Abstract

A woman with Addison disease developed hyperpigmentation, headache, and nausea despite conventional replacement therapy with cortisone. Excessively elevated plasma adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) with absence of response to administration of corticotropin-releasing factor (CRF), and roentgenological evidence of enlargement of the sella turcica, as well as detection of enlarged pituitary gland on magnetic resonance images, led to a diagnosis of ACTH-producing microadenoma, which was removed by transsphenoidal microsurgery. The specimen obtained at surgery evidenced corticotroph hyperplasia, as demonstrated by immunohistochemical staining for ACTH. Fine structure exhibited densely granulated cells with a few bundles of microfilaments and an abundance of large lysosomal bodies. Surgical removal of the hyperplasia alleviated the patient's symptoms, and hyperpigmentation faded remarkably. Her plasma ACTH level returned to normal, has remained normal for more than 3 years, and responds adequately to CRF administration.

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