MRI Scan Brain Pituitary micro/macro Adenoma

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MRI Scan Brain Pituitary micro/macro Adenoma
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MRI Scan Brain Pituitary micro/macro Adenoma, in Visit Clinic

High-detail brain imaging to find small or large pituitary tumors that can affect hormones and vision in Visit Clinic.

centreCentre Visit
SAMPLE TYPE
Tissue
FASTING REQUIRED
No
GENDER
Male/Female
GET REPORTS IN
24 hours
TEST INCLUDED
1
Customers
20K+Customers
Labs
CertifiedLabs
Rating
4.5+Rating
Accuracy
ProvenAccuracy

What is a MRI Scan Brain Pituitary micro/macro Adenoma Test in Visit Clinic?

An MRI scan of the brain focused on the pituitary gland creates detailed pictures of the gland and nearby structures. It shows size, shape, and the presence of small (micro) or large (macro) adenomas. The pituitary controls many hormones, so changes can affect growth, reproduction, and metabolism. Detecting adenomas helps explain symptoms like headaches, vision problems, or hormonal imbalances. Doctors use MRI to diagnose pituitary tumors, plan treatment such as surgery or radiation, and monitor response to therapy. Contrast dye may be used to improve detail. MRI is noninvasive and gives clearer images than CT for the pituitary area.

MRI Scan Brain Pituitary micro/macro Adenoma Test Preparation in Visit Clinic

No special preparation is required.

MRI Scan Brain Pituitary micro/macro Adenoma Test Parameters in Visit Clinic

The MRI Scan Brain Pituitary micro/macro Adenoma test evaluates various parameters. Here are the main parameters checked:

  • Single test

Why Take a MRI Scan Brain Pituitary micro/macro Adenoma Test in Visit Clinic?

MRI Scan Brain Pituitary micro/macro Adenoma is ordered as part of a neuroendocrine imaging evaluation when pituitary disease is suspected. It is used for symptoms like persistent headaches, visual field changes, or abnormal hormone tests such as unexplained high prolactin or low cortisol. The scan helps diagnose pituitary adenomas, cysts, or hemorrhage and guides treatment choice and follow-up. Tumors, bleeding, inflammation, or prior surgery can cause abnormal findings, and a family history of pituitary tumors or genetic syndromes may raise the need for testing.

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Frequently asked questions

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What is a pituitary Microadenoma on a brain MRI in Visit Clinic?plus

A pituitary microadenoma on brain MRI is a small (less than 10 mm) benign tumor of the pituitary gland. On contrast MRI it appears as a tiny focal lesion with different signal or enhancement than normal gland. Microadenomas may secrete hormones or be nonfunctioning, causing hormonal symptoms; they usually prompt endocrine assessment and periodic MRI follow-up.

What is a macro pituitary adenoma in Visit Clinic?plus

A macro pituitary adenoma is a benign tumor of the pituitary gland larger than 10 mm. It can secrete excess hormones (e.g., prolactin, growth hormone) or compress normal pituitary tissue and nearby structures, causing headaches, visual field loss (classically bitemporal hemianopia), and hypopituitarism. Diagnosis uses MRI and hormone tests. Treatment may include medical therapy, transsphenoidal surgery, and radiotherapy depending on size, symptoms, and hormone activity.

What is a pituitary micro and macroadenoma in Visit Clinic?plus

A pituitary microadenoma is a benign pituitary gland tumor smaller than 10 mm; a macroadenoma is 10 mm or larger. Both may be functioning (produce excess hormones) or nonfunctioning. Microadenomas often cause hormonal symptoms; macroadenomas can compress nearby structures causing headaches and visual field loss. Diagnosis uses hormone tests and MRI; treatment may include medication, surgery, or radiotherapy.

Is a microadenoma serious in Visit Clinic?plus

A pituitary microadenoma (less than 10 mm) is usually benign and often causes no symptoms. Many are nonfunctional and managed with observation—regular MRI and hormone tests. If it secretes hormones or grows, it can cause hormonal imbalances or symptoms needing medication, surgery, or radiotherapy. Overall not typically life‑threatening, but requires endocrinology follow‑up to guide treatment.

Is pituitary macroadenoma a brain tumor in Visit Clinic?plus

A pituitary macroadenoma is a benign tumor of the pituitary gland (larger than 10 mm) located at the base of the brain. It isn’t usually classified as malignant brain cancer, but it is an intracranial tumor that can compress nearby brain structures, cause hormonal imbalances and visual problems, and may require surgery, medication, or radiation depending on size and effects.

Can pituitary microadenoma be treated without surgery in Visit Clinic?plus

Yes. Many pituitary microadenomas are managed without surgery: small, non‑secreting lesions often undergo observation with periodic MRI and hormone testing. Functioning tumors can be treated medically (e.g., dopamine agonists for prolactinomas; somatostatin analogs or other endocrine drugs for hormone‑secreting types). Radiotherapy is rare. Treatment is individualized by tumor type, symptoms, and hormone status.