About Pituitary Macroadenoma
Key Highlights
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Non-invasive, medication-based approach to manage pituitary tumors.Aims to normalize abnormal hormone levels and alleviate symptoms like headaches or vision changes.Can effectively shrink certain types of tumors, potentially avoiding surgery.Involves close, long-term monitoring by a hormone specialist to ensure optimal outcomes.Focuses on improving overall quality of life by managing the systemic effects of hormonal imbalances.
Who is this surgery for?
- Diagnosis of a pituitary tumor larger than 1 cm (macroadenoma) on MRI scan.
- Tumors that secrete excess hormones, such as prolactin (prolactinoma), growth hormone (acromegaly), or ACTH (Cushing's disease).
- Presence of symptoms related to hormone excess or deficiency (e.g., irregular periods, infertility, fatigue, unexplained weight changes).
- When the tumor causes compression symptoms like headaches or visual field defects but surgery is not immediately indicated.
- As first-line therapy for prolactin-secreting macroadenomas, where medication is often highly effective.
How to prepare
- Comprehensive hormonal blood work to establish baseline levels of pituitary and target gland hormones.
- Specialized dynamic endocrine tests (e.g., oral glucose tolerance test for acromegaly) may be required.
- Detailed MRI of the pituitary gland with contrast to precisely visualize the tumor's size and location.
- Formal visual field testing (perimetry) to assess for optic nerve compression.
- Discussion with the endocrinologist about medical history, all current medications, and treatment goals.
Risks & possible complications
- Side effects from medications, which can include nausea, dizziness, fatigue, or nasal congestion.
- Inadequate tumor shrinkage or failure to normalize hormone levels, potentially necessitating surgery.
- Rarely, tumor apoplexy (sudden bleeding into the tumor) causing severe headache and vision loss.
- Development of new hormone deficiencies due to tumor growth or treatment effects.
- Need for long-term, often lifelong, medication and monitoring.
Recovery & hospital stay
- Recovery from medical management involves adjusting to medication, with side effects often improving over weeks.
- Regular follow-up blood tests (every 3-6 months initially) to monitor hormone response and adjust dosages.
- Repeat MRI scans typically every 6-12 months to assess tumor size reduction.
- Ongoing visual field tests to ensure no worsening of compression.
- Patients are encouraged to report any new or worsening symptoms, such as severe headaches or vision changes, immediately.
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Typical hospital stay: Typically outpatient (0 days)
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Expected recovery time: Ongoing management (lifelong for many)
Frequently Asked Questions
If you are considering pituitary macroadenoma in Turkey, these questions and answers can help you make a confident, informed decision.
Top-rated hospitals in Turkey with endocrinology departments and experienced surgeons are ideal for this procedure. Use MediFyr to compare facilities, reviews, and doctor profiles before you decide.
Look at the doctor’s years of experience, hospital association, patient reviews, and how often they perform pituitary macroadenoma. MediFyr helps you compare endocrinologists and book consultations online.
The overall cost depends on hospital category, surgeon’s experience, room type, implant or device used (if any), length of stay, tests, and post-operative care. Our team can help you get cost estimates from multiple hospitals before you decide.
Procedure cost in other countries
Here is an overview of how the estimated cost, hospital stay, and recovery time for pituitary macroadenoma compare across other countries where we have data.
Dr. g sandeep reddy provided exceptional...
Dr. g sandeep reddy provided exceptional care for my endocrinology condition. The treatment was personalized and effective.