Abstract

Abstract Disclosure: N. Sweis: None. J. Sanchez Perez: None. M. Fariduddin: None. R.M. Sargis: None. D.J. Toft: None. S. Reutrakul: None. Background: Pituitary apoplexy is a potentially fatal condition involving the infarction or hemorrhage of the pituitary gland. Rarely, it can occur in the setting of an ACTH-secreting pituitary adenoma. Clinical Case: A 27-year-old female with a past medical history of obesity, spontaneous miscarriages, and amenorrhea presented to the ER with an acute onset frontal headache of throbbing quality, associated with nausea and vomiting. The headache began two days prior, rapidly intensified, and did not improve with oral acetaminophen. CT of the head revealed an enlarged pituitary gland, while neurovascular imaging showed no abnormalities. Her neurologic examination was normal. She denied visual changes, photophobia, neck rigidity, fevers, chills, or recent infections. Furthermore, she endorsed a weight gain of about 40 pounds over the past year despite no change in dietary habits. This was accompanied by amenorrhea, hair thinning, itchy comedonal acne, hirsutism, and a loss of libido. Her physical examination was remarkable for the presence of cushingoid features including violaceous abdominal striae, facial acne, moon facies, a dorsal fat pad, and acanthosis nigricans around the neck and axillae. Pituitary MRI with and without contrast showed an enlarged sellar and suprasellar macroadenoma measuring approximately 2.1x1.4x1.2 cm abutting the optic chiasm. The visualized lesion contained hemorrhagic products, suggesting pituitary apoplexy. Biochemical testing on admission included a low morning plasma cortisol of 6.5 ug/dL (ref. range: 6.7-22.6 ug/dL), a 24-hour urine free cortisol of 12.0 (<=45.0 ug/24 hour), and an elevated ACTH of 145.0 pg/mL (7.2 - 63.3 pg/mL). A1c was 5.8% (<5.7%). Serum levels of prolactin, IGF1, GH, LH, FSH, TSH, Free T4, estradiol, total and bioavailable testosterone were within normal limits. She was evaluated with an ACTH stimulation test, which showed a morning cortisol level of 1.2 ug/dL at baseline, lower from prior. Cortisol levels were adequately increased at 19.6 ug/dL and 22.6 ug/dL, 30 and 60 minutes after the administration of Cosyntropin 250 mcg, respectively (>=18 ug/dL after 30-60 mins). The level of ACTH at the time was also decreased to 76.6 pg/mL. The patient was therefore started on steroid replacement therapy with hydrocortisone and later underwent transsphenoidal resection of the pituitary mass without complications. Histopathological examination of the resected mass showed pituitary adenoma cells with diffuse weak to moderate ACTH staining, most consistent with a sparsely granulated corticotroph pituitary adenoma. Conclusion: We report an interesting case of Cushing disease that spontaneously resolved after pituitary apoplexy. Our case underlines the importance of close monitoring of such patients who may rapidly undergo a period of adrenal insufficiency after hypercortisolism. Presentation: 6/3/2024

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