Abstract
Eleven patients with Korean (epidemic) hemorrhagic fever were each studied three times with high-resolution CT in order to demonstrate necrosis of the pituitary gland and to correlate the CT findings with the patients' pituitary function and visual fields. Seven of the 11 patients showed varying degrees of progressive decrease in the height of the pituitary gland: one severe, two moderate, and four mild. The visual fields of all the patients were checked at the time of the third (last) follow-up CT. Six of the 11 patients had bitemporal superior quadrantanopsia. In five patients, the decreased height (atrophic change) of the pituitary gland and the visual-field defect were coincidental. The visual-field defects in those patients were not improved on follow-up examination 5 weeks later. Two patients in whom a 1-year follow-up examination was performed showed no interval changes in the defects. Pituitary function tests were performed in nine of the 11 patients (six with atrophic pituitary glands and three without atrophic changes) at the time of the third CT. Five of the six patients with atrophy showed decreased pituitary reserve function for follicle-stimulating hormone, cortisol, or human growth hormone, while only one patient showed decreased reserve function for cortisol among the three patients without atrophic change. The pituitary atrophic changes observed on follow-up sellar CT are thought to be the result of the ischemic necrosis of the gland. The high probability (five of seven) of visual-field defects in those patients with atrophic glands suggests optochiasmatic and pituitary ischemia as the basic pathogenesis.
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