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  • Title: Double pituitary lesions in three patients with Cushing's disease.
    Author: Meij BP, Lopes MB, Vance ML, Thorner MO, Laws ER.
    Journal: Pituitary; 2000 Nov; 3(3):159-68. PubMed ID: 11383480.
    Abstract:
    Double pituitary adenomas are rare in surgical specimens and the most common clinical feature in reported patients has been acromegaly. We report 3 cases of double pituitary lesions in patients who presented with Cushing's disease. In a 22-year-old man (case 1) with delayed puberty and low testosterone levels, mild hyperprolactinemia was diagnosed and treated with dopamine agonist therapy that reduced the prolactin (PRL) levels to normal. Over a 1-year period Cushing's disease developed gradually and was confirmed with classical endocrine testing. In a 27-year-old woman (case 2) who initially presented with severe depression and morbid obesity there was a gradual onset of Cushing's disease; initially she had minimally elevated serum PRL. In a 33-year-old woman (case 3) there was a 2-year history of Cushing's disease characterized by hirsutism, hypertension and weight gain; serum PRL was normal. Magnetic resonance imaging in all 3 patients revealed a microadenoma that was successfully removed by transsphenoidal pituitary surgery. Histology and immunocytochemistry in case 1 and case 3 revealed a corticotroph cell adenoma and a PRL cell adenoma in separate areas of the pituitary. In case 3 the PRL cell adenoma was "silent" but in case 1 the PRL cell adenoma may have been the cause of the mild hyperprolactinemia. In case 2 nodular corticotroph hyperplasia was the cause of Cushing's disease and a "silent" PRL cell adenoma was also identified. We conclude from these cases and a literature review that double pituitary lesions may occur in patients with Cushing's disease. The corticotroph part of the double lesion may consist of a corticotroph cell adenoma or, as reported in this study, of corticotroph nodular hyperplasia. The counterpart of the double lesion may consist either of a "silent" PRL cell adenoma or a functional PRL cell adenoma causing hyperprolactinemia.
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