EVALUATION OF RESECTION OF PITUITARY MICROADENOMA FOR THE TREATMENT OF CUSHING'S DISEASE IN PATIENTS WITH RADIOLOGICALLY NORMAL SELLA TURCICA

Abstract
Si.: patients with Cushing's disease and a radiologically normal sella turcica have been treated by transsphenoidal hypophysectomy. Microadenomas were found and removed in five. One patient was in complete remission by 2 months and three by 6 months post‐operatively. Two of the remaining patients (one with and the other without a surgically demonstrable tumour) were not cured after 8 and 15 months follow‐up, respectively. Our data suggest that pituitary tumours are present in the majority of patients with Cushing's disease. The possibilities of incomplete adenomectomy or of a tumour buried within the gland should be considered in patients in whom pituitary surgery does not induce remission. In one patient, subsequently proven to have a pituitary adenoma, the disease remitted pre‐operatively with cyproheptadine, suggesting hypothalamic regulation of the tumour and/or direct drug action at the pituitary level.