Abstract

A primary “empty” sella may be associated with significant hypothalamic-pituitary dysfunction. This report characterizes the endocrinologic and radiographic findings in six patients with hyperprolactinemia (range 34.3 to 1,170 ng/ml) ultimately found to have an enlarged empty sella. Lateral skull x-ray films and thin-section tomograms were suggestive of pituitary tumors in all patients. Four patients underwent transphenoidal sellar exploration after pneumoencephalography (PEG) failed to demonstrate air within the sella. The inability of PEG to demonstrate an empty sella in two patients was explainable on the basis of an intact diaphragma sellae with previous transient intrasellar pathology responsible for the sellar enlargement. Dynamic hypothalamic-pituitary testing yielded no consistent pattern of response. These studies suggest that an empty sella: (1) may be associated with hyperprolactinemia, regardless of etiology, (2) is not diagnosable by dynamic hormonal testing, and (3) may be indistinguishable from a pituitary tumor by current radiographic techniques.

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