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      Lymphocytic hypophysitis.

      Hormone research
      Adrenal Cortex Hormones, therapeutic use, Diagnosis, Differential, Diagnostic Techniques, Endocrine, Female, Humans, Inflammation, classification, drug therapy, etiology, pathology, Lymphocytes, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Pituitary Diseases, Pregnancy, Pregnancy Complications

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          Abstract

          Lymphocytic hypophysitis is a disorder of the pituitary gland that presents as a sellar mass lesion and/or hypopituitarism. It causes pituicyte destruction and hypopituitarism and is speculated to have an autoimmune basis. Lymphocytic hypophysitis should be considered in the differential diagnosis of pituitary masses and/or hypopituitarism in females who are pregnant or in the early postpartum period, especially in cases associated with other autoimmune diseases or unusual patterns of hormone deficiencies. A definitive diagnosis requires tissue biopsy. A presumptive clinical diagnosis can be made based on a history of gestational or postpartum hypopituitarism, a contrast-enhancing sellar mass with imaging features characteristic of lymphocytic hypophysitis, a pattern of pituitary hormone deficiency with early loss of adrenocorticotrophic hormone and thyroid-stimulating hormone unlike that typically found with macroadenomas, relatively rapid development of hypopituitarism and a degree of pituitary failure disproportionate to the size of the mass. Symptoms resulting from partial or panhypopituitarism occur in approximately 80% of cases and multiple deficiencies are found in approximately 75% of cases. Appropriate management remains controversial. Corticosteroid therapy has been advocated as a means of attenuating inflammation, but given the uncertainty of its efficacy and the known adverse effects, such therapy does not seem justified for most patients. The optimal surgical strategy involves partial resection of the mass to decompress the surrounding structures. All patients with lymphocytic hypophysitis require appropriate replacement therapy for deficient hormones. Long-term follow-up is mandatory to monitor for the development of other hormonal deficits. Copyright (c) 2007 S. Karger AG, Basel.

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          Autoimmune hypophysitis.

          Autoimmune (lymphocytic) hypophysitis is a rare disease that should be considered in the differential diagnosis of any nonsecreting pituitary mass, especially when occurring during pregnancy or postpartum. We have analyzed 370 articles published from January 1962 to October 2004 and identified a total of 379 patients with primary lymphocytic hypophysitis. The present review synthesizes the clinical and research data reported in this body of scientific literature.
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            Lymphocytic infundibuloneurohypophysitis as a cause of central diabetes insipidus.

            Central diabetes insipidus may be familial, secondary to hypothalamic or pituitary disorders, or idiopathic. Idiopathic central diabetes insipidus is characterized by selective hypofunction of the hypothalamic-neurohypophysial system, but its cause is unknown. We studied 17 patients with idiopathic diabetes insipidus, in whom the duration of the disorder ranged from 2 months to 20 years. Only four patients had been treated with vasopressin before the study began. All the patients underwent endocrinologic studies and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) with a 1.5-T superconducting unit, and two patients had biopsies of the neurohypophysis or the pituitary stalk. Nine of the 17 patients had thickening of the pituitary stalk, enlargement of the neurohypophysis, or both and lacked the hyperintense signal of the normal neurohypophysis. In the remaining eight patients, the pituitary stalk and the neurohypophysis were normal, although the hyperintense signal was absent. The abnormalities of thickening and enlargement were seen on MRI only in the patients who had had diabetes insipidus for less than two years, and the abnormalities disappeared during follow-up, suggesting a self-limited process. In addition to vasopressin deficiency, two patients had mild hyperprolactinemia and nine had impaired secretory responses of growth hormone to insulin-induced hypoglycemia. The two biopsies revealed chronic inflammation, with infiltration of lymphocytes (mainly T lymphocytes) and plasma cells. Diabetes insipidus can be caused by lymphocytic infundibuloneurohypophysitis, which can be detected by MRI. The natural course of the disorder is self-limited.
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              Anterior hypophysitis and Hashimoto's disease in a young woman.

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