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a Neuropsychiatry and
Memory Disorders Clinic, Division of Psychiatry and Psychology, b Department of Endocrinology, United Medical and
Dental School, St Thomas's Hospital, London, UK
Correspondence to: E M Guinan, Neuropsychiatry and Memory Disorders Clinic, Division of Psychiatry and Psychology, United Medical and Dental School, St Thomas's Hospital, London SE1 7EH, UK. Telephone 0044 171 928 9292 extention 3650; fax 0044 171 633 0061.
Received 2 December 1997;
Accepted 20 March 1998
OBJECTIVES
Two case studies are reported of
patients with pituitary adenomas who had been treated with
trans-sphenoidal surgery, one with and one without adjunctive
radiotherapy, in whom memory impairment was found. Further to this,
neuropsychological investigations of 90 patients were carried out (1)
to establish the prevalence of such deficits, and (2) to try to
determine their cause.
METHODS
Two case studies are described. For the
expanded study, patients were recruited from the data base of the
endocrinology department of St Thomas's Hospital, London, if they had
previously been treated for a pituitary adenoma in the past 30 years.
Ninety patients were contacted and assessed with a wide range of
neuropsychological tests. They were divided into five treatment groups:
those who had received transfrontal surgery with radiotherapy,
trans-sphenoidal surgery with or without radiotherapy, radiotherapy
only, and a bromocriptine therapy group, as well as a group of 19 healthy control subjects matched for age and sex.
RESULTS
In the two patients presented, both showed
severe memory impairments compared with their intact intellectual
ability. The more severely affected patient had received adjunctive
radiotherapy, and superimposition of the 90% isodose fields on a
postoperative MRI examination suggested involvement of the diencephalic
structures. In the group study, significant deficits in anterograde
memory were also obtained on two measures (WMS-R, RMT) for all patient groups when compared with the healthy controls, although these impairments varied in degree and were less in the bromocriptine group.
However, the individual surgical and radiotherapy treatment groups did
not differ significantly from one another. By contrast, general
intellectual function (IQ) remained intact for all groups, as did
performance on supplementary cognitive tests, including measures of
frontal lobe or "executive" function, language comprehension, and
speed of mental processing. Psychiatric morbidity and tumour aetiology
did not seem to relate to the presence of memory deficits.
CONCLUSIONS
Anterograde memory deficits were seen
in the two case studies and in all our treatment groups when compared
with the healthy controls, and these occurred in the context of
preserved intellectual function. The present findings suggest that
these memory deficits result from treatment rather than from the
underlying tumour, but there was no difference between the effects of
surgery and radiotherapy. It is suggested that they result from damage
to diencephalic structures implicated in memory.
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