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Front Endocrinol (Lausanne) · Jan 2013
Selective use of peri-operative steroids in pituitary tumor surgery: escape from dogma.
- Jacqueline Regan and Joseph Watson.
- Department of Neurosciences, Inova Health Systems Falls Church, VA, USA.
- Front Endocrinol (Lausanne). 2013 Jan 1; 4: 30.
ObjectiveTraditional neurosurgical practice calls for administration of peri-operative stress-dose steroids for sellar-suprasellar masses undergoing operative treatment. This practice is considered critical to prevent peri-operative complications associated with hypoadrenalism, such as hypotension and circulatory collapse. However, stress-dose steroids complicate the management of these patients. It has been our routine practice to use stress steroids during surgery only if the patient has clinical or biochemical evidence of hypocortisolism pre-operatively. We wanted to be certain that this practice was safe.MethodsWe present our retrospective analysis from a consecutive series of 114 operations in 109 patients with sellar and/or suprasellar tumors, the majority of whom were managed without empirical stress-dose steroid coverage. Only patients who were hypoadrenal pre-operatively or who had suffered apoplexy were given stress-dose coverage during surgery. We screened for biochemical evidence of hypoadrenalism as a result of surgery by measuring immediate post-operative AM serum cortisol levels.ResultsThere were no adverse events related to the selective use of cortisol replacement in this patient population.ConclusionOur experience demonstrates that selective use of corticosteroid replacement is safe; it simplifies the management of the patients, and has advantages over empiric "dogmatic" steroid coverage.
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