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The role of the biochemistry department in the diagnosis of pituitary apoplexy
A 47-year-old man presented with severe clinical hypoglycaemia. He had long-standing insulin-dependent diabetes with previously good glycaemic control. Intense headaches and vomiting initiated hospitalization. A brain computed tomography (CT) scan was normal, and a lumbar puncture showed elevated ce...
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Published in: | Annals of clinical biochemistry 2004-03, Vol.41 (2), p.162-165 |
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Main Authors: | , , , , , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Citations: | Items that cite this one |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | A 47-year-old man presented with severe clinical hypoglycaemia. He had long-standing
insulin-dependent diabetes with previously good glycaemic control. Intense headaches
and vomiting initiated hospitalization. A brain computed tomography (CT) scan was
normal, and a lumbar puncture showed elevated cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) protein [0.67
g/L; normal range (NR) 0.15-0.45 g/L], suggesting resolving viral meningitis.
Routine thyroid function tests were abnormal (free thyroxine 10.6 pmol/L, NR 9-22.5
pmol/L; thyroid-stimulating hormone 0.16 mU/L, NR 0.35-5 mU/L). In the absence of
evident thyroid therapy, the laboratory policy required an urgent cortisol assay to
be added; this was very abnormal (42 nmol/L), suggesting hypopituitarism. Later
analysis showed that concentrations of gonadotrophins and adrenocorticotrophin were
low. An urgent pituitary magnetic resonance imaging scan revealed an unsuspected
pituitary tumour with recent haemorrhage (pituitary apoplexy). The patient was given
intravenous hydrocortisone and then stabilized on oral hydrocortisone, thyroxine and
mesterolone. He made a full recovery and the hypoglycaemia resolved.
The normal brain CT scan was falsely reassuring and the CSF protein was not due to
viral meningitis but to haemorrhage into the pituitary tumour. If laboratory policy
had not required the urgent cortisol assay be added, the diagnosis of hypopituitarism
would have been delayed or even missed altogether. This could have led to the death
of the patient. |
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ISSN: | 0004-5632 1758-1001 |
DOI: | 10.1258/000456304322880096 |