Pituitary Apoplexy
Introduction
Pituitary apoplexy is a life-threatening endocrine and neurosurgical emergency caused by acute hemorrhage or infarction of the pituitary gland, usually occurring within a pituitary adenoma.
Acute ischemic or hemorrhagic infarction of the pituitary gland, most commonly in a pre-existing pituitary tumor, leading to sudden expansion and compression of surrounding structures.
Epidemiology
- Occurs in:
- 2–12% of pituitary adenomas
- Often first presentation of undiagnosed adenoma
- Mean age:
- 40–60 years
Anatomy & Pathophysiology
Why Pituitary is Vulnerable?
The pituitary gland has:
- High metabolic demand
- Unique portal vascular supply
- Limited space inside sella turcica
Blood Supply
- Superior hypophyseal arteries → portal circulation → anterior pituitary
- Inferior hypophyseal arteries → posterior pituitary
👉 Tumors outgrow blood supply → ischemia
👉 Fragile tumor vessels → hemorrhage
Pathophysiology Cascade
Step 1 – Tumor Enlargement
- Adenoma increases metabolic and oxygen demand
Step 2 – Vascular Compromise
- Infarction or hemorrhage occurs
Step 3 – Rapid Expansion
Leads to:
- Sellar pressure rise
- Optic chiasm compression
- Cavernous sinus involvement
- Pituitary hormone failure
Risk Factors & Precipitating Events
Tumor-Related
- Pituitary macroadenoma (>1 cm)
- Non-functioning adenomas (most common)
- Prolactinomas
- ACTH-secreting tumors
Systemic Triggers
Hemodynamic
- Hypotension
- Major surgery
- Shock
- Cardiac arrest
Hormonal
- Pregnancy
- Dynamic pituitary testing
- Dopamine agonist therapy
Hematologic
- Anticoagulation
- Thrombocytopenia
- Coagulopathy
Others
- Head trauma
- Radiation therapy
Clinical Presentation
Classic Presentation (Sudden Catastrophic Onset)
1️⃣ Severe Headache
- Most common symptom
- Retro-orbital or frontal
- Thunderclap type possible
2️⃣ Visual Disturbances
Mechanisms:
- Optic chiasm compression
- Cavernous sinus involvement
Manifestations:
- Bitemporal hemianopia
- Visual acuity loss
- Diplopia
- Ophthalmoplegia (CN III, IV, VI)
👉 CN III palsy is common → ptosis + mydriasis
3️⃣ Altered Sensorium
- From raised ICP
- Subarachnoid hemorrhage mimic
- Electrolyte disturbances
- Acute adrenal crisis
4️⃣ Acute Endocrine Failure
MOST DANGEROUS:
Acute Secondary Adrenal Insufficiency
Symptoms:
- Hypotension
- Shock
- Hyponatremia
- Hypoglycemia
5️⃣ Meningeal Irritation
- Neck stiffness
- Photophobia
- Due to blood in subarachnoid space
Hormonal Deficits in Pituitary Apoplexy
Frequency Order
- ACTH deficiency (most life-threatening)
- TSH deficiency
- Gonadotropin deficiency
- GH deficiency
- Prolactin variable
- ADH abnormalities (DI or SIADH)
Differential Diagnosis
Neurocritical Mimics
- Subarachnoid hemorrhage
- Meningitis
- Cavernous sinus thrombosis
- Intracranial tumor bleed
- Aneurysmal rupture
Diagnostic Evaluation
1️⃣ Laboratory Evaluation
Essential Emergency Labs
- Serum cortisol
- ACTH
- TSH + free T4
- Prolactin
- Electrolytes
- Glucose
- Gonadotropins
👉 Never delay steroid therapy for labs
2️⃣ Imaging
MRI – GOLD STANDARD
MRI findings:
- Sellar mass
- Hemorrhagic signal changes
- Optic chiasm compression
- Cavernous sinus invasion
CT Scan Useful if:
- MRI unavailable
- Detects acute hemorrhage
But:
- Lower sensitivity than MRI
Emergency Management (ICU Perspective)
STEP 1 – Stabilization
ABC Approach
- Airway protection if ↓ GCS
- Hemodynamic stabilization
- Correct electrolytes
- Glucose control
STEP 2 – Immediate Steroid Therapy
LIFE-SAVING THERAPY
Recommended Regimen:
- Hydrocortisone 100 mg IV stat
- Followed by:
- 50–100 mg IV every 6 hours
OR - 200 mg/day infusion
👉 Prevents adrenal crisis
👉 Improves hemodynamics
STEP 3 – Fluid & Electrolyte Correction
- Treat hyponatremia
- Manage DI if present
- Monitor sodium closely
STEP 4 – Neurosurgical Evaluation
Indications for Urgent Decompression:
- Severe visual loss
- Progressive neurological deficit
- Reduced consciousness
- Radiological optic chiasm compression
Surgical Management
Transsphenoidal Decompression
Preferred approach:
- Minimally invasive
- Reduces optic pressure
- Improves visual outcome
Timing of Surgery
Strong Indications for Early Surgery:
- Severe visual loss
- Cranial nerve palsy progression
- Deteriorating consciousness
Conservative Management Possible If:
- Mild symptoms
- Stable neurology
- No visual deficit
Conservative (Non-Surgical) Management
Includes:
- High-dose steroids
- Hormone replacement
- Close neuro-ophthalmologic monitoring
Endocrine Replacement Therapy
Acute Phase
ALWAYS Replace:
- Glucocorticoids first
Q: Why steroids before thyroxine?
Thyroxine increases metabolic demand → worsens cortisol deficiency → shock.
Then Replace:
- Thyroxine (after steroid coverage)
- Desmopressin if DI
- Sex hormones later
- GH replacement delayed
Complications
Acute
- Adrenal crisis
- Permanent visual loss
- Stroke
- Hydrocephalus
Long Term
- Permanent hypopituitarism (common)
- Tumor recurrence

