Background: Lymphocytic infiltration of the pituitary is an unusual inflammatory disorder of the pituitary and indicated to be autoimmune in origin. Presentations depend on the site of involvement and degree of destruction of the cellular population of the pituitary and may range from an asymptomatic state to pan-hypopituitarism with or without mass effects. In the present study, we represent a rare case of lymphocytic infiltration of the pituitary gland who was diagnosed with such condition and the subsequent management. Case presentation: A 22-year-old male who was admitted with symptoms of increased thirst and excessive fatigue. Following a thorough physical, clinical, laboratory, biochemistry, and imaging examinations a timely diagnosis of lymphocytic infiltration of the pituitary was made without using the invasive procedure of pituitary biopsy. In light of the diagnosis prompt management with the mainstay of glucocorticoid was started along with replenishing the other deficient hormones. In this study we describe a rare case of lymphocytic infiltration of the pituitary discussing in terms of epidemiology, sign and symptoms, laboratory evaluation, imaging studies, histopathology, management, and the usual outcome. Conclusion: lymphocytic infiltration of the pituitary gland can be diagnosed with the clinical presentation along with lab evaluation and imaging but without pituitary biopsy, which could help in an early and accurate diagnosis which is the basis for better management of the rare condition.
Published in | American Journal of Laboratory Medicine (Volume 6, Issue 6) |
DOI | 10.11648/j.ajlm.20210606.11 |
Page(s) | 83-87 |
Creative Commons |
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, provided the original work is properly cited. |
Copyright |
Copyright © The Author(s), 2021. Published by Science Publishing Group |
Lymphocytic Infiltration, Pan-hypopituitarism, Pituitary Gland
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APA Style
Hamad Haider Khan, Hameed Ullah, Hui Guo, Siraj Ulhaq Khan, Shida Hussain, et al. (2021). Diagnosing a Rare Case of Lymphocytic Infiltration of the Pituitary Gland Without the Invasive Procedure of Pituitary Biopsy. American Journal of Laboratory Medicine, 6(6), 83-87. https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ajlm.20210606.11
ACS Style
Hamad Haider Khan; Hameed Ullah; Hui Guo; Siraj Ulhaq Khan; Shida Hussain, et al. Diagnosing a Rare Case of Lymphocytic Infiltration of the Pituitary Gland Without the Invasive Procedure of Pituitary Biopsy. Am. J. Lab. Med. 2021, 6(6), 83-87. doi: 10.11648/j.ajlm.20210606.11
AMA Style
Hamad Haider Khan, Hameed Ullah, Hui Guo, Siraj Ulhaq Khan, Shida Hussain, et al. Diagnosing a Rare Case of Lymphocytic Infiltration of the Pituitary Gland Without the Invasive Procedure of Pituitary Biopsy. Am J Lab Med. 2021;6(6):83-87. doi: 10.11648/j.ajlm.20210606.11
@article{10.11648/j.ajlm.20210606.11, author = {Hamad Haider Khan and Hameed Ullah and Hui Guo and Siraj Ulhaq Khan and Shida Hussain and Zahid Nadeem and Faiz Ullah Khan and Ayesha Jamil and Nawab Ali and Irfan Mansha and Safiullah Khan Achakzai and Mirwais Khan and Khan Alam and Bingyin Shi}, title = {Diagnosing a Rare Case of Lymphocytic Infiltration of the Pituitary Gland Without the Invasive Procedure of Pituitary Biopsy}, journal = {American Journal of Laboratory Medicine}, volume = {6}, number = {6}, pages = {83-87}, doi = {10.11648/j.ajlm.20210606.11}, url = {https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ajlm.20210606.11}, eprint = {https://article.sciencepublishinggroup.com/pdf/10.11648.j.ajlm.20210606.11}, abstract = {Background: Lymphocytic infiltration of the pituitary is an unusual inflammatory disorder of the pituitary and indicated to be autoimmune in origin. Presentations depend on the site of involvement and degree of destruction of the cellular population of the pituitary and may range from an asymptomatic state to pan-hypopituitarism with or without mass effects. In the present study, we represent a rare case of lymphocytic infiltration of the pituitary gland who was diagnosed with such condition and the subsequent management. Case presentation: A 22-year-old male who was admitted with symptoms of increased thirst and excessive fatigue. Following a thorough physical, clinical, laboratory, biochemistry, and imaging examinations a timely diagnosis of lymphocytic infiltration of the pituitary was made without using the invasive procedure of pituitary biopsy. In light of the diagnosis prompt management with the mainstay of glucocorticoid was started along with replenishing the other deficient hormones. In this study we describe a rare case of lymphocytic infiltration of the pituitary discussing in terms of epidemiology, sign and symptoms, laboratory evaluation, imaging studies, histopathology, management, and the usual outcome. Conclusion: lymphocytic infiltration of the pituitary gland can be diagnosed with the clinical presentation along with lab evaluation and imaging but without pituitary biopsy, which could help in an early and accurate diagnosis which is the basis for better management of the rare condition.}, year = {2021} }
TY - JOUR T1 - Diagnosing a Rare Case of Lymphocytic Infiltration of the Pituitary Gland Without the Invasive Procedure of Pituitary Biopsy AU - Hamad Haider Khan AU - Hameed Ullah AU - Hui Guo AU - Siraj Ulhaq Khan AU - Shida Hussain AU - Zahid Nadeem AU - Faiz Ullah Khan AU - Ayesha Jamil AU - Nawab Ali AU - Irfan Mansha AU - Safiullah Khan Achakzai AU - Mirwais Khan AU - Khan Alam AU - Bingyin Shi Y1 - 2021/11/17 PY - 2021 N1 - https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ajlm.20210606.11 DO - 10.11648/j.ajlm.20210606.11 T2 - American Journal of Laboratory Medicine JF - American Journal of Laboratory Medicine JO - American Journal of Laboratory Medicine SP - 83 EP - 87 PB - Science Publishing Group SN - 2575-386X UR - https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ajlm.20210606.11 AB - Background: Lymphocytic infiltration of the pituitary is an unusual inflammatory disorder of the pituitary and indicated to be autoimmune in origin. Presentations depend on the site of involvement and degree of destruction of the cellular population of the pituitary and may range from an asymptomatic state to pan-hypopituitarism with or without mass effects. In the present study, we represent a rare case of lymphocytic infiltration of the pituitary gland who was diagnosed with such condition and the subsequent management. Case presentation: A 22-year-old male who was admitted with symptoms of increased thirst and excessive fatigue. Following a thorough physical, clinical, laboratory, biochemistry, and imaging examinations a timely diagnosis of lymphocytic infiltration of the pituitary was made without using the invasive procedure of pituitary biopsy. In light of the diagnosis prompt management with the mainstay of glucocorticoid was started along with replenishing the other deficient hormones. In this study we describe a rare case of lymphocytic infiltration of the pituitary discussing in terms of epidemiology, sign and symptoms, laboratory evaluation, imaging studies, histopathology, management, and the usual outcome. Conclusion: lymphocytic infiltration of the pituitary gland can be diagnosed with the clinical presentation along with lab evaluation and imaging but without pituitary biopsy, which could help in an early and accurate diagnosis which is the basis for better management of the rare condition. VL - 6 IS - 6 ER -