Follow-up Study on Treatment in 27 Patients with Cushing's Disease: Adrenalectomy, Transsphenoidal Adenomectomy and Medical Treatment
Overview
Affiliations
27 patients with Cushing's disease were treated over a period of 18 years at the Departments of Medicine and Surgery, Nagoya University School of Medicine and the following results were obtained. 1) Adrenalectomy. 21 of 27 patients with Cushing's disease underwent adrenalectomy. 19 patients had total bilateral adrenalectomy and 2 patients unilateral adrenalectomy. 4 patients died, the cause of death not being related directly to adrenalectomy. 9 of 15 bilaterally adrenalectomized patients had hyperpigmentation even though they had been given substitution therapy with cortisol 20-30 mg daily. They had elevated plasma ACTH levels, which were not completely suppressed by 2 mg of dexamethasone or 2.5 mg of bromocriptine per day. 2) Adenomectomy, 5 patients had adenomectomy via the transsphenoidal approach. 3 patients were cured but one of them has required postoperative substitution therapy with cortisol for hypopituitarism for one year until today. 2 of 5 adenomectomized patients had a recurrence of Cushing's syndrome after remission for 6-8 months. One of these recurrent cases has been subsequently treated successfully with bromocriptine, a dopaminergic drug. 3) Medical treatment. 2.5 mg per day of bromocriptine has been effective in 2 patients without a pituitary adenoma and ineffective in the other 4 patients with a pituitary adenoma. 24 mg per day of cyproheptadine, an antiserotoninergic drug was not effective in any of the 4 patients with a pituitary adenoma.
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