Electrophysiological Mechanisms of Response Activation and Inhibition in Prolactinomas
Description
Impairment of cognitive functions has been reported in prolactinomas. However, the electrophysiological mechanisms of response activation and response inhibition in prolactinomas remain unclear. We recorded participants’ scalp electroencephalography (EEG) in a visual Go/Nogo task. Compared to the healthy controls (HCs), the patient’s demonstrated worse performance and their prolactin (PRL) levels negatively correlated with behavioral results. Meanwhile, patients’ P300 amplitudes in the Go and Nogo conditions were smaller than the HCs. The amplitudes of N200nogo in patients were smaller than the HCs as well.
Patients also showed lower occipital alpha power than the HCs, which suggested that the impaired response inhibition may arise from deficient attention control. Taken together, the present study revealed the neurocognitive discrepancies between prolactinomas and the HCs. The frontal theta oscillation was highlighted as the electrophysiological markers of the impaired response control in prolactinomas. Ectopic pituitary adenomas are a rare clinical entity and are frequently mistaken for other base of skull lesions on imaging. We report the clinical presentation and management of a woman presenting with an ectopic prolactinoma located in the clivus. A 66-year-old female presented with a 6-month history of headaches and light-headedness. Anatomical imaging demonstrated a clival lesion most suspicious for chordoma. Endocrinological assessment revealed modestly increased prolactin level with lower-than-expected gonadotropins levels for her age. Surgical resection confirmed an ectopic prolactinoma. A skull base lesion in a patient with hormonal derangement should lend to a high clinical suspicion of an EPA as they may be treated with medications before surgery. Guidelines could assist clinicians investigating skull-based lesions to identify the rare, but important diagnosis of ectopic pituitary adenomas. First-line treatment of prolactinoma is usually medical, based on dopamine agonists receptors, mainly cabergoline. The classical side-effects of cabergoline (low blood pressure and nausea) have been well known since it was first introduced.
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With regards
Michel
Journal Coordinator
Journal of Reproductive Endocrinology & Infertility