====== Pituitary Apoplexy Management ====== Pituitary apoplexy is a neuroendocrine emergency caused by acute hemorrhage or infarction of a pituitary adenoma, typically presenting with: Sudden headache Visual impairment (e.g., bitemporal hemianopsia) Ophthalmoplegia Altered consciousness Hypopituitarism (including adrenal insufficiency) 🚨 Initial Management (Emergency Phase) 1. Stabilization ABCs: Airway, Breathing, Circulation ICU admission if altered consciousness 2. Immediate Medical Therapy High-dose corticosteroids (e.g., IV hydrocortisone 100 mg bolus, then 50–100 mg q6-8h) Reduces edema Prevents adrenal crisis Intravenous fluids and electrolyte correction 3. Endocrine Workup Baseline labs: cortisol, TSH, fT4, LH/FSH, prolactin, IGF-1 Monitor sodium, glucose, osmolality 4. Neuroimaging Urgent MRI is gold standard CT may show hyperdense lesion in acute hemorrhage 🔍 Definitive Treatment Strategy A. Surgical Management Indications: Rapid deterioration of visual acuity or field deficits Progressive ophthalmoplegia Reduced consciousness Approach: Transsphenoidal decompression (preferred) Timing: within 24–72 hours for best visual outcomes B. Conservative Management Indications: Stable or improving vision Mild/no cranial nerve deficits No reduced consciousness Close monitoring with: Serial neurological and ophthalmologic exams Repeat MRI in 1–2 weeks 🔄 Follow-up and Long-term Care 1. Endocrine Replacement Lifelong hormone replacement if persistent hypopituitarism Hydrocortisone, levothyroxine, sex steroids ± GH 2. Tumor Surveillance MRI at 3 months, then annually 3. Vision and QoL Monitoring Regular ophthalmologic evaluations Neuropsychological and rehabilitation support 📚 Clinical Pearls Corticosteroids are first-line regardless of surgery. Not all patients with apoplexy need surgery. Early endocrinology and neurosurgery consult is essential. Recovery of function is variable—vision may improve, but pituitary function often does not.