Pituitary Lymphoma Presenting as Fever of Unknown Origin*

  • Landman R
  • Wardlaw S
  • McConnell R
  • et al.
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Abstract

An 86-yr-old woman presented with fever of unknown origin. When laboratory evaluation revealed partial hypopituitarism, a magnetic resonance imaging scan of the head was performed and revealed a sellar mass consistent with a pituitary adenoma. Only after other possible etiologies for fever were excluded did she undergo transsphenoidal resection of the sellar mass, which proved to be a B-cell lymphoma. Primary central nervous system lymphoma of the pituitary region is a rare cause of a sellar mass, and this is the first reported case of pituitary lymphoma whose presenting manifestation was fever of unknown origin. Several disease processes can manifest themselves as fever and a sellar mass, including lymphomas. In our case, only surgical biopsy could make a diagnosis and distinguish this process from the more common pituitary adenoma.

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APA

Landman, R. E., Wardlaw, S. L., McConnell, R. J., Khandji, A. G., Bruce, J. N., & Freda, P. U. (2001). Pituitary Lymphoma Presenting as Fever of Unknown Origin*. The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism, 86(4), 1470–1476. https://doi.org/10.1210/jcem.86.4.7389

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