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Query: UMLS:C0001430 (
adenoma
)
21,222
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Primary aldosteronism is the principal disorder of zona glomerulosa and a number of subsets have been identified: unilateral
adenoma
; bilateral micro- or macro-nodular hyperplasia (idiopathic aldosteronism); primary hyperplasia and aldosterone-producing carcinoma either adrenal or ectopic. The diagnostic criteria for a correct differential diagnosis of these subsets are now quite reliable and our experience is presented in detail. Unfortunately the pathogenesis of most of these forms is still poorly recognized and requires further investigation. An extreme sensitivity to angiotensin II is present in patients with idiopathic aldosteronism, and a role for adrenal
renin
is now being advocated. A peculiar form of hyperaldosteronism is the glucocorticoid-remediable subtype. An unusual sensitivity of aldosterone to ACTH is present in this form. A qualitative biochemical abnormality in this disorder consists of marked over-production of products of the cortisol C18-oxidation pathway, 18-hydroxycortisol and 18-oxocortisol, which are more abundant than aldosterone and 18-hydroxycorticosterone. A family with three affected sibs has been studied by our group. In other clinical situations, classical zona fasciculata mineralocorticoids [deoxycorticosterone (DOC), corticosterone and their 18-hydroxy compounds] are secreted in excess. The hypertensive diseases of this zone are rare DOC-secreting tumors and two forms of congenital adrenal hyperplasia (CAH), the 11 beta-hydroxylase (11-OHDS) and the 17 alpha-hydroxylase deficiency syndromes (17-OHDS), which are identified by the presence of hypokalemia and suppressed
renin
activity. DOC is the only mineralocorticoid hormone (MCH) oversecreted in the 11-OHDS, while all ACTH-dependent MCH are very high in the 17-OHDS. The molecular basis of gene abnormalities of this disorder are currently under investigation, and preliminary data obtained in some of our patients are presented. Finally a syndrome of apparent mineralocorticoid excess, which is not a primary disorder of the adrenal cortex, describes the association of an unexplained hypermineralocorticoid state with a decreased rate of peripheral 11 beta-hydroxy dehydrogenation of cortisol to cortisone. Studies on this syndrome have led to the hypothesis that peripheral cortisol inactivation is the normal mechanism permitting specific mineralocorticoid recognition. The syndrome exists in two forms both characterized by a decreased turnover of a normal level of plasma cortisol, but in the type I variant an elevated cortisol/cortisone metabolite ratio is found, whereas in the type II variant this ratio is normal. Three patients of the latter form have recently been described by us and are shortly illustrated.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Steroids and hypertension. 195 39
1. Of 93 patients with primary aldosteronism seen during a 20 year period, 52 had an aldosterone-producing
adenoma
(APA) removed (five more await surgery), 14 had bilateral adrenal hyperplasia (BAH), three had glucocorticoid-suppressible hyperaldosteronism (GSH), one had adrenal carcinoma and 18 are yet to be categorized. 2. Seventy-three presented with hypertension and hypokalaemia. Others had markedly suppressed renal venous plasma
renin
activity (PRA) or elevated plasma aldosterone (PA)/PRA ratio, in new or resistant hypertensives. 3. The PA/PRA ratio was the most reliable screening test. 4. Diagnosis depended on the failure of suppression of aldosterone by salt loading and fludrocortisone. 5. Differentiation of BAH from APA depended on adrenal venous sampling comparing adrenal and peripheral venous PA/cortisol ratios. 6. A new familial variety of primary aldosteronism is described, with two affected members in each of three families. 7. Primary aldosteronism should be looked for in resistant and low-
renin
hypertension as well as in hypertension with hypokalaemia, and other family members should have PA/PRA measured if they are hypertensive.
...
PMID:Clinical and pathological diversity of primary aldosteronism, including a new familial variety. 206 71
Among 436 patients with hypertension unrelated to any renal lesion, renovascular damage, pheochromocytoma, Cushing's syndrome or hyperthyroidism, 15 patients had low plasma
renin
activity (PRA) and elevated plasma aldosterone concentrations in the upright position and resultant high aldosterone/PRA ratios: 8 with aldosterone-producing
adenoma
(APA; group 1) and 7 with idiopathic hyperaldosteronism (IHA; group 2). Thirty-nine patients had suppressed PRA in the presence of normal plasma aldosterone levels and moderately elevated aldosterone/PRA ratios (group 3). Thirty of them had elevated plasma 11-deoxycorticosterone (DOC) and 18-hydroxy-11-deoxycorticosterone (18-OH-DOC) concentrations (group 3a) and 9 of them had normal levels of those mineralocorticoids (group 3b). The rest of them (382 patients) had low aldosterone/PRA ratios (group 4). Adrenal scintigraphy with dexamethasone pretreatment revealed [13I]-cholesterol accumulation not only in patients with APA (unilateral) or IHA (bilateral), but also in patients of group 3a (bilateral). In patients in groups 3a and 3b adrenal size (especially thickness), as measured by computed tomography (CT scan), was enlarged, as in patients with IHA (group 2), and was significantly greater than in patients of group 4 (p less than 0.001). Spironolactone reduced blood pressure in all tested patients of group 3a, and the removal of adrenal tumor or hyperplastic tissue normalized blood pressure in patients of groups 1, 2 and 3a. Excised adrenal glands exhibited cortical hyperplasia with or without nodular hyperplasia in patients of group 3a. Good agreement was found between the actual size of the excised tissue and the measurement obtained by CT scan. Since beta-endorphin and beta-lipotropin were depressed in patients of group 3a, it is suggested that an unknown pituitary substance stimulates the adrenal cortex to release too large amounts of DOC and 18-OH-DOC and inappropriate secretion of aldosterone.
...
PMID:Inappropriate elevation of the aldosterone/plasma renin activity ratio in hypertensive patients with increases of 11-deoxycorticosterone and 18-hydroxy-11-deoxycorticosterone: a subtype of essential hypertension? 207 Mar 75
Primary aldosteronism is the principal disorder of the zona glomerulosa, and a number of subsets have been identified: unilateral
adenoma
, bilateral micro- or macronodular hyperplasia (idiopathic aldosteronism), primary hyperplasia, and aldosterone-producing carcinoma, either adrenal or ectopic. The diagnostic criteria for a correct differential diagnosis of these subsets are now quite reliable, and our experience is presented in detail. Unfortunately, the pathogenesis of most of these forms is still poorly recognized and requires further investigation. An extreme sensitivity to angiotensin II is present in patients with idiopathic aldosteronism, and a role of adrenal
renin
is now being advocated. A peculiar form of hyperaldosteronism is the glucocorticoid-remediable subtype. An unusual sensitivity of aldosterone to ACTH is present in this form. The qualitative biochemical abnormality in this disorder consists of a marked overproduction of products of the cortisol C-18-oxidation pathway, 18-hydroxycortisol and 18-oxocortisol, which are more abundant than aldosterone and 18-hydroxycorticosterone. A family with 3 affected sibs has been studied by our group. In other clinical situations, classical zona fasciculata mineralocorticoids (deoxycorticosterone [DOC], corticosterone, and their 18-hydroxy compounds) are secreted in excess. The hypertensive diseases of this zone are rare DOC-secreting tumors and two forms of congenital adrenal hyperplasia, the 11 beta-hydroxylase and 17 alpha-hydroxylase deficiency syndromes, which are identified by the presence of hypokalemia and suppressed
renin
activity. DOC is the only mineralocorticoid hormone (MCH) oversecreted in the 11-hydroxylase deficiency syndromes, while all ACTH-dependent MCH levels are very high in the 17-hydroxylase deficiency syndromes.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:New aspects of mineralocorticoid hypertension. 215 75
Malignant hypertension and high plasma
renin
activity was found in a 39-year-old woman with an aldosterone-producing
adenoma
. Only 3 similar cases have been previously reported, and all patients died before or after identification of the
adenoma
. The present paper documents the first reported case of a successfully managed high-
renin
malignant hypertension secondary to an aldosterone-producing
adenoma
. Regardless of its sporadic occurrence and common presence with low plasma
renin
activity, primary aldosteronism should be considered as a possible underlying cause of high-
renin
malignant hypertension.
...
PMID:High-renin malignant hypertension secondary to an aldosterone-producing adenoma. 217 60
Adenomas
of the adrenal cortex which produce aldosterone (APA) are among the surgically correctible causes of hypertension accounting for 0.5 to 1.0% of all hypertensive etiologies. The adenomas have a 5:1 predilection for women and generally present with hypertension or profound hypokalemia. A low plasma
renin
activity completes the triad for primary hyperaldosteronism which could be caused by adrenocortical cancer, a neoplasm with an average diameter of 12 cm, or idiopathic hyperaldosteronism (IHA), a bilateral hyperplasia of the zona glomerulosa of the adrenal cortex which responds poorly to surgical resection. The adenomas are small (2 cm) but can be localized by imaging or selective venous sampling. Resection has a high success rate with minimal morbidity.
...
PMID:Aldosterone-producing tumors (Conn's syndrome). 218 43
Among 154 cases of primary aldosteronism seen in the General Clinical Research Center at San Francisco General Hospital, twelve patients did not fulfill established characteristics of an aldosterone producing
adenoma
(APA) or idiopathic hyperaldosteronism (IHA). Eight patients had nodular adrenocortical hyperplasia; plasma and urinary aldosterone were elevated and responses to stimulatory and suppressive maneuvers demonstrated the same autonomy seen in patients with APA. This subset is designated primary adrenal hyperplasia. Four additional patients also had elevated aldosterone levels that were responsive to these maneuvers, similar to IHA, but had unilateral tumors. This group has been designated as aldosterone-producing
renin
-responsive
adenoma
. Eleven patients had unilateral adrenalectomy and one preferred prolonged spironolactone therapy, resulting in a sustained cure or amelioration of hypertension, hypokalemia and normalization of aldosterone production.
...
PMID:Correctable subsets of primary aldosteronism. Primary adrenal hyperplasia and renin responsive adenoma. 219 12
The case of a 39-year-old woman with Cushing's syndrome, hypertension and severe hypokalemia, caused by a unilateral adrenal adenoma composed of cells of the zona fasciculata histological type, is described. Plasma
renin
activity, plasma levels of mineralocorticoids and the aldosterone secretion rate were determined before and after surgical removal of the
adenoma
. The tumor appeared to produce autonomously cortisol as well as corticosterone, 18-hydroxycorticosterone and aldosterone. This condition has not previously been described in the literature and might be explained by strong expression of the full spectrum of activities of the mitochondrial enzyme P450 C11 by the tumor cells. Interestingly, despite hyperaldosteronism, plasma
renin
activity was not suppressed.
...
PMID:Concurrent hypercortisolism and hyperaldosteronism due to an adrenal adenoma. 223 30
The captopril test was used to make a differential diagnosis of various types of primary aldosteronism. After captopril, there was no change in the activity of the
renin
-angiotensin-aldosterone system only in the group of patients with aldosterone-producing adenomas in a histological variant of "adenoma and atrophy". The findings suggest that aldosterone secretion regulation is autonomic in the
adenoma
unassociated with the function of the
renin
-angiotensin-aldosterone system only in the case of isolated
adenoma
with a histological variant of
adenoma
and atrophy. In patients with aldosterone-producing adenomas in the presence of the variant "adenoma and hyperplasia", aldosterone secretion retains sensitivity to the
renin
-angiotensin-aldosterone system as in patients with idiopathic hyperplasia and hypertensive disease, which indicates that it is possible to differentiate isolated "adenoma and atrophy" from hypertensive disease and idiopathic hyperplasia, despite its combination with tumor by using the captopril test.
...
PMID:[Significance of single-dose captopril test in the differential diagnosis of primary aldosteronism]. 229 Feb 81
The adrenal function mainly cortical one, was evaluated in 16 patients with incidentally discovered adrenal masses. Pathological examination was possible in 15 cases. The finding consisted of adrenocortical
adenoma
in 9, adrenocortical nodular hyperplasia in 1, adrenal medullary hyperplasia in 1, metastatic tumor in 2 and adrenal cyst in 2. Another case of adrenal cyst was diagnosed by percutaneous puncture. In all cases peripheral levels of plasma cortisol, plasma aldosterone concentration and plasma
renin
activity were normal. Plasma catecholamine levels were also normal except in a case of adrenal medullary hyperplasia. On the other hand, the cases of adrenocortical
adenoma
displayed elevation of urinary 17-hydroxycorticosteroids in 6/9 (67%), a loss of plasma cortisol circadian rhythm in 3/7 (43%) and insufficient suppression on dexamethasone (DXM) suppression test in 6/9 (67%). Their adrenal scintigraphy (with 131I-6 beta-iodomethyl-9-nor-cholest-5 (10)-en-3 beta-ol) revealed an increased ipsilateral up-take and insufficient suppression after DXM in all, while a diminished contralateral up-take in 4/9 (44%). These data suggested that a considerable number of adrenal incidentalomas may not be truly "non-functioning". Two patients with cortical
adenoma
experienced post operative adrenal insufficiency (25%). It was suggested that a pre-operative loss of plasma cortisol circadian rhythm was the most prognosticating of the post operative adrenal insufficiency, rather than insufficient DXM suppression or scintigraphic absence of contralateral up-take. Among the patients with malignancy, differentiation of incidental adrenal adenoma from metastasis by size alone may not be reliable.
...
PMID:[Clinical experience of adrenal incidentaloma with particular reference to adrenal cortical function]. 229 17
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