    A 67-year-old man with generalized fatigue and weight loss developed hyponatremia. Endocrinologic examination demonstrated panhypopituitarism. magnetic resonance imaging showed a pituitary mass extending slightly to the suprasellar region. Transsphenoidal resection of the tumor was performed. Histological examination found exclusively granulomatous tissue with cholesterol clefts, and no epithelial component. This cholesterol granuloma may be classified as xanthogranuloma of the sellar region.
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keywords = hyponatremia
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8/30. Case report of hypopituitarism with suspected syndrome of inappropriate VP secretion (SIADH) due to a large aneurysm of the internal carotid in the sellar region.

    hypopituitarism and hyponatremia, especially when severe, are infrequent findings particularly when the cause of hypopituitarism at presentation is unknown and untreated. Interestingly, hyponatremia is usually seen in elderly patients with hypopituitarism due to various causes. We present a case with unrecognized and untreated hypopituitarism due to a large aneurysm of the internal carotid artery in the sellar region causing the syndrome of inappropriate secretion of antidiuretic hormone (SIADH).
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9/30. Transient lymphocytic panhypophysitis associated with SIADH leading to diabetes insipidus after glucocorticoid replacement.

    A 52-year-old man presented with vomiting, general fatigue and hyponatremia. His symptoms and signs were consistent with the syndrome of inappropriate secretion of antidiuretic hormone (SIADH). Endocrine studies revealed hypopituitarism and administration of hydrocortisone resulted in a marked polyuria. The patient was diagnosed as masked diabetes insipidus. The lymphocytic hypophysitis was also diagnosed on the basis of MRI findings and anti-pituitary antibody. Six months later, these abnormalities disappeared. diabetes insipidus may exist in a case of hyponatremia due to contrastive SIADH. Such patients may recover spontaneously and careful follow-up is required, avoiding a long-term treatment by monotonous continuation of hormonal replacement.
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ranking = 1
keywords = hyponatremia
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10/30. Early postpartum hyponatremia in a patient with transient Sheehan's syndrome.

    In modern day health care, Sheehan's syndrome is a rare disorder affecting the postpartum period. We present a case of a 33-year-old woman with atonic hemorrhage developing a transient Sheehan's syndrome associated with hyponatremia six days postpartum. Evaluation of cranial computer tomography and magnetic resonance imaging of the pituitary demonstrated normal finding. Immediate replacement therapy using sodium, chloride, hydrocortisone, fludrocortisone and levothyroxine revealed regression of the Sheehan's syndrome to complete recovery. The present report shows that Sheehan's syndrome can be associated with hyponatremia and illustrates the need to include hyponatremia as an initial symptom in the differential diagnosis of Sheehan's syndrome.
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ranking = 3.5
keywords = hyponatremia
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