Pituitary injury and persistent hypofunction resulting from a peripartum non-hemorrhagic, vaso-occlusive event

  • Kuriya A
  • Morris D
  • Dahan M
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Abstract

Cerebral vascular accidents are caused by vasospasm when induced by preeclampsia or by dopamine agonists. However, six arteries nourish the pituitary and prevent against vasospasm-induced damage, which up until now has not been thought to occur. Bromocriptine was used to arrest lactation in a 31-year-old with secondary amenorrhea following preeclampsia and fetal demise at 28 weeks gestation. Tests and history revealed panhypopituitarism not associated with hemorrhage or mass infarction but instead caused by vasospasm. The present study is the first report of pituitary damage from a non-hemorrhagic, vaso-occlusive event in the literature. In keeping with Sheehan's and Simon's syndromes, we have named pituitary damage resulting from vaso-occlusion as Dahan's syndrome, and a literature review suggests that it may be a common and previously overlooked disorder.

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Kuriya, A., Morris, D. V., & Dahan, M. H. (2015). Pituitary injury and persistent hypofunction resulting from a peripartum non-hemorrhagic, vaso-occlusive event. Endocrinology, Diabetes & Metabolism Case Reports, 2015. https://doi.org/10.1530/edm-15-0001

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