Primary pituitary tuberculosis
Tuberculosis is an infectious disease that involves any organ. However, the primary pituitary tuberculosis is an extremely rare disease. Intracranial tuberculomas account for 0.15-5% of intracranial space-occupying lesions, of which, pituitary as the primary site is unusual, and easily misdiagnosed...
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University of São Paulo
2021-01-01
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doaj-3ebf8206f7ba4de282e9961cc7e192102021-02-02T15:56:51ZengUniversity of São PauloAutopsy and Case Reports2236-19602021-01-0111Primary pituitary tuberculosisTarun Kumar0Jitendra Singh Nigam1Iffat Jamal2Vikas Chandra Jha3All India Institute of Medical Science, Department of PathologyAll India Institute of Medical Science, Department of PathologyIndira Gandhi Institute of Medical Sciences, Department of HematologyAll India Institute of Medical Science, Department of Neurosurgery Tuberculosis is an infectious disease that involves any organ. However, the primary pituitary tuberculosis is an extremely rare disease. Intracranial tuberculomas account for 0.15-5% of intracranial space-occupying lesions, of which, pituitary as the primary site is unusual, and easily misdiagnosed as pituitary adenoma. In this setting, the late diagnosis can result in permanent endocrine dysfunction. We report the case of a 50-year-old woman who presented to the neurosurgery outpatient department with complaints of progressively increasing headache and diminished vision over the last year. On the clinical examination, the patient was conscious and oriented. The routine hematological and biochemical workup showed an increased erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR) and increased prolactin levels. The radiological working diagnosis was consistent with pituitary macroadenoma. No other radiological and/or clinical clue that could elicit the suspicion of pulmonary or extrapulmonary lesions of tuberculosis was found. The transsphenoidal endonasal tumor excision was done. The histopathology showed numerous epithelioid cell granulomas, Langhans giant cells along with scant necrosis. Ziehl Neelsen staining demonstrated acid-fast bacilli, and the final diagnosis of pituitary tuberculoma was made. We report this rare case of pituitary lesion that may be included in the differential diagnosis of sellar lesions to avoid unnecessary surgical interventions, especially in regions where the disease is endemic. https://www.revistas.usp.br/autopsy/article/view/180648TuberculosisGranulomaAdenomaPituitary Gland |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Tarun Kumar Jitendra Singh Nigam Iffat Jamal Vikas Chandra Jha |
spellingShingle |
Tarun Kumar Jitendra Singh Nigam Iffat Jamal Vikas Chandra Jha Primary pituitary tuberculosis Autopsy and Case Reports Tuberculosis Granuloma Adenoma Pituitary Gland |
author_facet |
Tarun Kumar Jitendra Singh Nigam Iffat Jamal Vikas Chandra Jha |
author_sort |
Tarun Kumar |
title |
Primary pituitary tuberculosis |
title_short |
Primary pituitary tuberculosis |
title_full |
Primary pituitary tuberculosis |
title_fullStr |
Primary pituitary tuberculosis |
title_full_unstemmed |
Primary pituitary tuberculosis |
title_sort |
primary pituitary tuberculosis |
publisher |
University of São Paulo |
series |
Autopsy and Case Reports |
issn |
2236-1960 |
publishDate |
2021-01-01 |
description |
Tuberculosis is an infectious disease that involves any organ. However, the primary pituitary tuberculosis is an extremely rare disease. Intracranial tuberculomas account for 0.15-5% of intracranial space-occupying lesions, of which, pituitary as the primary site is unusual, and easily misdiagnosed as pituitary adenoma. In this setting, the late diagnosis can result in permanent endocrine dysfunction. We report the case of a 50-year-old woman who presented to the neurosurgery outpatient department with complaints of progressively increasing headache and diminished vision over the last year. On the clinical examination, the patient was conscious and oriented. The routine hematological and biochemical workup showed an increased erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR) and increased prolactin levels. The radiological working diagnosis was consistent with pituitary macroadenoma. No other radiological and/or clinical clue that could elicit the suspicion of pulmonary or extrapulmonary lesions of tuberculosis was found. The transsphenoidal endonasal tumor excision was done. The histopathology showed numerous epithelioid cell granulomas, Langhans giant cells along with scant necrosis. Ziehl Neelsen staining demonstrated acid-fast bacilli, and the final diagnosis of pituitary tuberculoma was made. We report this rare case of pituitary lesion that may be included in the differential diagnosis of sellar lesions to avoid unnecessary surgical interventions, especially in regions where the disease is endemic.
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topic |
Tuberculosis Granuloma Adenoma Pituitary Gland |
url |
https://www.revistas.usp.br/autopsy/article/view/180648 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT tarunkumar primarypituitarytuberculosis AT jitendrasinghnigam primarypituitarytuberculosis AT iffatjamal primarypituitarytuberculosis AT vikaschandrajha primarypituitarytuberculosis |
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