Hypoglycemia revealing arachnoidocele in infant
Manel Jellouli, Tahar Gargah
Corresponding author: Manel Jellouli , Department of Pediatric, Charles Nicolle Hospital, Tunis, Tunisia
Received: 28 Aug 2015 - Accepted: 09 Sep 2015 - Published: 18 Sep 2015
Domain: Maternal and child health
Keywords: Hypoglycemia, arachnoidocele, herniation, subarachnoid space
©Manel Jellouli et al. Pan African Medical Journal (ISSN: 1937-8688). This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution International 4.0 License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Cite this article: Manel Jellouli et al. Hypoglycemia revealing arachnoidocele in infant. Pan African Medical Journal. 2015;22:46. [doi: 10.11604/pamj.2015.22.46.7814]
Available online at: https://www.panafrican-med-journal.com//content/article/22/46/full
Hypoglycemia revealing arachnoidocele in infant
Manel Jellouli1,&, Tahar Gargah1
1Department of Pediatric, Charles Nicolle Hospital, Tunis, Tunisia
&Corresponding author
Manel Jellouli , Department of Pediatric, Charles Nicolle Hospital, Tunis, Tunisia
Arachnoidocele is characterized by the herniation of the subarachnoid space within the sella turcica, associated with some degree of flattening of the pituitary gland. In children and adolescents, Arachnoidocele is rare, and the clinical picture is much less benign, with an increase in familial incidence, associated skeletal disorders, and endocrine abnormalities. OH was in infant admitted at the age of one month for respiratory symptoms. The examination on admission found an hypothermic infant with macroglossia, an anterior and posterior fontanelle wide, an umbilical hernia with growth retardation and normal cranial perimeter. Her height was 3200 g and her weight was 52 cm. The examination of others systems was unremarkable. She had central hypothyroidism (FT4 below 0.4 and TSH equal to 0.346). An exploration of the pituitary was requested, finding an achievement of the cortical axis revealed by the occurrence of multiple episodes of hypoglycemia with normal insulinemia and normal Adreno-Cortico-Trophic-Hormone with low cortisolemia (52 nmol/l). Growth stimulation tests were performed. Growth hormone levels were less than 10 ng/ml. A brain MRI was applied for a arachnoidocele intra-sellar repressing anterior pituitary with an anterior pituitary parenchyma very small without abnormality posterior pituitary or pituitary stalk.The patient was treated with hydrocortisone, levothyroxine and growth hormone replacement. The outcome was favorable without recourse to neurosurgery at the lack of damage to the optic nerve and the sphenoid bone, with a decline of five years otherwise the child has a delay in psychomotor acquisitions.
Figure 1: MRI of total empty sella: Coronal weighted T1 image showing arachnoidocele intra-sellar