Pyrethroidoma is a group of tumours that occur from the front and back of the peripal lobes and from skin cells on the larvae, which can be divided into different types. Pyretoma is one of the most common benign tumours in clinical practice, and its effects on patients are reflected in their growth and development, reproductive function, learning and ability to work. Clinical manifestations are hormonal anomalous disorders, the symptoms of tissues around tumour-pressed pituitary bodies, the loss of function in the pituitary organs and other protagonal frontal functions. Clinically, argonoma can be classified according to the nature of the tumours as functional adenomas and non-functional adenomas, such as octogenomas, growth hormone adenomas, adenomas of adrenal cortex (cuchinia) and thyroid hormone adenomas. Different types of cerebral peritoneal tumors have different manifestations and different treatments.
1 Estrogen-type apogees
Definition: Emulsifiable tumours are caused by the permutation of permulsifiable tumours (PRL).
Symptoms: men who have low sexual function, infertility, breast growth; women of childbearing age who have breast milk, menstruation cycle changes, or who have not had a menstrual period, and who are infertility; the main symptoms of menopause are headaches and loss of sight.
Treatment: Drug treatment is the preferred treatment for invasive adenomas; surgery may be considered when the drug is of poor effect or drug resistance.
2. Adrenal cortex adenoma
Definition: Promoting adrenal cortex adenoma, known as “cuchinia”, resulting from the overproduction of argon hormone acthional acthional hormones by a perpenaloma.
Symptoms: Excessive cortisols cause body weight gain, loss of myomatic capacity and muscle weakness; depression, concentration and memory difficulties, sleep disorders, irritation; skin thinners, high blood pressure, diabetes; increased risk of infection due to weakened immune system.
Treatment: Surgery is the preferred method of treatment, and there are many satisfactory surgical effects that can be achieved through a nostril under the lens.
3. Prothyroidoid apritoma
Definition: The tumor caused by the growth of the tectonic tSH cell is the least visible type of the aperture hormone, accounting for only 1.0% to 2.8% of the aperture tumor.
Symptoms: TSH over-generative thyroid irritation leads to hyperthyroidism: reduced body weight, irritation, high heart rate, sleep disorder, increased intestinal cortex; female patients can also have a reduced or closed stroke.
Treatment: Surgery of adenoma is the preferred method of treatment, the main aim being to remove tumours as much as possible and to reduce the pressure of the visual nerve. It is possible to enter the road or open a skull.
4. Protuitive growth hormone adenoma
Definition: The adenomas of perpentine growth hormones (GH) are second only to adenomas of impotent adenomas and octomal adenomas, and third highest in the field. Because of excessive growth hormones (GHs) in the body, chronic oversurged GHs can cause excessive growth of whole body soft tissue, bones and cartilage, causing face changes, large end-end fatting of hands and feet, thick skin, increased internal organs, osteoporosis and sleep respiratory syndrome.
Symptoms: The growth hormone-type apogee is mainly manifested in limb obesity and giant disease, with fewer simple giant diseases and more than half of the adult population having secondary limb obesity.
Treatment: Most of the adenomas in the pituitary GH are the primary surgically removed. Basic surgical entry is divided into nasal and acoustic. In cases where growth hormones are still high due to surgical or post-operative tumour residues, drug (growth inhibitor) treatment is available. The short-term use of growth inhibitors before an invasive GH adenoma can reduce the size of the tumor and provide conditions for full surgery. Post-operative tumour residues may also be subject to assisted radiotherapy.
5. Inoperable adenomas
Definition: The vast majority of adenomas of the argon have a high genocinological function and produce corresponding clinical symptoms that become functional adenomas when the adenomas do not increase the levels of hormones in the blood and are not hormonal excess.
Symptoms: Men ‘ s sexual dysfunction and infertility before menopausal and menopause; loss of vision and/or thyroid loss (low thyroid hormone levels) or insufficiency of adrenal gland (low cortisol levels).
Treatment: Surgery is the preferred option, and assisted radiotherapy is available in cases of poor operation or post-operative recurrence. Most non-functional adenomas are small, and no symptoms of oppression can be observed.
In general, the symptoms of the different types of argonoma also vary, and the treatment is different. The most important for the patient is to visit the hospital in a timely manner after the symptoms have occurred and to work with the doctor for individualized treatment once the diagnosis is clear.