pubmed-article:3932786 | pubmed:abstractText | Immunohistochemical studies were performed on the tumors of 97 of 100 patients who had undergone an operation for a presumed prolactin-secreting pituitary adenoma; no tissue was available for study in the other 3 patients. Appropriate immunohistochemical studies were done to identify the presence of growth hormone, prolactin, adrenocorticotropic hormone, luteinizing hormone, follicle-stimulating hormone, and thyroid-stimulating hormone within the adenoma cells. The presence of a prolactin-producing pituitary adenoma was confirmed in 91 patients, 3 of whom had an adenoma that consisted of cells that contained prolactin and growth hormone. One other patient, not counted among the 91 with prolactinoma, had lactotrope and thyrotrope hyperplasia. Among the five patients whose adenoma did not contain prolactin cells, four had a null cell adenoma and one had a tumor consisting of follicle-stimulating hormone and luteinizing hormone immunoreactive cells. On the basis of preoperative serum prolactin values in these patients, we concluded that moderately increased values (30 to 200 ng/ml) of serum prolactin are not a reliable guide for determining whether a prolactin-producing pituitary adenoma is present, whereas levels exceeding 200 ng/ml are usually associated with a prolactin-secreting tumor. | lld:pubmed |