Physical Address
304 North Cardinal St.
Dorchester Center, MA 02124
Upper limit of normal pituitary height varies with age, sex
Pregnant/lactating female patients: 12 mm
Young menstruating female patients: 10 mm
Male patients, postmenopausal women: 8 mm
Infants, children: 6 mm
Nonphysiologic hyperplasia seen with
Hypothyroidism, Addison disease, or other end-organ failure
Some neuroendocrine neoplasms
Enlarged homogeneously enhancing pituitary gland with convex superior margin
Best technique: High-resolution MR
Sagittal/coronal T1; coronal T2
Dynamic coronal T1WI
Postcontrast T1 FS sagittal/coronal T1
3-4-mm slice thickness
Pituitary macroadenoma
Pituitary microadenoma
Lymphocytic hypophysitis
Venous congestion (intracranial hypotension, dural arteriovenous fistula)
Growth hormone cell hyperplasia usually diffuse, occurs with neuroendocrine tumors
Prolactin cell hyperplasia: Diffuse > nodular
Corticotroph hyperplasia: Nodular or diffuse
Thyrotroph hyperplasia
Longstanding primary hypothyroidism, may have associated prolactin hyperplasia
Gonadotroph hyperplasia (e.g., Turner, Klinefelter syndrome)
Upper limit of normal pituitary height varies with age, gender
Pregnant/lactating females: 12 mm
Young menstruating females: 10 mm
Males, postmenopausal females: 8 mm
Infants, children: 6 mm
Nonphysiologic hyperplasia seen with
Longstanding hypothyroidism, Addison disease, end-organ failure, or some neuroendocrine neoplasms
Become a Clinical Tree membership for Full access and enjoy Unlimited articles
If you are a member. Log in here