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Query: UMLS:C0020538 (
hypertension
)
170,190
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Adrenal masses are more and more frequently detected by adrenal ultrasound, computed tomography or nuclear magnetic resonance carried out for a reason other than the suspicion of adrenal disease (incidentalomas). The findings of an incidentaloma still leaves many diagnostic and therapeutic questions open. We report the results of a multicentric retrospective evaluation of patients with adrenal incidentalomas, performed by a Study Group of the Italian Society of Endocrinology. According to the definition of incidentaloma, exclusion criteria a priori were: severe or paroxysmal
hypertension
, frank hypokalemia and clinical signs of hypercortisolism or hyperandrogenism. 29 centers participated in the study and the data obtained by questionnaire were collected in 2 centers for final elaboration. Center 1 carried out the epidemiological and clinical evaluation. Basal and dynamic hormonal evaluation of 786 among the 1013 cases recruited were performed in our center (center 2). Functional studies included: diurnal rhythm of cortisol, urinary free cortisol (UFC), ACTH, DHEAS, 17-OH progesterone, testosterone, androstenedione, supine and upright plasma renin activity (PRA) and aldosterone, urinary aldosterone, urinary catecholamines and VMA. The hormonal dynamic evaluation included the overnight dexamethasone suppression test (1 mg), CRH test and ACTH test. In our study, 89% (702 patients) of adrenal incidentalomas were non-hypersecretory masses; 6.2% (49 patients) showed a preclinical Cushing's syndrome (PCS) (at least two altered parameters of pituitary-adrenal axis); 3.4% (27 patients) were pheochromocytomas; 0.89% (7 patients) were aldosteronomas. One tumor was a masculinizing
adrenocortical carcinoma
. Two hundred sixty patients underwent surgical exploration and the histological diagnosis showed: 138 adenomas (53%), 32 carcinomas (12%), 26 pheochromocytomas (10%). 16 myelolipomas (8%), 13 cystic lesions (5.5%), 7 tumors of neuronal lineage (3%). 12 metastases (4%), 13 others (5%). The 138 patients with adenomas had the following hormonal diagnosis: 103 nonfunctional adenomas (74%), 31 PCS (23%) and 4 cases of hyperaldosteronism (3%). In the patients with PCS an abnormal dexamethasone suppression test was found in 86% of cases (37/41 patients). Values for ACTH were low in 78% (32/41 patients). UFC was elevated in 64% of patients, the diurnal rhythm of cortisol evaluated in 14 patients was absent in 7. Only in 50% of cases DHEAS values (12/24 patients) were decreased, whereas they were normal in the other 50%. Interestingly, 8 patients with normal DHEAS and normal UFC showed nonsuppressible cortisol by dexamethasone test (1 mg). Blunted ACTH response to CRH was detected in 9 of 14 patients (64%). Thus our data suggest that the best parameter for evaluating subclinical hypercortisolism seems to be the overnight dexamethasone suppression test. In 27 patients with pheochromocytoma 24-hour urinary catecholamine and VMA levels were elevated in 86 and 46% of cases respectively. In 7 patients with hyperaldosteronism upright PRA was suppressed in 100% of cases and aldosterone plasma levels were elevated in 6 patients (86%); serum potassium level was slightly decreased in 60% of cases. In 86 of 138 histologically proven adenomas, DHEAS levels were: normal in 59% of patients, decreased in 36% and elevated in 4.6%, whereas in 22 of 32 cortical carcinomas evaluated. DHEAS levels were normal in 63% of cases, decreased in 18% and elevated 18%. Post-ACTH 17-OH progesterone levels were elevated in 52% (62/118 patients) of non-functioning adenomas and in 2 of 4 carcinomas. Not enough data are yet available postoperatively. In summary, endocrine evaluation can lead to the identification of a nonnegligible number of cases of clinically unsuspected pheochromocytomas and subtle hypercortisolism (about 3.4 and 6.2%, respectively of all adrenal incidentalomas), while cases of primary subclinical aldosteronism are rarely found. (ABSTRACT TRUNCATED)
...
PMID:Adrenal incidentaloma: an overview of hormonal data from the National Italian Study Group. 916 66
We established a xenograft line of human
adrenocortical carcinoma
(ADR-1), and analyzed the hyperaldosteronism induced by the xenograft in vivo.
Adrenocortical carcinoma
specimens from a 25-year-old woman were subcutaneously inoculated into nude mice (BALB/c-nu/nu) followed by serial passages in vivo. ADR-1 retained the histopathological features (trabecular and sinusoid nests) seen in the primary carcinoma. The patient showed hyperaldosteronism (serum aldosterone >4000 pg/ml) and hypokalemia (serum K 2.1 mEq/l), but did not show
hypertension
. The nude rat (F344-rnu/rnu) bearing ADR-1 showed hyperaldosteronism (serum aldosterone 3320+/-1420 pg/ml; control 191+/-130 pg/ml) and hypokalemia (serum K 3.4+/-0.4 mEq/l; control 5.2+/-1.0 mEq/l) in vivo, and
hypertension
was not obvious. ADR-1 was shown immunohistochemically to retain production of human-specific corticosteroid synthetase. The xenograft ADR-1 will be useful to elucidate the regulatory mechanism of normotensive hyperaldosteronism.
...
PMID:Establishment of an adrenocortical carcinoma xenograft with normotensive hyperaldosteronism in vivo. 989 Feb 67
We report a case of preclinical Cushing's syndrome in a 54-year-old male associated with bilateral adrenocortical tumours. Physical findings and general laboratory data were unremarkable except for mild
hypertension
(158/90 mmHg) and impaired glucose tolerance. Endocrinological evaluation revealed the presence of autonomous cortisol secretion including unsuppressible serum cortisol by 8 mg dexamethasone test (11 microg/dl), high serum DHEA-S (3580 ng/ml, normal: 400-3500) and increased urinary 17-KS excretion (31.0-35.8 mg/day, normal: 5.8-21.3). CT scan demonstrated the presence of tumours in both adrenals and bilateral adrenalectomy was subsequently performed. Histological examination of the resected specimens revealed an
adrenocortical carcinoma
on the right side and an adenoma on the left side with noticeable cortical atrophy in non-neoplastic adrenals. Immunohistochemical study of steroidogenic enzymes demonstrated that all the steroidogenic enzymes involved in cortisol biosynthesis were expressed in both right and left adrenal tumours. Enzymatic activities of 21, 17alpha, 18, 11beta-hydroxylases were detected in both right and left adrenals except for the absence of 11beta-hydroxylase activity in the left adrenal adenoma. Results of in vitro tissue steroidogenesis examined in short-term tissue culture of the specimens revealed no significant differences between carcinoma and adenoma in cortisol production, but the production of adrenal androgens in carcinoma was significantly higher than that in adenoma, which may indicate the importance of evaluating adrenal androgen levels in patients with adrenocortical neoplasms.
...
PMID:A patient with preclinical Cushing's syndrome and excessive DHEA-S secretion having unilateral adrenal carcinoma and contralateral adenoma. 1042 68
A clinical syndrome combining
hypertension
and hypokalemic alkalosis led to the diagnosis of primary hyperaldosteronism, caused by a right-sided, 2 cm large, apparently benign aldosterone-producing adenoma. The adrenal tumor was completely resected by laparoscopic adrenalectomy. Six months after surgery, the patient exhibited a severe relapse of hyperaldosteronism. Extensive peritoneal metastases of a mixed aldosterone- and cortisol-secreting
adrenocortical carcinoma
were found at abdominal laparotomy. In the light of this case report, we discuss the possibility that laparoscopic resection of adrenocortical tumors might contribute to their subsequent peritoneal dissemination.
...
PMID:Peritoneal carcinomatosis following laparoscopic resection of an adrenocortical tumor causing primary hyperaldosteronism. 1068 40
We report a combination of unusual myxoid change and extensive lipomatous metaplasia of an
adrenocortical carcinoma
. The patient was a 38-year-old man with
hypertension
and heart failure. Radiographic examination revealed the presence of a left adrenal tumor, and adrenalectomy was performed. The tumor weighed 380 g and appeared encapsulated. The cut surface was predominantly gelatinous. Histologically, the tumor was composed of atypical round cells with eosinophilic to vacuolated cytoplasm. The tumor was diagnosed as
adrenocortical carcinoma
. The stroma accumulated copious mucinous material. In addition, individual to nodular mature adipocytes were admixed throughout the tumor. The transition from carcinoma cells to mature adipocytes was recognized. Myxoid change is a very rare phenomenon in
adrenocortical carcinoma
, and only 10 similar cases have been reported to date. Lipomatous metaplasia is another peculiar feature of adrenocortical lesions that has been reported only in benign conditions. To our knowledge, this is the first reported case of
adrenocortical carcinoma
with lipomatous metaplasia.
...
PMID:A case of myxoid adrenocortical carcinoma with extensive lipomatous metaplasia. 1256 42
We report a rare case of
adrenocortical carcinoma
. A 26-year-old woman presented with hypokalemia and
hypertension
due to hyperaldosteronism. She had no signs of Cushing's syndrome. Endocrinological data showed excess of aldosterone production and nonsupressible cortisol production on 2 mg of dexamethasone. Magnetic resonance imaging showed left adrenal tumor. Transabdominal left adrenalectomy was performed and histopathological diagnosis was
adrenocortical carcinoma
. Her blood pressure and hypokalemia returned to normal after adrenalectomy. There is no recurrence after 36 months. We want to emphasis the importance of adrenal tests before the operation even if there are no signs of excess cortisol production.
...
PMID:Co-secretion of aldosterone and cortisol by an adrenocortical carcinoma. 1521 35
Over the course of a few years, an obese 52-year-old woman with a 23-year history of
hypertension
developed a number of abdominal complaints including gall stones. Her blood pressure became increasingly difficult to control and she developed diabetes mellitus and suffered palpitations and headaches. It became noticeable that she had a moon face. Laboratory tests revealed hypercortisolism. CT-scan showed a large inhomogeneous mass of nine centimetres in her left adrenal gland, which was subsequently removed surgically. The histopathological diagnosis was consistent with an adenoma. After a number of months the patient developed bone and liver metastases and the diagnosis was amended to carcinoma of the adrenal cortex. She then underwent radiotherapy and chemotherapy treatment. One year after surgery she developed a pancytopenia and died.
Adrenocortical carcinomas
are rare tumours with an incidence of about 1-2 cases per million of the population. Symptoms are heterogeneous since both functional (hormonal overproduction) and non-functional (mass effect) tumours exist. Surgical resection is the only curative therapy. It may be difficult to distinguish between benign and malignant cortical tumours.
...
PMID:[The adrenocortical carcinoma, a tumour of wide clinical diversity]. 1555 52
Adrenocortical carcinoma
(AC) is a rare tumor with poor prognosis. Twenty-two patients (14 F, 8 M; age 22 to 59 years; median, 43 years) with AC were evaluated prospectively in a single center: tumor stage was I-II in 12 cases and III-IV in 10. The overall survival in our cohort was 41.6 +/- 42 months; 16 subjects are still alive. Curative surgery was followed by longer survival than debulking or no surgery (p < 0.0001). The first relapse was highly predictive for further recurrences. Recurrent ACs were progressively more aggressive, and they occurred with variable but ever shorter intervals. At diagnosis, 14 patients (63.5%) presented with features of clear adrenocortical hyperactivity. Despite the absence of clinical signs of hormonal excess, all other patients presented some abnormalities of steroid secretion. The most common clinical finding was a recent diagnosis of moderate-to-severe
hypertension
(68%), poorly controlled by pharmacological treatment, often associated with multiple cardiovascular risk factors. High mitotic rate and undifferentiated polymorph cellular pattern were associated with worse prognosis. Response to treatments other than surgery (mitotane chemotherapy) was better in patients treated early after the first surgery. In conclusion, curative surgery was the most effective treatment. Monitoring arterial pressure, endocrine parameters, and metabolic parameters can be helpful for the early detection of AC recurrences.
...
PMID:Andrenocortical carcinomas: twelve-year prospective experience. 1559 64
Adenomatoid tumors are relatively uncommon benign neoplasms of mesothelial origin, usually occurring in the male and female genital tracts. Rare extragenital adenomatoid tumors have been identified in the adrenal glands, heart, mesentery, pleura, and lymph nodes. In the adrenal gland, adenomatoid tumors may pose a diagnostic challenge. The differential diagnosis includes
adrenocortical carcinoma
and metastatic carcinoma, especially signet ring cell carcinoma. Because of its glandular pattern, an adenomatoid tumor may be confused with an adenocarcinoma. We present 3 cases of adrenal adenomatoid tumors, including one with a concurrent large hemorrhagic vascular adrenal cyst. The adenomatoid tumors were unilateral, appeared solid and white, and varied from 1.7 to 4.2 cm in diameter. They occurred in 3 male patients aged 33, 33, and 46 years. One patient presented with abdominal pain due to the presence of a concurrent large adrenal cyst. The tumor was an incidental radiological finding in another case and was discovered during the course of a workup for
hypertension
in the third case. The light microscopic appearances were consistent with those of typical adenomatoid tumors. Immunohistochemical stains for calretinin and cytokeratin 5/6 were positive, confirming the tumors' mesothelial origin. Ultrastructural studies performed in 2 cases revealed microvilli and desmosomes. Follow-up showed no evidence of recurrence or metastasis. In our experience, the key to the diagnosis of this rare benign tumor is to consider adenomatoid tumor in the differential diagnosis of any glandular tumor occurring in the adrenal gland.
...
PMID:Adenomatoid tumor of the adrenal gland: a clinicopathologic study of 3 cases. 1569 45
Aldosterone-producing
adrenocortical carcinoma
(APAC) is a rare cause of
hypertension
often diagnosed late because of paucity of information. Thus, we delineated its clinical course and survival rates based on two cases referred to us that featured diverging clinical courses, and on a scrutiny of the literature since 1955 when the first case of APAC was identified. Data on demography, imaging results, hormonal assessment, histology, and clinical course were extracted independently by the investigators. We included in our database 58 cases, most presenting with Conn's syndrome. Plasma aldosterone levels were on average increased 14-fold; plasma renin activity was suppressed in 55% of cases. The tumor showed extremely variable size and weight, and no gender or side preference. Metastases were present in 10% of all cases at initial diagnosis and in an additional 48% of cases at follow-up. Median survival was 546 days (95% confidence interval (CI): 240-851); median time to either recurrence or death was 212 days (95% CI: 29-395). No clinical or histological signs predicted survival with Cox regression analysis. We concluded that, although an ominous course with a poor survival rate is common, no sign accurately predicts the course of APAC. Thus, molecular studies to identify diagnostic markers of survival are mandatory.
...
PMID:Aldosterone-producing adrenocortical carcinoma: an unusual cause of Conn's syndrome with an ominous clinical course. 1578 46
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