How would I know if I have a Pituitary tumor?
Patients with pituitary tumors often have no symptoms at all. Occasionally these tumors may produce headaches. Head pain may be sudden and severe if there is a bleed into the tumor. Endocrine symptoms are most common including alterations in menstruation, lactation (milk from the breast), impotence, or loss of sex drive. Less commonly, tumors may produce growth hormone causing gigantism in young patients or enlargement of hands, feet, and facial features (acromegaly) in older patients. The most common of these symptoms is due to compression of the optic nerves or chiasm. Patients with involvement of one optic nerve may notice dim, dark, or blurred vision. If the chiasm is affected, vision will be lost off to the outside in both eyes.
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