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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 
 
 

Tests of prolactin secretion in diagnosis of prolactinomas.

Prolactin-secreting tumours of the pituitary were identified and treated by transsphenoidal microsurgery in fourteen infertile females with hyperprolactinaemia. Resting prolactin levels were 590--9000 mU/1 (mean 3400). In seven patients, tomography of the pituitary fossa was normal and resting prolactin levels were 590-6000 mU/1 (mean 3400). In these patients the pre-operative diagnosis prolactinoma in these patients was made by demonstrating loss of the normal circadian prolactin profile and impaired prolactin response to intravenous thyrotrophin-releasing hormone (T.R.H.) and metoclopramide stimulation. Prolactin response to the acute oral administration of L-dopa and bromocriptine was of less diagnostic value. Preoperative assessment of anterior pituitary function identified abnormalities other than hyperprolactinaemia in four patients (28%). Post-operative assessment indicated that microsurgery was curative in twelve patients (86%), selective in all, and without significant side-effect. It is concluded that dynamic tests such as T.R.H. and metoclopramide stimulation have considerable value in identifying hyperprolactinaemic patients with prolactin-secreting adenomas, particularly those which are radiologically occult.[1]

References

  1. Tests of prolactin secretion in diagnosis of prolactinomas. Cowden, E.A., Ratcliffe, J.G., Thomson, J.A., Macpherson, P., Doyle, D., Teasdale, G.M. Lancet (1979) [Pubmed]
 
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