Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0020538 (hypertension)
170,190 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A 49-year-old woman was diagnosed in 1985 as having pheochromocytoma because of hypertension with high levels of plasma catecholamine concentration and 24-hour urine excretion of vanillyl-mandelic acid and metanephrine together with a right adrenal mass. The excised tumor cells had fine granular basophilic cytoplasm with argyrophilic granules by Grimelius' method. Four years later, she was diagnosed as having a duodenal bulb ulcer. Serum gastrin showed an abnormally high level of 1900 pg/ml. Abdominal echogram and computed tomography revealed a hypoechoic lesion in the pancreas and intrahepatic multiple tumors. A needle biopsy specimen of the liver tumor was compatible with the histology of metastatic islet cell tumor. A diagnosis of Zollinger-Ellison syndrome was made due to malignant gastrinoma with multiple liver metastases. The patient had no family history of endocrinological or neoplastic disorders. The present case indicates the possibility that pheochromocytoma and gastrinoma, that is, endocrine tumors characteristic of multiple endocrine neoplasia (MEN) I and MEN II, may be coincident even in a person without MEN. A continued awareness of previously rare or undescribed manifestations is important in patients with islet cell tumors or pheochromocytoma.
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PMID:Zollinger-Ellison syndrome and pheochromocytoma. Report of a case. 809 84

The unusual case of a 65-year-old woman with intermittent hypotension, fever, pulmonary edema and coma as initial presentation of pheochromocytoma is reported. The patient developed respiratory, cardiac and renal failure, disseminated intravascular coagulation and liver dysfunction. She had to be defibrillated on multiple occasions, occurring in periods of severe hypertension. After successful surgical removal of a pheochromocytoma a thyroid medullary carcinoma was detected. Several members of the patients family had presented with multiple endocrine neoplasia (MEN II).
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PMID:Multiple organ failure and coma as initial presentation of pheochromocytoma in a patient with multiple endocrine neoplasia (MEN) type II A. 810 32

Sporadic adrenomedullary hyperplasia (AMH) is characterized by a clinical history of hypertension, increased plasma and/or urinary catecholamine levels and histomorphometric evidence of increased adrenal medullary mass in the absence of MEN 2 syndrome. The case of a 42-year-old female patient is reported who presented with typical clinical and laboratory findings of episodic hypertension and elevated plasma and urinary catecholamines. Sonography and computed tomography revealed no abnormality, but 131I-metaiodobenzylguanidine (131I-MIBG) scintigraphy showed increased uptake in the right adrenal. Transabdominal unilateral adrenalectomy was performed. The right adrenal gland was macroscopically inconspicuous. Upon histomorphometry, however, an increased adrenal medullary cell mass was shown, thus confirming AMH. Two years following surgery the patient is asymptomatic and normotensive.
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PMID:[Sporadic unilateral adrenal medullary hyperplasia--a rare cause of hypertension]. 864 35

Hypertension attributable to pheochromocytoma is a very attractive model for the elucidation of the pathogenesis of hypertension. Sixteen different point mutations in the RET proto-oncogene and 30 mutations in the Von Hippel-Lindau (VHL) tumor suppressor gene have been identified so far associated with expression of pheochromocytoma. Each of these mutations initiates either the syndrome of multiple endocrine neoplasia type 2 (MEN 2) (MEN 2A and MEN 2B) or the VHL disease. Certain mutations in both genes are associated with the presence of pheochromocytoma. In general, these pheochromocytomas produce catecholamines that result in hypertension. Therefore, analysis for germline mutations in these genes are of practical value, because susceptibility to these diseases can be predicted in as yet clinically unaffected relatives.
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PMID:Monogenetic hypertension and pheochromocytoma. 880 29

We report the first patient who had bilateral pheochromocytoma associated with multiple endocrine neoplasia type 2a syndrome (MEN 2a) and underwent unilateral laparoscopic adrenalectomy followed by contralateral retroperitoneoscopic partial adrenalectomy 2 years later. The postoperative course was uneventful both times, and the patient was cured of hypertension without any need for steroid replacement. Endoscopic partial adrenalectomy is a minimally invasive procedure for pheochromocytoma with mild symptoms. We believe that this procedure has considerable potential for treating bilateral pheochromocytoma, which is frequently observed in patients with MEN 2a.
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PMID:Unilateral laparoscopic adrenalectomy followed by contralateral retroperitoneoscopic partial adrenalectomy in a patient with multiple endocrine neoplasia type 2a syndrome. 1021 3

In our clinic 19615 patients were operated over 25 years on for goiter. Malignant thyroid neoplasms were found in 1049 (5.3%) patients including 875 (83.4%) women and 174 (16.6%) men. Sixty two adult patients (42 women and 20 men were operated on for medullary thyroid carcinoma (MTC). Thyroid cancer was diagnosed in this group pre or intraoperatively in 44 (71%) patients and postoperatively, on histologic examination, in 18 (29%) patients. These patients were reoperated. Radical operations (total thyroidectomy with regional lymph node removal) were conducted in 43 (69.3%) patients and palliative ones in 19 (30.7%) patients. After MTC surgery, MEN 2A (MTC and an adrenal tumor) were diagnosed by means of imaging techniques (USG, CT) in 6 (9.7%) patients. All adrenal tumors were unilateral. Five of these patients were operated, and pheochromocytoma was confirmed by histopathologic examination. Two years after the MTC operation, 1 women was lost to follow-up. After a year, she was admitted to hospital for severe hypertension and died of cerebral hemorrhagia. Pheochromocytoma was revealed by autopsy. All patients were treated complementarily after the MTC operation. Different combinations of teleradiotherapy, chemotherapy and substitutive doses of levothyroxine were used. Ten (23.2%) of 43 patients operated radically were reoperated 1-3 years after the first operation due to loco-regional tumor recurrence. Radical reoperations were performed in 4 patients, and palliative ones in 6. Over a 0.5-23-year follow-up period, 26 (41.9%) patients died, including 20 of cancer, and 6 of other reasons. Four out of 36 living patients have clinical or biochemical symptoms of neoplastic disease. The follow-up period of MEN 2 patients operated on ranged from 1 to 6 years. Up to now, no tumor in the second adrenal gland has been diagnosed in any of these patients. Genetic (molecular) tests performed in 31 out of 36 living patients revealed mutations of RET gene in 4 (12.9%).
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PMID:Medullary thyroid carcinoma (MTC)--clinical and molecular aspects on the basis of own experience. 1113 Feb 52

This study examined the mechanisms linking different biochemical and clinical phenotypes of pheochromocytoma in multiple endocrine neoplasia type 2 (MEN 2) and von Hippel-Lindau (VHL) syndrome to underlying differences in the expression of tyrosine hydroxylase (TH), the rate-limiting enzyme in catecholamine synthesis, and of phenylethanolamine N-methyltransferase (PNMT), the enzyme that converts norepinephrine to epinephrine. Signs and symptoms of pheochromocytoma, plasma catecholamines and metanephrines, and tumor cell neurochemistry and expression of TH and PNMT were examined in 19 MEN 2 patients and 30 VHL patients with adrenal pheochromocytomas. MEN 2 patients were more symptomatic and had a higher incidence of hypertension (mainly paroxysmal) and higher plasma concentrations of metanephrines, but paradoxically lower total plasma concentrations of catecholamines, than VHL patients. MEN 2 patients all had elevated plasma concentrations of the epinephrine metabolite, metanephrine, whereas VHL patients showed specific increases in the norepinephrine metabolite, normetanephrine. The above differences in clinical presentation were largely explained by lower total tissue contents of catecholamines and expression of TH and negligible stores of epinephrine and expression of PNMT in pheochromocytomas from VHL than from MEN 2 patients. Thus, mutation-dependent differences in the expression of genes controlling catecholamine synthesis represent molecular mechanisms linking the underlying mutation to differences in clinical presentation of pheochromocytoma in patients with MEN 2 and the VHL syndrome.
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PMID:Pheochromocytomas in von Hippel-Lindau syndrome and multiple endocrine neoplasia type 2 display distinct biochemical and clinical phenotypes. 1134 98

Pheochromocytoma is a rare cause of hypertension. Its coexistence with pregnancy is exceptional and laparoscopic removal has rarely been reported. We describe the case of a 34-year-old woman with multiple endocrine neoplasia type 2a (MEN 2a) with adrenal pheochromocytoma diagnosed in the 6th week of pregnancy. After pretreatment with phenoxybenzamine, a successful transperitoneal laparoscopic adrenalectomy was performed in the twentieth week of gestation. The management of pheochromocytoma in pregnancy and the indications for laparoscopic surgery in pregnant patients are discussed.
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PMID:Pheochromocytoma in a pregnant woman with multiple endocrine neoplasia type 2a. 1182 68

We describe the case of a 56-year-old man who developed acute hypertension leading to cardiac insufficiency, arrhythmia, severe heart failure and death. The autopsy revealed Sipple's syndrome (multiple endocrine neoplasia syndrome type IIa) and catecholamine-induced cardiomyopathy. This man had received a false diagnosis of primary hypertension 1 year before. The prime objective of this report is to call attention to the necessity of an in depth diagnosis of labile and paroxysmal hypertension. The clinical diagnostic features of phaeochromocytoma as well as the main therapeutic approaches suggested in the literature are commented on.
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PMID:Sipple's syndrome presenting acutely as severe heart failure. 1213 43

The members of four generations of a family with Von Hippel-Lindau syndrome (VHL) have been followed by one of us (I.P.) for 30 years. The disease was proved in four members of this family, in three of them associated with pheochromocytoma. The grandmother (I-1) died at the age of 16 years two months after her first birth. The cause of death was not established. Her daughter (II-1) had 9 births with 5 children alive. Paresthesia and difficulties in walking followed by paraparesis and paraplegia were the first signs of the disease at the age of 58 years. The surgical treatment was performed because of an expansive lesion at the level of Th 3-4. Pathohistological examination was not done. It seems that a haemangioblastoma might be the cause of her disease. Diagnosis of pheochromocytoma was documented in a female patient (III-2) in 1972. Two years later she was successfully operated on. Pathohistological examination proved clinical diagnosis. She had also diabetes mellitus, cholelithiasis and cardiomyopathy. She died at the age of 56 years. A right-sided pheochromocytoma was diagnosed in a next female patient (III-4) at the age of 22 years. Her surgical treatment was successful. Retinal haemangioblastomatosis was established 7 years later in this patient. She was blind at the end of her life. Haemangioblastomatosis cerebelli was diagnosed soon, and she died at the age of 51 years. A 12- year old boy (IV-3) presented severe hypertension (36/24 kPa). Left-sided pheochromocytoma was removed in this patient one year later. Right-sided pheochromocytoma was operated on in the same patient at the age of 24 years. An elevated level of urinary dopamine was documented four years after the second operation. A malignant right-sided pheochromocytoma was operated on in the same patient 15 years later. At the same time metastases were found in the lower part of the right lung lobe. A 131-I-MIBG therapy could not be realized. He died at the age of 41. Pathohistological examinations proved the clinical diagnosis in this patient after all of three surgical treatments. MEN 2 syndrome was excluded by proper genetical analyses on the RET-protooncogen. Genetical analyses are in the course to identify the possible mutations of VHL-tumour-suppressor gene through the living members of the family. Multidisciplinary approach is mandatory in diagnosis, follow up and treatment of this specific group of patients. A collaboration among specialists of different fields of medicine (internal medicine, ophthalmology, neurology, radiology, urology, neurosurgery, biochemistry, pathology and genetics) is suggested.
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PMID:[The von Hippel-Lindau syndrome with pheochromocytoma]. 1258 97


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