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  Vol. 89 No. 6, JUNE 1952 TABLE OF CONTENTS
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SARCOID-LIKE GRANULOMATA OF THE PITUITARY GLAND

A Cause of Pituitary Insufficiency

VIRGIL R. BLEISCH, M.D.; STANLEY L. ROBBINS, M.D.

AMA Arch Intern Med. 1952;89(6):877-892.

Since this article does not have an abstract, we have provided the first 150 words of the full text PDF and any section headings.

DESTRUCTION of the pituitary gland by giant-cell granulomata is a poorly understood, seldom recognized cause of pituitary insufficiency. While these granulomata are readily apparent pathologically, their cause is obscure. They have been considered to be sarcoid or tuberculosis.1 A syphilitic causation has often been questioned.2 Some have considered these lesions to be a distinct, specific disease of unknown origin.3 It is probable that four etiological processes are involved in the reported cases of this disease. In the literature 16 cases have been associated with typical uveoparotid fever, osteitis multiplex cystica, lupus pernio, hyperglobulinemia, or other characteristics of Besnier-Boeck-Schaumann sarcoidosis. In some of these cases, furthermore, the asteroid and Schaumann bodies which are so suggestive of sarcoidosis have been demonstrated.4 Occasional reported cases may represent a healed syphilitic process: In the case of Oelbaum and Wainwright the association of pituitary granulomata with the almost pathognomonic syphilitic lesions of interstitial keratitis and . . . [Full Text PDF of this Article]


Author Affiliations

BOSTON

From the Mallory Institute of Pathology, Boston City Hospital.


Footnotes

Dr. Bleisch is chief resident in pathology, Mallory Institute of Pathology, Boston City Hospital. Dr. Robbins is assistant pathologist, Mallory Institute of Pathology, Boston City Hospital; associate professor of pathology, Boston University School of Medicine.



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