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Pituitary Surgery: Peri-operative Management Anna Boron, MD Faculty physician in Endocrinology in the Department of Internal Medicine at St. Joseph’s Hospital.

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Presentation on theme: "Pituitary Surgery: Peri-operative Management Anna Boron, MD Faculty physician in Endocrinology in the Department of Internal Medicine at St. Joseph’s Hospital."— Presentation transcript:

1 Pituitary Surgery: Peri-operative Management Anna Boron, MD Faculty physician in Endocrinology in the Department of Internal Medicine at St. Joseph’s Hospital and Medical Center

2 What is the Likely Nature of the Sellar Mass? Pituitary adenoma Craniopahryngioma Meningioma Pituitary hyperplasia Infiltrative / infmammatory process Infection Apoplexy Metastatic lesion /primary cancer

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5 Is There Any Compression (mass) Effect? Suprasellar, ”upward“ expansion – headache, visual field defects Lateral expansion – IV, V, VI cranial nerve palsy, headache, pituitary crisis (with apoplexy) Downward expansion – CSF leak, rarely blindness, temporal epilepsy Pituitary compression – hormonal deficiencies

6 Which, if any, Hormone is Overproduced? Hyperprolactinemia – most frequent GH hypersecretion - acromegaly ACTH hypersecretion – Cushing’s disease TSH hypersecretion - thyrotoxicosis Gonadotropin producing tumors – so called “nonfunctioning” pituitary tumors

7 Which, if any, Hormone is Lacking? Functional suppression Physical suppression

8 Peri~ and Postoperative Steroid Replacement In patients with known adrenal insufficiency “stress dose” of steroids is given, with postoperative taper to the home dose of steroids If postoperative cortisol level <10 mcg/dl, upon discharge - Rx hydrocortisone 15 mg q8am and 5 mg q2pm “Sick day” rule Cosyntropin stimulation test In Cushing’s disease – gradual taper from steroids

9 Steroid Replacement Every patient with central adrenal deficiency needs ID necklace or bracelet Steroid supplementation: Hydrocortisone Prednisone Dexamethasone

10 Thyroid Replacement If hypothyroidism present pre-operatively, levothyroxine replacement should be started in dose 1.6 mcg/kg BW Thyroid function should be re-measured 6-8 weeks after dose initiated Therapy effectiveness should be assessed by plasma free T4

11 Gonadotropins 1.Testosterone not routinely given before surgery 2.Testosterone replacement post surgery: –Depot testosterone 200 mg/ Q 2 weeks or 100 mg weekly IM –Testosterone gel –Testosterone patch 3.Monitoring of hemoglobin and hematocrit, PSA, total testosterone level

12 Gonadotropins Estradiol skin patches/ oral estrogen supplementation Progesterone supplementation in patients with intact uterus

13 GH Deficiency GH supplementation in severe GH deficiency with stimulated GH <3 mcg/l or in patients with three or four other pituitary hormone deficiencies and low IGF-1 level

14 Disorders of Water and Salt 1.Hypernatremia Diabetes Insipidus (DI) Fluid loss ( GI loss, insensible loss) 2.Hyponatremia SIADH Cerebral salt wasting GI loss Adrenal insufficiency/ hypothyroidism edema

15 Hypernatremia Plasma sodium >145 mmol/l Relative sodium excess compared to whole body water Results either from net water loss or sodium load Symptoms: weakness, confusion, seizures, coma Complications: cerebral bleeding, permanent brain damage and death, cerebral edema with overfast correction of hypernatremia

16 Hypernatremia Prognosis - the mortality rate depends on the severity of the hypernatremia and the rapidity of its onset Severe hypernatremia - mortality rate of approximately 40-70% in elderly patients The level of consciousness is the single best prognostic indicator

17 Diabetes Insipidus Condition that occurs when the kidneys are unable to conserve water as they perform their function of filtering blood The amount of water conserved is controlled by antidiuretic hormone (ADH) ADH is a hormone produced in the brain (hypothalamus), then stored and released from the pituitary gland Central DI - caused by a lack of ADH Nephrogenic DI - caused by a failure of the kidneys to respond to ADH

18 Diabetes Insipidus Symptoms – excessive thirst, craving for ice water, excessive urine volume, dehydration Treatment – underlying condition should be treated when possible Central DI may be controlled with vasopressin (desmopressin, DDAVP), fluids If treated, diabetes insipidus does not cause severe problems or reduce life expectancy

19 Hyponatremia Plasma sodium <135 mmol/l Euvolemic hyponatremia - total body water increases, but the body's sodium content stays the same Hypervolemic hyponatremia - both sodium and water content in the body increase, but the water gain is greater Hypovolemic hyponatremia - water and sodium are both lost from the body, but the sodium loss is greater

20 Hyponatremia Symptoms: abnormal mental status, confusion, hallucinations, coma, seizures, fatigue, headache, muscle spasms or weakness, nausea, vomiting Treatment - depends on the type of hyponatremia and underlying cause and may include: fluids through a vein, medications (demeclocycline, vaptans, salt supplements), water restriction The outcome depends on the condition that is causing the low sodium

21 A Special Thanks to our Sponsors Barrow Neurological Institute Corcept Ipsen KARL STORZ Endoskope


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