Remote Assessment: Hormones and Vision First
Before a cross-border journey, you can request an online preliminary assessment by digitally sharing your pituitary-protocol contrast-enhanced brain MRI, your hormone blood tests and, if available, your visual field results via WhatsApp. At this stage the aim is to discuss honestly whether the adenoma is secreting hormones, whether it is affecting vision, and whether treatment should be surgery, medication or observation. This matters because treatment in pituitary adenoma is not always surgery; the right path varies with the tumor's type and hormone profile.
Not Every Pituitary Adenoma Requires Surgery
Treatment varies markedly depending on whether the adenoma secretes hormones. In prolactin-secreting adenomas (prolactinoma) the first treatment is most often not surgery but medication, which shrinks the tumor in many patients. In adenomas secreting growth hormone (acromegaly) or cortisol (Cushing's), surgery is usually the first choice. In non-secreting adenomas that compress the visual pathways or grow, surgery comes into consideration; in small, asymptomatic adenomas, observation with serial MRI may be sufficient. For this reason, before planning a long journey, we determine together what the correct first step is for your adenoma.
Endoscopic Transnasal Surgery: Access Through the Nose
For most pituitary adenomas requiring surgery, the method preferred today is endoscopic transnasal-transsphenoidal surgery, performed through the nose without opening the skull. In this approach the tumor is reached via the nasal cavity and sphenoid sinus; there is no external incision. Some large adenomas or those extending into the skull may require different approaches. The goal of surgery is to remove the tumor safely, relieve pressure on the visual pathways and, where possible, preserve normal pituitary function. Which technique is appropriate is planned according to the tumor's size and extension.
The Process and Recovery Journey in Turkey
If the remote assessment suggests surgery is possible, the endocrine and eye tests needed and the estimated length of stay are planned before your arrival. On arriving in Turkey, an evaluation carried out jointly by endocrinology, ophthalmology and neurosurgery is performed. Endoscopic surgery usually requires a few days of hospital stay; after surgery, hormone levels and fluid-salt balance are monitored closely. At discharge a written summary is prepared for the hormone follow-up plan, hormone replacement if needed, and the endocrinology review to be continued in your home country.
Honest Expectations and Multilingual Communication
A pituitary adenoma is mostly benign, but the risks of surgery (temporary/permanent hormone deficiency, diabetes insipidus, cerebrospinal fluid leak, rarely visual or vascular injury) and the fact that full control may not always be achievable in hormone-secreting tumors are discussed openly. Outcomes vary with the type and size of the adenoma, and no outcome is guaranteed. For a patient coming from across a border, the most critical point is that these expectations are clearly understood in their own language; the decision is made together with you after all your data have been seen.