Title: CONTRIBUTION OF MRI IN THE EXPLORATION OF CHILDREN HYPOPITUITARISM
1CONTRIBUTION OF MRI IN THE EXPLORATION OF
CHILDRENHYPOPITUITARISM
5th Arab Radiological Congress of the Pan Arab
Association of Radiological
- M. ALOUI, N. AIDI, W. DOUIRA-KHOMSI, A. EL
GHAZALY, H. LOUATI, L. BEN HASSINE, L. LAHMAR,
I. BELLAGHA Department of Pediatric Radiology,
Bechir Hamza childrens Hospital -
Hammamet, 26-28 April 2012
PED1
2Introduction
- Hypopituitarism refers to the absence or
reduction in function of hormones produced by the
pituitary gland - It may be idiopathic or associated with organic
causes, such as tumor, surgery, or irradiation of
the sellar area - Early diagnosis and treatment promote the best
possible outcomes - Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) retains an
important place in the diagnostic and therapeutic
approach of hypopituitarism
3Objectives
- Illustrate through 14 observations, the
contribution of MRI in the exploration of
children pituitary insufficiency - Review the role of MRI in the morphological
exploration of the sellar region and the
detection of the associated brain damage
4PATIENTS AND METHODS
- Retrospective study involved 14 children
monitored for non tumoral-hypopituitarism
including 13 with clinical growth retardation and
one with hypogonadism. All of them have a
pituitary MRI - Patients were admitted to this study only if MRI
revealed anterior pituitary hypoplasia
5PATIENTS AND METHODS
- Technique
- MR studies were performed with a 1.5-T (GE
Medical System) - All patients were explored with the same protocol
at the level of the pituitary - Sagittal and coronal T1-weighted spin echo images
- Sagittal or coronal T2-weighted fast spin echo
images - T1-weighted sequences after intra venous
administration of contrast agent if pituitary
stalk was not seen
6PATIENTS AND METHODS
- The height of the pituitary gland was determined
on the midsagittal T1-weighted image by measuring
the greatest distance between the base and the
top of the gland - Pituitary height measurements were compared with
published normal values for age - A pituitary was considered to be hypoplasic when
the gland height was less than -2 SD for age
7Results
- Age range 2 to 17 years (at the time of MRI)
- Sex 8 males, 6 females
- Absence of family history of hypopituitarism for
all patients - Hormonal assessment
- Isolated Growth hormone deficiency (IGHD) in 8
cases - Multiple pituitary hormone deficiencies (MPHD)
in 2 cases - Was not realized in 4 cases
8RESULTS
- MRI performed showed
- Pituitary hypoplasia in all patients
- Combination with other types of brain damage in 8
cases specified as shown - Disruption of the pituitary stalk in 3 cases (2
with MPHD and 1 without hormonal assessment) - Ectopic posterior pituitary in 3 cases
- Chiari I malformation in 1 case
- Small size of the corpus callosum with arachnoid
cyst in 1 case
9RESULTS
Fig. 1 17-year-old boy with growth and
pubertal failure MRI midsagittal T2 and
T1-weighted images, midsagittal and coronal
T1-weighted enhancement images show a small
anterior pituitary gland (2.8 mm height) (red
arrow). Posterior pituitary (yellow arrow) and
stalk (green arrow) are normal
10RESULTS
Fig. 2 8-year-old girl with growth failure
MRI coronal and midsagittal T1-weighted images
show a small anterior pituitary (2.4 mm height)
(yellow arrow) and an ectopic posterior pituitary
(orange arrow) seen as an area of high signal
intensity in place of the pituitary stalk which
is not visible
11RESULTS
A
Fig. 3 9-year-old boy with growth failure
MRI coronal T2-weighted and midsagittal
T1-weighted images show a small anterior
pituitary (2.5 mm height) (yellow arrow) and
Chiari I malformation (orange arrow). Sagittal
T2-weighted MR medular image was normal
12RESULTS
Fig. 4 9-year-old boy with hypogonadism and a
MPHD in the hormonal assessment MRI unenhanced
midline sagittal T1 and enhanced coronal
T1-weighted images show a small anterior
pituitary (3 mm height) (yellow arrow), ectopic
posterior pituitary seen as an area of high
signal intensity in the midline at the median
eminence (orange arrow). The thin stalk is only
seen after injection of gadolinium (green arrow)
13RESULTS
B
Fig. 5 3-year-old boy with facial dysmorphism
and growth failure MRI midsagittal T1-weighted
and coronal T2-weighted images show small
anterior pituitary gland (1.9 mm height) (yellow
arrow), small size of the corpus callosum (green
arrow) and temporal arachnoid cyst (orange
arrow)
14DISCUSSION
- Childhood hypopituitarism may be present at birth
or may be acquired - In childhood hypopituitarism, GH is the most
commonly underproduced pituitary hormone - The diagnosis of hypopituitarism must integrate
clinical data and appropriate hormonal testing - Once the diagnosis of hypopituitarism has been
made a head MRI scan must be performed to look
for a possible organic or structural basis
15DISCUSSION
- Laboratory diagnosis is not always easy, the IGHD
may be transitory ? MRI occurs early in the
diagnostic strategy, often before laboratory
confirmation of the pituitary deficiency - MRI can be used to study the anatomic details of
the pituitary-hypothalamic region - The prevalence of morphologic abnormalities in
the pituitary gland is greater in patients with
combined pituitary hormone deficiency than in
those with IGHD
16DISCUSSION
- Hypopituitarism can be classified in two groups
- Congenital Hypopituitarism
- Features hypoglycemia / small penis at birth/
noninfectious form of hepatitis - Causes birth trauma and/ or asphyxia as part of
one of a number of midline anatomical defects /
genetic mutation - A congenital basis is strongly suggested by the
presence of a transected pituitary stalk on MRI
17DISCUSSION
- Acquired Hypopituitarism
- Causes
- Tumor The most common tumor in this region in
childhood is craniopharyngioma - Radiation treatment of a cancerous tumor in the
head or neck region - Other causes brain infection (encephalitis and/
or meningitis), hydrocephalus (even without an
underlying tumor), vascular abnormalities and
major head trauma
18DISCUSSION
- Abnormalities that can be associated with
congenital hypopituitarism include - A small pituitary gland with filling of the sella
with cerebrospinal fluid (empty sella) - Ectopic posterior pituitary gland
- Pituitary stalk transection syndrome (lack of
pituitary stalk visibility, hypoplasia of the
anterior hypophysis, ectopic posterior pituitary
gland) - Small optic nerves, hydrocephalus, vascular
abnormalities - Midline CNS malformations (optic nerve
hypoplasia, Chiari malformation, absence of the
septum pellucidum and/ or the corpus callosum)
19DISCUSSION
- Diagnosis of tumor in the hypothalamic-pituitary
area (craniopharyngioma) - Lateral skull-ray erosion of the normal sellar
architecture and/ or the presence of suprasellar
calcification - MRI show mixture of solid and cystic components
and may contain a ring of calcification around a
cystic component
20DISCUSSION
- Pituitary function was more severely impaired in
the patients with pituitary stalk interruption
syndrome (MPHD) - In contrast, in the patients with isolated
pituitary hypoplasia, GH secretion was less
severely impaired (IGHD) - ? Correlation between the morphology of
the hypothalamic-pituitary axis
and endocrine disease severity - ? T1 weighted sequences are the cornerstone of
the morphological analysis of the pituitary - ? The injection of gadolinium is more
sensitive to visualize the pituitary stalk when
it is not seen before injection -
21DISCUSSION
- Treatment of Hypopituitarism
- If an underlying cause is discovered on the MRI
of the head, such as a tumor and/ or
hydrocephalus, appropriate neurosurgical
intervention is required - Identified hormone abnormalities require
treatment with appropriate hormonal replacement
therapies
22CONCLUSION
- Non-tumor etiology constitutes a major group of
childhood hypopituitarism - MRI abnormalities correlated with the severity of
growth hormone deficiency - These abnormalities are more prevalent in
patients with MPHD than in IGHD - The presence of anterior pituitary hypoplasia
should alert the radiologist to the possibility
of associated cerebral malformations
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