Abstract

Forty-five women and fifteen men with prolactinomas have been treated surgically. Patients with large tumours received pituitary irradiation and postoperative hyperprolactinaemia was treated with bromocriptine. The patients have been followed-up for 6-36 months following the operation. The tumours were larger and the levels of production higher in men as compared with women. All women had amenorrhoea. Galactorrhoea was present in forty-three women but not in the men. After surgery serum prolactin levels fell significantly in all women but remained above normal in thirty-six; prolactin remained high in twelve men. Bromocriptine effectively decreased the postoperative hyperprolactinaemia. The surgical complications were oculomotor nerve paresis in one woman and one man. After surgery six (23%) women developed impaired GH secretion, six (15%) impaired thyroid function, eight (18%) impaired cortisol secretion and five (17%) impaired LH secretion in isolation or combination which had not been present preoperatively. Three patients relapsed. Fifteen women menstruated after surgery and ten began to do so during the subsequent bromocriptine treatment. Thus, menstruation was restored in all six women with microadenomas in sixteen of twenty patients with intrasellar macroadenomas and three of nineteen patients with suprasellar adenomas. The preoperative LH-reserve proved to be an important prognostic indicator. Nine patients, i.e. 50% of patients desiring fertility became pregnant. In the men gonadal function deteriorated in four patients and did not improve in any without testosterone treatment.

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