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Signs and symptoms of pituitary tumors
For all adenomas
These tumors may cause problems because of the hormones they
release. If no excess hormone is being produced, these tumors often
become large before they are noticed. Large tumors can affect nearby
tissues, leading to headaches and visual problems.
Typically, a functional adenoma makes too much of a single
pituitary hormone -- without making too much of the other hormones. As
the tumor gets larger, it puts pressure on the normal pituitary tissue.
This can lead to a loss of normal pituitary hormone production, and low
levels of some normal body hormones such as cortisone, thyroid hormone,
and sex hormones.
Non-functional adenomas that cause no symptoms are sometimes
found because of an MRI taken for other reasons. These
"incidentalomas." are being discovered more often as more MRI and CT
scans of the brain are done. These may be the most common pituitary
tumors. They probably do not need treatment.
Macroadenomas and pituitary carcinomas
Pituitary carcinomas are rare cancers usually found after they
cause visual problems or other neurologic symptoms. Benign
macroadenomas (tumors larger than 1 cm), whether functional or not, can
also lead to neurologic symptoms that may include:
- paralysis of eye movements causing double or blurred vision
- loss of peripheral vision
- sudden blindness
- facial numbness or pain
- headache
- dizziness
- loss of consciousness
Vision problems occur when the tumor "pinches" the nerves that
extend between the eyes and the brain. Sudden loss of vision, loss of
consciousness, and even death can result from sudden bleeding into the
tumor.
Macroadenomas and pituitary carcinomas can destroy normal
pituitary tissue, creating a shortage of one or more pituitary
hormones. Depending on which hormones are affected, the symptoms might
include:
- nausea
- weakness
- unexplained weight loss or weight gain
- amenorrhea (no menstrual periods)
- erectile dysfunction in men, also known as impotence
(difficulty having erections)
- decreased interest in sex, mainly in men
Diabetes
insipidis: This syndrome can occur with any macroadenoma
or with pituitary carcinoma. Diabetes insipidus also can occur as a
complication of any pituitary tumor treatment. It should not be
confused with diabetes mellitus (high sugar levels in the blood and
urine).
Diabetes insipidus results when the pituitary makes too little
vasopressin (also called anti-diuretic
hormone, or ADH).
ADH is what tells the kidneys to concentrate the urine. Not having
enough of this hormone causes loss of water with frequent urination.
This can be severe. As a result, the person becomes very thirsty as the
body tries to keep up with the loss of water. If severe and untreated,
this problem causes blood mineral abnormalities, which can lead to coma
and even death. Fortunately, this condition is easily treated with a
drug that replaces the vasopressin.
Growth hormone-secreting adenomas
The major symptoms of these are directly related to growth
hormone overproduction. The effects of excessive growth hormone levels
on children and adults are quite different.
In children, high growth hormone levels can stimulate the
growth of nearly all bones in the body. The medical term for this
condition is gigantism.
Its features typically include:
- being very tall (sometimes over 7 feet)
- very rapid growth
- joint pains
- increased sweating
The long bones of adults (especially in the arms and legs)
cannot grow further, even when growth hormone levels are very high. But
bones of the hands, feet, skull, face, and jaws can grow throughout
life. This is why adults with growth hormone-secreting adenomas do not
grow taller and develop gigantism. Instead, they develop a different
condition called acromegaly.
The signs and symptoms of acromegaly are:
- growth of the skull, hands, and feet leading to increase in
hat, shoe, glove, and ring size
- deepening of the voice
- change in the appearance of the face (due to growth of
facial bones)
- wider spacing of the teeth (due to jawbone growth)
- joint pain
- increased sweating
- high blood sugar or even diabetes mellitus
- kidney stones
- heart disease
- headache
- thickening of tongue and roof of mouth, leading to sleep
disturbances, including snoring and sleep apnea
- thickened skin
- increased growth of body hair
These changes can occur quite slowly, and often people
don’t recognize how they’ve changed until they look
at an old picture of themselves (or try to remove an old wedding band).
Corticotropin (ACTH)-secreting adenomas
Excessively high ACTH levels stimulate the adrenal glands to
produce several steroid hormones. Oversupply of these steroid hormones
causes several symptoms that doctors group together as Cushing's syndrome.
When this originates from the high ACTH production from the pituitary
it is termed Cushing's
disease. In adults, these symptoms include:
- unexplained weight gain (mostly in the chest and abdomen)
- purple stretch marks on the abdomen
- new or increased hair growth (on the face, chest, and/or
abdomen)
- swelling of the face
- fat deposits at the point where the back of the neck joins
the spine
- moodiness or depression
- easy bruising
- high blood sugar or even diabetes mellitus
- hypertension (high blood pressure)
- irregular or absent menstrual periods
- weakening of the bones, which can lead to osteoporosis or
even fractures
Most of the adult symptoms can also occur in children.
Children with Cushing's disease may stop growing and start having
problems in school performance. These changes occur much faster than
acromegaly, so they are more easily recognized.
Prolactin-producing adenomas
(prolactinomas)
Prolactinomas are most common in young women and older men. In
adult women before the menopause, high prolactin levels cause menstrual
periods to stop. High prolactin can also cause abnormal breast milk
production, called galactorrhea.
In men, impotence (not being able to have an erection) or loss of
interest in sex may be the first symptom. If the tumor continues to
grow, then headaches and vision problems can occur. In women who do not
have periods (such as children before puberty and older women after
menopause), prolactinomas may not be noticed until they cause these
symptoms.
Thyrotropin (TSH)-secreting adenomas
When the tumor makes too much thyroid-stimulating hormone
(TSH), it causes the thyroid gland to make too much thyroid hormone.
Patients usually have symptoms of hyperthyroidism (overactive thyroid),
such as:
- a rapid heartbeat
- tremors (shaking)
- weight loss
- an increased appetite
- feeling warm or hot
- difficulty falling asleep
- anxiousness
- frequent bowel movements
- a lump (enlarged thyroid) in the front of the neck
Gonadotropin-secreting adenomas
These adenomas make luteinizing hormone (LH) and/or
follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH). They are not very common. Their
overproduction of LH and/or FSH may cause irregular menstrual periods
in women. Before these adenomas are detected, they may become large
enough to cause headaches and problems with vision.
Medical history and physical exam
The first step is for the doctor to take a complete medical
history to check for risk factors and symptoms. Your doctor will ask
about your family history to see if you may have inherited the gene for
multiple endocrine neoplasia, type I (MEN1). The doctor will want to
know if anyone in your family has had a pituitary gland tumor, an
overactive parathyroid gland (hyperparathyroidism),
or adrenal gland tumors. They may also ask about problems with kidney
stones, stomach ulcers, or low blood sugar (hypoglycemia), all
of which can be signs of MEN1. The physical exam and visual exam
provide more information about signs of pituitary tumors and other
health problems.
Biochemical testing for pituitary tumors
Your symptoms and physical exam results may lead your doctor
to believe that you might have a pituitary tumor. If your doctor
suspects you have a hormone-producing tumor, your hormone levels in
blood and/or urine samples will be measured.
Growth hormone-secreting adenomas
A physical exam may alert the doctor to look for these tumors
because the signs and symptoms are often very distinctive. The next
step is to check for excessive growth hormone production. Levels of
growth hormone and insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-1) will be
measured in your blood samples, which are taken the morning after an
overnight fast. When growth hormone levels are high, they cause the
liver to make more IGF-1. Testing the IGF-1 level can be more helpful
than checking the level of growth hormone. The IGF-1 level doesn't
change much during the day, but the level of growth hormone can go up
and down.
If both levels are very high, the diagnosis is clearly a
pituitary tumor. If the levels are slightly increased, a glucose
suppression test is done. You will be asked to drink a sugary liquid,
and the levels of growth hormone, IGF-1, and blood sugar will be
measured at intervals afterward. The normal response to suddenly taking
in so much sugar is a drop in growth hormone levels. If the growth
hormone levels remain high, a pituitary adenoma is probably the cause.
Corticotropin (ACTH)-secreting adenomas
Most of the signs and symptoms of ACTH-secreting tumors come
from having too much cortisol (an adrenal steroid hormone). Quite a few
diseases can cause the body to make too much cortisol. Patients with
symptoms suggesting this condition need tests to determine if a
pituitary tumor is the cause.
These tests may include measuring levels of cortisol and ACTH
in blood samples taken at different times of the day. The patient may
be asked to collect all the urine that they produce over a 24-hour
period, which is then tested to measure daily production of cortisol
and other steroid hormones. Blood ACTH levels may be checked again
after taking a dose of a powerful, cortisone-like drug called
dexamethasone. These tests help to distinguish patients with
ACTH-secreting tumors from patients with other diseases, such as
adrenal gland tumors, that may cause similar symptoms.
Prolactin-secreting adenomas
(prolactinomas)
Blood prolactin levels can be measured to check for a prolactinoma.
Gonadotropin-secreting adenomas
Luteinizing hormone (LH) and follicle-stimulating hormone
(FSH) levels can be checked to see if a patient has a gonadotropin-secreting tumor.
Thyrotropin-secreting adenomas
Tests to measure blood levels of thyrotropin (TSH) and thyroid
hormones can usually identify people with a thyrotropin-secreting
adenoma.
Nonfunctional (null cell) adenomas
A pituitary adenoma is considered non-functional if it does
not make too much pituitary hormone, so the pituitary hormone levels
will not be increased. Sometimes, though, pituitary hormone blood
levels may actually be lowered because the adenoma interferes with
their production.
Testing for diabetes insipidus
Diabetes insipidus is caused by damage to the part of the
pituitary that produces vasopressin. This condition can be caused by
pituitary macroadenomas and carcinomas. It is sometimes caused by
tumors arising from parts of the central nervous system next to the
pituitary gland. Still, it occurs more commonly with metastatic cancer.
It sometimes is a side effect of surgical treatment of pituitary
tumors, or tumors next to the pituitary gland.
In many cases, this diagnosis is made by tests to measure
sodium (salt) levels in the blood and osmolality (total
salt concentration) of the blood and urine. If these tests are
inconclusive, then a water deprivation study may be done. In this is a
test, you are not allowed to drink fluids for several hours. The test
is often done overnight. If your body is not making enough vasopressin,
you will continue to make urine even though you are not taking in any
fluid. You may also be given an injection of vasopressin to see if this
corrects the problem.
Venous blood sampling
Corticotropin-secreting adenomas may be too small to be
detected by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans (see the next
section). When the ACTH level is high, but the patient’s MRI
scan is normal, a venous sampling study may be useful to find the
tumor.
In this study, catheters (small tubes) are placed into the
groin veins through a small nick in the skin and guided into the
petrosal sinuses, which hold 2 small veins that drain the blood from
each side of the pituitary gland. After an injection of
corticotropin-releasing hormone (CRH), blood samples are taken from
both sides and compared to see if the ACTH level is higher on one side
than the other. The side with the higher ACTH level has the pituitary
tumor.
Imaging tests
Computed tomography
The computed tomography (CT) scan is an x-ray procedure that
creates detailed cross-sectional images of your body. Instead of taking
one picture, like a standard x-ray, a CT scanner takes many pictures as
the camera rotates around you. A computer then combines these pictures
into an image of a slice of your body. The machine will take pictures
of multiple slices of the part of your body that is being studied.
Before any pictures are taken, you may be asked to drink 1 to
2 pints of a liquid called "oral contrast." This helps outline the
intestine so that certain areas are not mistaken for tumors. Oral
contrast is rarely needed for CT scans of the brain.
You may also receive an IV (intravenous) line through which a
different kind of contrast dye (IV contrast) is injected. This helps
better outline tumors and other structures.
The injection can cause some flushing (redness and warm
feeling that may last hours to days). A few people are allergic to the
dye and get hives. Rarely, more serious reactions like trouble
breathing and low blood pressure can occur. Medicine can be given to
prevent and treat allergic reactions. Be sure to tell the doctor if you
have ever had a reaction to any contrast material used for x-rays.
CT scans take longer than regular x-rays, and you will need to
lie still on a table while they are being done. But the newest CT scans
take only seconds to complete. Also, you might feel a bit confined by
the ring-like equipment you’re in when the pictures are being
taken.
The CT scan can find a pituitary adenoma if it is large
enough. The MRI (see next section) is used much more often to look at
the brain and pituitary.
Magnetic resonance imaging
Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans use radio waves and
strong magnets instead of x-rays. The energy from the radio waves is
absorbed and then released in a pattern formed by the type of tissue
and by certain diseases. A computer translates the pattern of radio
waves given off by the tissues into a very detailed image of parts of
the body. A contrast material, called gadolinium, is
sometimes injected into a vein to improve the quality of the image.
MRI scans are particularly helpful in examining the brain and
spinal cord. MRI is the best imaging test to identify pituitary tumors
of all types. MRI can identify a macroadenoma of the pituitary gland,
as well as most microadenomas. But the MRI may not be able to detect
microadenomas that are smaller than 3 mm (about 1/8 inch). Sometimes
the MRI scan will show a small abnormality in the pituitary that has
nothing to do with the patient’s symptoms. Between 5% and 25%
of healthy people have some minor abnormality of the pituitary gland
that shows up on an MRI scan.
MRI scans can be uncomfortable. First, they take a long time
-- often up to an hour. Also, you have to lie inside a tube, which is
confining and can upset people with claustrophobia (a fear of enclosed
spaces). The machine also makes a thumping noise, which can be
disturbing. If you have problems with anxiety in tight spaces, talk to
your doctor before the MRI. Sometimes, medicine can be given to help
with the anxiety. It also may be possible to have the test done using
an "open" MRI machine that is less confining and easier to tolerate. A
trade-off is that open MRI machines may provide less detailed imaging
of the pituitary tumor.
Testing of vision and visual fields
Because pituitary tumors can damage nerves leading to the
eyes, your vision should be tested. The most common test is to measure
how well a person can see. A more subtle test is to test the field of
vision (or visual fields). At first, pituitary tumors only press on
part of the optic nerves. This leads to part of a person’s
vision being lost. This is usually the "peripheral vision," meaning
things that you can see on one side or the other without actually
looking directly at them. Eye doctors have special instruments that can
test for this.
Examination of pituitary tissue specimens
In diagnosing tumors of most parts of the body, imaging tests
and blood tests may strongly suggest a particular type of tumor.
However, a biopsy
(taking a sample of the tumor to examine under the microscope) is
considered the only way to be certain of that diagnosis.
In many situations, doctors will not treat a tumor until a
biopsy has been done. A pituitary tumor is one of the exceptions to
this general rule. One reason is that the hormone tests for some types
of adenomas are very accurate. The other reason is that some types of
adenomas can be treated without surgery, using medicines or radiation
therapy.
When pituitary tumors are removed by surgery, they are
examined under a microscope to determine their exact type. Special
stains may be used. These use special antibodies made the laboratory.
They are attached to chemicals and color the areas of hormone
production, which allows specific pituitary hormones to be seen.
Last Medical Review: 02/17/2009 Last Revised: 02/17/2009
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