Prolactinoma: Pathophysiology, Imaging Features, Diagnosis, and Treatment – A Giant Invasive Pituitary Macroadenoma Case Review
Prolactinoma: Pathophysiology, Imaging Features, Diagnosis, and Treatment – A Giant Invasive Pituitary Macroadenoma Case Review
Introduction Prolactinoma is the most common type of functional pituitary adenoma and represents a critical entity in neuroendocrinology, neuroradiology, and clinical neurosurgery. Despite its generally benign nature, large and invasive prolactinomas can present with dramatic neurological deficits and radiologic findings that mimic aggressive skull base tumors. This column presents a real-world case of a giant invasive prolactinoma, integrating pathophysiology, epidemiology, clinical presentation, imaging characteristics, differential diagnosis, treatment strategies, and prognosis, based on globally authoritative literature and a classic NEJM imaging case. Special emphasis is placed on MRI interpretation and dopamine agonist treatment response. Pathophysiology of Prolactinoma Prolactinomas arise from lactotroph cells of the anterior pituitary gland , characterized by autonomous prolactin secretion. Under normal physiology, prolactin release is tonically inhibited by dopamine via D2 r...
- Get link
- X
- Other Apps