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Query: UMLS:C0020538 (hypertension)
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A system for discriminating between adrenal adenoma and hyperplasia based on the levels of aldosterone production, plasma renin concentration, severity of electrolyte disturbances, plasma aldosterone patterns during recumbency and after assuming erect posture, and 131I-19-iodocholesterol scan has been developed. Indicated for operation are patients with adenomas whose elevated blood pressure cannot be continuously controlled with usual doses of medication and patients with documented deterioration of target organ function. Adrenalectomy has been performed 83 times in 81 patients with a diagnosis of primary hyperaldosteronism. Results of excision of adrenal adenomas have been excellent with significant lowering of blood pressure in all cases and cure of hypertension in over 60%. Results of total or subtotal adrenalectomy for hyperplasia have been poor with almost all patients still requiring medication for hypertension. Adenomas have always been unilateral, and usually can be localized so that unilateral exploration is curative. Therefore, we have tried to distinguish preoperatively between adenoma and hyperplasia. Anterior transperitoneal adrenalectomy has been effective with few complications, and no postoperative hypercortisolism after unilateral adrenalectomy for adenoma. The unilateral extraperitoneal approach gives shorter morbidity and potentially fewer serious complications.
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PMID:Selection of patients and operative approach in primary aldosteronism. 118 May 75

In 16 patients with hypokalemic hypertension the combination of abnormally high and unsuppressible plasma aldosterone with low or undetectable renin activity led to the diagnosis of primary aldosteronism. To differentiate between aldosterone producing adenoma and idiopathic bilateral hyperplasia, determination of aldosterone concentration in both adrenal veins was performed in 12 patients. In 4 of these patients the two forms of primary aldosteronism could not be differentiated as in these cases only one of the two adrenal veins simultaneously showing an abnormally high aldosterone concentration could be canulated. Plasma aldosterone and plasma cortisol were determined overnight (20.00-8.00 h) at short time intervals in 8 patients with adenoma, 1 patient with carcinoma of the adrenal cortex and 3 patients with bilateral hyperplasis. In all patients with adenoma a significant correlation between aldosterone and cortisol was observed (p less than 0.05-0.001) whereas no correlation was seen in the patients with hyperplasia and carcinoma. The clinical importance of these findings is that in the presence of ACTH-dependent secretion of aldosterone the site of the adenoma can be predicted even when blood from only one adrenal vein is obtained.
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PMID:[Primary aldosteronism: diagnosis, laterality and regulation of hormone secretion]. 121 58

The syndrome of primary aldosteronism is caused either by an aldosterone-producing adenoma or by idiopathic bilateral adrenal hyperplasia. Hypokalemic hypertension is the leading symptome of the disease. Diagnosis is by the combination of abnormally high and non-suppressible aldosterone values with undetectable or low renin values unresponsive to postural changes or salt restriction. Patients with aldosterone-producing adenoma normally show a fall in plasma aldosterone in response to posture and ACTH-dependent circadian rhythm of aldosterone, whereas bilateral hyperplasia is characterized by postural increases in plasma aldosterone and an ACTH-independent diurnal aldosterone rhythm. These creteria serve to differentiate between adenoma and hyperplasia. An aldosterone-producing adenoma can be localized by veinography, determination of aldosterone concentration in both adrenal veins and by 131I-cholesterol scintigraphy. In our hands the determination of aldosterone in blood from both adrenal veins is the most efficient procedure. In interpreting the results, however, rhythmic and sudden changes in adrenal hormone secretion should be considered. In cases where no adrenal venous blood is obtained, 131I-cholesterol scintigraphy may be used to localize adenoma. In patients with aldosterone-producing adenomas unilateral adrenalectomy should be performed, whereas patients with idiopathic bilateral hyperplasia should receive antihypertensive therapy. As rare instances of primary aldosteronism, a case of aldosterone-producing carcinoma of the adrenal cortex and a case of presumably unilateral adrenal hyperplasia are reported.
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PMID:[Primary aldosteronism]. 126 63

Cushing's syndrome with pregnancy is rare, and only about 60 cases have been reported. In the recent 4 years, 3 cases were diagnosed in Chang Gang Memorial Hospital. They presented with serious maternal complications early in the second month of pregnancy, including hypertension, proteinuria and lower leg edema. Unfortunately it was not diagnosed until the 20th week of pregnancy. They had the same hormone profile as other Cushing's syndrome patients who were not pregnant. Under the supportive treatment they had outcomes of two premature deliveries and one still birth. Just after delivery all patients received left adrenalectomy and pathology showed adenoma. All of them had good recovery courses. According to the literature, early treatment (surgical operation, medical treatment, or irradiation) could decrease maternal morbidity and fetal loss rate.
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PMID:[Cushing's syndrome with pregnancy. Report of three cases]. 129 59

Angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors act by lowering the level of angiotensin II. The therapeutic benefits of these drugs and their potential side-effects therefore result from suppression of the physiological effects of angiotensin II. It is rational to prescribe an ACE inhibitor when the renin-angiotensin system is activated, as in renin-dependent essential hypertension, malignant hypertension and hypertension associated with heart failure. The beneficial effects of ACE inhibitor must be weighed against the special risks of renovascular hypertension: risk of renal artery thrombosis in case of unilateral stenosis and risk of renal failure if the stenosis is bilateral or affects a solitary kidney. In some situations the renin-angiotensin system is not directly involved in hypertension but may play a local haemodynamic role, as in some cases of primary or diabetic nephropathy. In such case the ACE inhibitors are thought to exert a protective effect. ACE inhibitors were reputed to be less effective in the elderly than in younger patients, but we now know that they can be prescribed with equal success in both instances to reduce peripheral resistance and improve regional blood flow as well as arterial compliance. Finally, ACE inhibitors can be prescribed, albeit with limited effectiveness, when the renin-angiotensin system is not activated, as in low renin hypertension and idiopathic hyperaldosteronism due to adrenal hyperplasia. They are ineffective in case of Conn's adenoma and contra-indicated in pregnant women.
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PMID:[For which hypertensive patient should angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor be prescribed or forbidden?]. 129 38

In this work we describe a case of Conn's syndrome caused by a suprarenal adenoma in a sixty-one year female. The patient had come to our observation because of severe hypertension and hypokalemia. Primary aldosteronism resulting from the secretion of excessive amounts of aldosterone caused by autonomous hyperfunction of the adrenal cortex usually by a solitary adenoma. In most series of unselected patients, it is found in fewer than 0.5% of hypertensives. In our study we demonstrated the circadian changes of arterial blood pressure but we failed to demonstrate the presence of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy as recently emphasized in the literature. Regardless of its rarity, primary aldosteronism is a fascinating disease, protean in its manifestations, logical in its pathophysiology.
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PMID:[Arterial hypertension secondary to Conn's disease: an infrequent pathology in nephrology. Report of a clinical case]. 130 Apr 65

Twenty-eight patients with primary aldosteronism were treated from 1974 to 1990. The serum potassium concentration was higher than normal level in all patients with the exception of one whose serum potassium concentration was normal. All of 14 tested patients had low renin values. The plasma aldosterone concentration was higher than standard value in all of 5 patients, and the A/PRA ratio was more than 400. Spironolactone administered preoperatively could not only normalize serum potassium concentration level and blood pressure, but also predict postoperative prognosis of hypertension. Only 37.5% of adenomas were detected by retroperitoneal pneumography with tomography in the early period. 80.0% of adenomas were found by B-ultrasonography, and 92.8% by CT after 1982. The operation was done through abdominal incision because of indefinite localization of adenoma before 1982, and the operation was performed through lumbar incision because of definite localization of adenoma after 1982.
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PMID:[Diagnosis and treatment of primary aldosteronism]. 130 99

Altogether 16 persons with STH-producing hypophyseal adenoma were investigated by tacho-oscillography, total rheography, blood taken from the ulnar vein, a radioimmunoassay to determine the levels of STH, ACTH, cortisol, deoxycorticosterone, aldosterone, T3, T4, vasopressin, prostaglandin E2, 6-keto-prostaglandin F1 alpha, and plasma renin activity. Acromegalic patients demonstrated an elevated level of STH, and prostaglandin E2 secretion was inhibited. Two groups of patients were singled out according to the hemodynamic state: the 1st group was characterized by a hyperkinetic type of circulation and normotension of borderline hypertension; the 2nd group was characterized by hypokinetic circulation, increased vascular resistance, labile or stable arterial hypertension. The interrelationship of hemodynamic and hormonal indices was unnoticed. It has been assumed that of pathogenetic importance in the development of arterial hypertension is depletion of E2 production, and at early stages--body liquid retention resulting from hypersomatotropinemia.
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PMID:[State of the endocrine and cardiovascular systems in patients with somatotropin-producing hypophyseal adenoma]. 130 90

A case of primary aldosteronism treated with spironolactone therapy has been followed up for 24 years. This is probably the longest case of spironolactone therapy for primary aldosteronism that has ever been reported. Long-term treatment with spironolactone controlled the hypertension and prevented hypokalemic alkalosis in this patient, without any deleterious effects on steroid biosynthesis. Based on data obtained during dose reduction and subsequent withdrawal of spironolactone, it is suggested that the suppressed plasma renin activity associated with adenoma-induced aldosteronism develops prior to hypokalemia and hypertension.
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PMID:Twenty-four year spironolactone therapy in an aged patient with aldosterone-producing adenoma. 131 94

A 57-year-old obese woman with hypertension, diabetes mellitus, osteoporosis, and a 40-year history of secondary amenorrhea was diagnosed with corticotropin-dependent Cushing's syndrome. Dynamic endocrine testing and radiological evaluation did not reveal definitively the source of the excess corticotropin. Bilateral adrenalectomy was performed with resolution of the signs and symptoms of hypercortisolism. Four years later, the patient was noted to have rising serum corticotropin levels and an enlarging pituitary mass; hyperprolactinemia also was documented. A diagnosis of Nelson-Salassa syndrome was made, and she underwent a transsphenoidal adenomectomy. A histological examination of the specimen revealed two distinct, albeit contiguous, adenomas: a corticotroph adenoma and a lactotroph adenoma. Postoperatively, the serum prolactin and corticotropin levels decreased significantly. Although the stalk section effect resulting from compression by a pituitary adenoma can raise serum prolactin levels, a concurrent lactotroph adenoma should be considered in patients with nonfunctional or functional pituitary adenomas of other types associated with significantly elevated prolactin levels. The mechanisms underlying simultaneous adrenocorticotropic hormone and prolactin excess are discussed.
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PMID:Coexisting corticotroph and lactotroph adenomas: case report with reference to the relationship of corticotropin and prolactin excess. 131 62


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