• Home
  • Proefschrift
  • Fons van den Bergh
  • Contact
  • Introduction
  • Pituitary Anatomy
  • Pituitary adenomas
    • Incidence en prevalence
    • Clinical symptoms
    • Mortality
  • Treatment modalities
    • Active surveillance
    • Medication
    • Surgery
    • Radiation therapy
  • Radiation therapy treatment schedules
  • Non-functioning pituitary adenoma
  • Prolactinoma
  • GH-secreting pituitary adenoma
  • ACTH-secreting pituitary adenoma
  • Mortality and radiation therapy
  • Side-effects of radiation therapy
    • Acute side-effects
    • Late side-effects
  • Hypopituitarism
  • Pituitary function and pregnancy
  • Cerebrovascular disease (CVD)
  • Tumour induction
    • Tumour induction inside the brain
    • Tumour induction outside the brain
  • Brain necrosis
  • Radiation Optic Neuropathy (RON)
  • Cognitive function
  • Quality of Life
  • Aims of this thesis
  • Reference List
  • Active surveillance

    An incidentaloma, most frequently a microadenoma (<1 cm), is diagnosed in about 10 percent of healthy persons on MRI, made for other reasons17,18.
    Patients with an incidentaloma have a slightly increased risk of morbidity and mortality, which implies a benefit of early diagnosis19. Therefore a conservative approach with repeat scanning done at yearly intervals is suggested17.

Comments are closed.

 
Designed by WOWWW!
Copyright © 2008 ·