Romanian Medical Journal (Mar 2020)

Functioning pituitary tumours: Hints from the skin

  • Florica Sandru,
  • Ana Valea,
  • Simona Elena Albu,
  • Mihai Cristian Dumitrascu,
  • Constantin Dumitrache,
  • Ana Maria Alexandra Stanescu,
  • Mara Carsote

DOI
https://doi.org/10.37897/RMJ.2020.1.1
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 67, no. 1
pp. 5 – 9

Abstract

Read online

We introduce dermatological aspects from an endocrine point of view related to pituitary tumours that display active secretor activity. This is a short literature review. 40 papers are cited including narrative reviews and original studies. Acromegaly: GH overproduction causes the thickening of the skin and swelling of the soft tissues in addition to the enlargement of extremities (like nose, hands, feet, jaw), coarsening of facial features (as front head and naso-labial folds), excessive sweating, exaggerate skin wrinkles, oily skin, and acrochordons. Cushing’s disease: cortisol overproduction has a severe protein catabolic effect at skin with collagen network disruption while immune effect of hypercortisolemia induces chronic skin infections and difficulties in wound healing. In females, consecutive androgens excess induces acne, hirsutism, and androgens-related alopecia. The classical phenotype includes: fragile skin or skin atrophy, red/purple striae, easy bruising, facial plethora. Skin changes represent the window to pituitary tumours for clinicians of different specialities, therefore contributing to final diagnosis of endocrinopathies.

Keywords