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Query: UMLS:C0001430 (
adenoma
)
21,222
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A 42-year-old woman was referred to our hospital for evaluation of severe hypertension. A right adrenal tumor was revealed by CT scan, and the elevation of cortisol and u-17OHCS was found. We made a diagnosis of adrenal adenoma with Cushing's syndrome and performed right adrenalectomy. However, a small myelolipoma (1.5 mm in diameter) was found beside the cortical
adenoma
by histopathological examination.
Adrenal myelolipoma
is not a rare disease now, because it is easily-detected as an incidental by CT scan. The present case of adrenal myelolipoma, however, is interesting and uncommon in its connection with functioning cortical
adenoma
. Only 3 cases have been previously reported so far in English and Japanese publications. We discuss the etiology of adrenal myelolipoma, and suggest that myelolipoma would develop in the course of regressive or necrotic degeneration of cortical cells by hormonal disorders, stress, circulatory disturbance or other unknown factors.
...
PMID:[Adrenal myelolipoma associated with Cushing's syndrome: a case report]. 163 23
Complex physiologic and neoplastic processes affect the adrenal glands. An appreciation of the gross pathologic and histologic correlates of disease aids in understanding the mechanisms by which diagnostic imaging helps characterize adrenal masses. Computed tomographic (CT) densitometry and chemical shift magnetic resonance (MR) imaging would seem to be the most reliable tools in determining whether a given adrenal mass is specifically an
adenoma
. Such a determination is made on the basis of the presence of substantial amounts of intracytoplasmic lipid. Thus, although a homogeneous mass with a CT attenuation of less than 10 HU or a decrease in signal intensity at opposed-phase MR imaging is diagnostic for
adenoma
, lesions that do not have these features are indeterminate and may necessitate biopsy.
Adrenal myelolipoma
also has a distinctive imaging appearance that reflects the presence of macroscopic fat deposits. Diagnosis of
adenoma
or adrenal myelolipoma is very helpful in the assessment and treatment of asymptomatic patients with adrenal masses and may make biopsy unnecessary. In patients with clinical or biochemical evidence of adrenal disease, MR imaging helps confirm the presence of a mass and allows localization and further characterization of the lesion.
...
PMID:MR imaging of the adrenal gland: radiologic-pathologic correlation. 982 Nov 92
Adrenal myelolipoma
is an uncommon benign tumor usually discovered by chance in patients with hypertension, obesity, atherosclerosis, cancer or endocrine disorders. The association with adrenal endocrine dysfunctions appears to be the most frequent. Myelolipoma has been found in patients affected by Cushing's syndrome, hyperaldosteronism, Addison's disease, virilization. We report herein a case of association, based on clinical and radiological signs, between myelolipoma and adrenal adenoma in a patient with Conn's disease. The myelolipoma was localized in the opposite adrenal gland to that of
adenoma
, at difference with the other cases described.
...
PMID:[Adrenal adenoma and myelolipoma in an elderly patient with Conn's syndrome]. 1076 42
Adrenal myelolipoma
is an uncommon, benign and hormonally inactive tumor. Most lesions are asymptomatic and usually are discovered incidentally at autopsy studies. Authors report on 6 patients (5 women, 1 man) with adrenal myelolipomas (5 right, 1 left), analyze their morphological findings and association with an adrenal hormonal overproduction. Five of the patients underwent surgery because of tumor size, in 3 of them histological evaluation confirmed myelolipoma and in 2 cases an adrenocortical
adenoma
with foci of myelolipoma. All the patients were asymptomatic and in 4 cases hormonal overproduction was not found. One female patient has oveproduction of dehydroepiandrosteron-sulphate (DHEAS) indicating a 3beta hydroxylase deficiency in this tumor and 1 patient has primary aldosteronism with a histological finding of an association of adrenocortical
adenoma
with foci of myelolipoma. Neither Cushings syndrome nor congenital adrenal hyperplasia were present in our group of patients.
...
PMID:Adrenal myelolipoma. 6 cases and a review of the literature. 1525 62
Adrenal myelolipoma
is a rare benign tumour. This tumour is generally considered as a type of hormonally inactive neoplasm, which is composed of mature adipose tissue and normal haematopoietic cells. Rarely adrenal myelolipoma and adrenal cortical
adenoma
could be found together in the same gland. Due to myelolipoma's asymptomatic character, it is generally diagnosed incidentally. In fact, myelolipoma can now be easily detected because of improved techniques such as ultrasound, CT and MRI and widespread use of imaging. Because of this a 66-year-old male patient with abdominal pain, proved that adrenal myelolipoma and non-functional adrenal cortical
adenoma
are rare in the same gland. The case presented here deals with different outcome which is rare in the literature.
...
PMID:Adrenal myelolipoma's connection with adenoma in the same adrenal gland. 2369 39
Distinguishing adrenal incidentalomas (5% of all abdominal CT scans) from metastasis is a frequent diagnostic challenge in primary malignancies with a propensity for adrenal spread, such as lung cancer.
Adrenal myelolipoma
and
adenoma
can be definitively characterized as benign by demonstrating gross and microscopic fat, respectively, on CT and MRI and an absence of abnormal uptake on PET. Unfortunately, adrenal sampling is frequently necessary in indeterminate cases for adequate staging of extra-adrenal primary malignancy. We present a lung cancer case in which definite characterization of a rare adrenal hemangioma with CT, PET, and MRI avoided unnecessary adrenal sampling.
...
PMID:Adrenal Hemangioma Definite Diagnosis on CT, MRI, and FDG PET in a Patient With Primary Lung Cancer. 2956 25