Interactive Transcript
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Dr. Shupack,
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let's take a look at this 17-year-old young
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lady that has primary amenorrhea.
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And I'll withhold the rest of the historical information.
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I have in front of you a coronal T2, two spin echo, a T1,
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one with contrast showing a beautiful central pituitary
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tuft or portal plexus blush right in the midline.
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It's gorgeous. And then on the right side,
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on the viewer's right,
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we have a sagittal contrast-enhanced MRI.
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The region of the proximal stalk medial eminence
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the stalk and then down into the gland,
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which looks maybe a little bit juicy.
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Now, she is 17.
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So how do you tell whether this is physiologically
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normal or abnormal? Yeah, that is the question.
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If you look at the gland, first of all, one question would be,
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well, if we're thinking it could be a little big,
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is it because there's a mass there?
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Now,
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remember we talked about the pituitary tuft and you got a
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great one here. You got a stalk that's in the midline,
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and so there's not going to be a mass.
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So if it is big, why would that be?
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And also, well, is it big, as you said, young female.
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We know that the pituitary is a little chubby,
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but can it be a little chubby in that age group?
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Yes.
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So this is where you have to get a little bit nitpicky,
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I think, meaning measuring the gland normal, abnormal,
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because there are resources out there that will tell you what
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the range is. Okay, so I measured this gland at about 8 mm.
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Okay. And as it turns out, this patient is 17 and a female.
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Okay. So we have to decide,
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is this in the normal range for that group or not?
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And as it turns out,
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you can see this in young females with pituitaries of this
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size and the upper end of normal, but not in this age group.
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Okay. This patient is 17.
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When do you start to see the bump in size?
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Yeah, it starts to go up.
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The highest,
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the biggest size that's normal is at 22 to 32 age group.
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Okay, so this patient is below that.
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So the upper range of normal is going to be below seven.
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So, yeah, it's a little chubby by objective means,
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meaning that that amenorrhea that we're talking about,
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we have to start investigating that and other diagnoses
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of pituitary hyperplasia. Yeah, I mean,
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your first reaction when you hear that there's decreased
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hormone function as a clinician or as a radiologist is, oh,
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well, maybe the pituitary is deficient, maybe it's small.
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But then when you see the pituitary either normal
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or a little plump, unless you're dialed in,
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you could get a little bit confused.
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Now, before age 21 or 22, the pituitary,
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according to the charts that you've shared with me,
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some very great scientific charts,
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it should be about six, 6.2, maybe 6.4.
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You know, this one was encroaching upon eight.
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And you don't start to see seven or eight in a woman until,
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as you said, age 21, 22 or 23.
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So you know it's a millimeter.
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Meter or too big for a woman.
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And in this scenario,
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it makes you think about pituitary hyperplasia.
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So in somebody with primary amenorrhea that's a young woman,
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what would be the first thing you'd consider?
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Well, amenorrhea would be one thing of pituitary hyperplasia.
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There's a list of things,
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but one thing would be anorexia nervosa is one reason you
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could see it. Hypothyroidism more common in women.
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And there are some other things: Addison's disease, medications,
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taking estrogens, taking phenothiazines.
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Okay, all those things can affect hormonal levels,
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but also the pituitary.
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And I can assure you that neurosurgery classic neurosurgery
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board question, right, is they show you a big pituitary,
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try to get you to operate on it,
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and if you didn't check the thyroid, you fail.
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Okay? So hypothyroidism is going to be a big one,
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but in this particular setting, young female,
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17-year-old amenorrhea,
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I would say anorexia nervosa is going to be right up there,
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but you're going to have to check these other things as well.
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What's her med list look like and what's her
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endocrine function? Yeah, in my experience,
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I'm not a real physician like you.
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I'm a radiologist, but I used to be a clinician.
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And the first two things that always come to mind in this
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scenario in a younger individual, especially a woman,
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anorexia nervosa number one,
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and then thyroid disease number two.
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For those of you that are younger, your residents,
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your fellows,
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one way to think about it is when the end organ fails,
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the pituitary says, hey, I don't have enough juice.
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We got to make some more juice.
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So the pituitary, like a muscle, hypertrophies.
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So that's the phenomenon of pituitary hyperplasia.
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So whenever an endocrine organ fails,
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the pituitary can get big.
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Some causes of a big pituitary without a focal
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mass: pituitary hyperplasia, neurosarcoidosis,
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Langerhans cell histiocytosis, or EG lymphocytic hypophysitis.
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Sometimes you can get an infiltrative adenoma
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where you don't actually see a mass.
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Another really important one that we often overlook in adults
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usually don't see it in younger women, 17 years of age,
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but say a 40-year-old woman who's a little bit bigger in
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terms of body habitus is intracranial hypotension,
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so-called SIH (spontaneous intracranial hypotension),
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where the CSF pressure is down and the sella enlarges to fill
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that space. That looks a lot like true pituitary hyperplasia.
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Pleomorphic meningiomas can be very smooth where you don't
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actually see a mass. Metastases, dural AVFs,
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pituocytoma, leukemia, lymphoma,
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any infiltrative lesion where you don't have a true mass
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within the pituitary gland can give the impression
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that the pituitary is enlarged.
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Shall we move on?
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Let's do it.
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