[MRI: incidence and evaluation of size and form criteria in hypophysis-healthy probands and in patients with detectable microadenomas].

1997 
: Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) was performed in 42 patients with proven microadenomas and in 42 patients with normal pituitary hormone analysis. The normal MRI--anatomy of the pituitary gland and its possible variations with measurement of the volume and comparison of the anatomy with that of the gland after changes caused by microadenomas has to our knowledge not yet described. In this study we measured the height, coronary and sagittal diameter of the pituitary gland in both groups as well as other indirect signs of microadenomas (asymmetry of the gland, sella turcica, and the stalk). The pituitary volume indicates the expansion of microadenomas much better than the gland height (and the other diameters). Normal pituitary glands showed a significant lower volume (525 +/- 137 mm3 [R = 225-800 mm3]) than patients with proven microadenomas (734 +/- 393 mm3 [R = 335-2800 mm3], p < 0.001). The normal pituitary gland and sella turcica show a large variety of anatomic variations. These variations are less frequent in healthy subjects (10-21%) than in patients with microadenomas (48-71%). The described criteria are of some value in diagnosis of a suspected gland hypertrophy or microadenoma. In 75% of the patients with normal pituitary parameters and in 12% of the patients with microadenomas no indirect adenoma criteria was found in our study.
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