Spontaneous Regression Of Enlargement Of The Sella Turcica And Of Associated Panhypopituitary Symptoms
Acta Endocrinologica 85(4): 1977; 684-691
View Original Source →Abstract
The case history of a woman born in 1946 is given. In 1968 she developed a syndrome of headache, fever, elevated antistreptolysin titer, enlarged and ballooned sella turcica, hypothyroidism secondary to TSH deficiency, secondary amenorrhoea of pituitary genesis, probable growth hormone deficiency, and secondary adrenocortical insufficiency. From 1972 all the mentioned pituitary defects of function disappeared, and the sella turcica gradually became normal in size as shown by x-ray examination.
Case Details
Personal Characteristics
A woman born in 1946
Clinical Characteristics
Headache, fever, elevated antistreptolysin titer, enlarged and ballooned sella turcica, hypothyroidism secondary to tsh deficiency, secondary amenorrhoea of pituitary genesis, probable growth hormone deficiency, and secondary adrenocortical insufficiency
Remission Characteristics
From 1972 all the mentioned pituitary defects of function disappeared, and the sella turcica gradually became normal in size as shown by x-ray examination
Treatment & Mechanisms
Proposed Remission Mechanisms
Not discussed