Scheithauer B W, Kovacs K, Randall R V, Horvath E, Laws E R
Clin Endocrinol Metab. 1986 Aug;15(3):655-81. doi: 10.1016/s0300-595x(86)80014-7.
Since its clinical description in the last century, much progress has been made in our understanding of acromegaly. From an initial description of pituitary enlargement as just another manifestation of generalized visceromegaly, the pituitary abnormality has come to be recognized, in most instances, as the underlying aetiological factor. Gigantism and acromegaly are manifestations of disordered pituitary physiology, but the lesion responsible may be hypothalamic, adenohypophyseal or ectopic in location. The best known pathological hypothalamic basis for acromegaly is represented by a neuronal malformation or 'gangliocytoma'. It usually takes the form of an intrasellar gangliocytoma or, more rarely, a hypothalamic hamartoma. The neuronal elaboration of GHRH may play a role in the development of a growth hormone adenoma; the pituitary process may pass through an intermediate stage of somatotropic hyperplasia. When acromegaly has its basis in a pituitary abnormality, the lesion is almost exclusively an adenoma; the non-tumorous adenohypophysis shows no evidence of coexistent hyperplasia. Surprisingly, such tumours are more often engaged in the formation of multiple hormones rather than GH alone. They frequently produce not only GH and prolactin, the products characteristics of cells of the acidophil line, but also glycoprotein hormones, usually TSH. The spectrum of adenomas also varies in its degree of differentiation from a histogenetically primitive lesion, the acidophil stem cell adenoma, to well-differentiated tumours of varying cellular composition and hormone content. Each adenoma type has its clinicopathological, histochemical, immunocytological and ultrastructural characteristics. The isolation and characterization of GHRH has permitted the identification of neuroendocrine tumours, most of foregut origin, elaborating this releasing hormone. Such functional tumours induce hyperplasia of pituitary somatotrophs and may, on occasion, result in the formation of growth hormone adenomas. Resection of these GHRH-producing neoplasms results in reversal of endocrinological and sellar abnormalities. Future efforts should be directed toward the elucidation of the aetiology of pituitary adenomas, specifically whether they represent a proliferative process having its origin in endocrinological imbalance, presumably a hypothalamic abnormality, or whether it has a 'de novo' origin in the 'usual process of neoplastic transformation'.
自上个世纪对肢端肥大症进行临床描述以来,我们对其的认识已取得了很大进展。从最初将垂体肿大描述为全身性脏器肿大的另一种表现,到如今在大多数情况下,垂体异常已被确认为潜在的病因。巨人症和肢端肥大症是垂体生理紊乱的表现,但致病病变可能位于下丘脑、腺垂体或异位。肢端肥大症最著名的病理性下丘脑基础表现为神经元畸形或“神经节细胞瘤”。它通常表现为鞍内神经节细胞瘤,或更罕见的下丘脑错构瘤。生长激素释放激素(GHRH)的神经元分泌可能在生长激素腺瘤的发生中起作用;垂体病变可能会经过一个生长激素细胞增生的中间阶段。当肢端肥大症基于垂体异常时,病变几乎完全是腺瘤;非肿瘤性腺垂体未显示出并存增生的证据。令人惊讶的是,这类肿瘤更常参与多种激素的形成,而非仅产生生长激素。它们不仅经常产生生长激素和催乳素(嗜酸性细胞系细胞的典型产物),还会产生糖蛋白激素,通常是促甲状腺激素。腺瘤的谱系在其分化程度上也有所不同,从组织发生学上原始的病变——嗜酸性干细胞腺瘤,到具有不同细胞组成和激素含量的高分化肿瘤。每种腺瘤类型都有其临床病理、组织化学、免疫细胞化学和超微结构特征。GHRH的分离和鉴定使得能够识别出大多数起源于前肠、分泌这种释放激素的神经内分泌肿瘤。这类功能性肿瘤会导致垂体生长激素细胞增生,有时可能会导致生长激素腺瘤的形成。切除这些产生GHRH的肿瘤会使内分泌和鞍区异常得到逆转。未来的研究应致力于阐明垂体腺瘤的病因,特别是它们是否代表一种起源于内分泌失衡(可能是下丘脑异常)的增殖过程,或者是否在“肿瘤转化的通常过程”中具有“从头开始”的起源。