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Query: UMLS:C0027651 (tumor)
685,946 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Tumors of the female genital tract may be associated with a variety of unusual clinical manifestations. Uncommon endocrine and paraendocrine syndromes include production of human chorionic gonadotropin by tumors other than those of germ cell origin, hyperthyroidism associated with struma ovarii and gestational trophoblastic disease, the carcinoid syndrome, the Zollinger-Ellison syndrome, hypercalcemia, Cushing's syndrome, hypoglycemia, hypertension related to renin or aldosterone production, hyperprolactinemia, inappropriate secretion of antidiuretic hormone, and virilization associated with Nelson's syndrome and placental site trophoblastic tumor. Paraneoplastic syndromes associated with gynecological tumors include disorders of the nervous system, connective tissue, and skin, as well as hematologic abnormalities and the nephrotic syndrome. Heritable and other congenital syndromes associated with these tumors are the Peutz-Jeghers syndrome, the nevoid basal-cell carcinoma syndrome, Ollier's disease and Maffucci's syndrome, hereditary leiomyomatosis, ataxia-telangiectasia, von Hippel-Lindau's disease, thyroid abnormalities associated with Sertoli-Leydig cell tumors, and Carney's complex. Other syndromes associated with tumors of the female genital tract include Meigs' syndrome, hyperamylasemia, uveal melanocytic lesions, and pyrexia.
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PMID:Clinical syndromes associated with tumors of the female genital tract. 175 57

A 54-year-old woman was referred to our hospital for the treatment of a tumor of the right chest wall. Clinical examination revealed hypertension, hypokalemia, metabolic alkalosis, hyperaldosteronism and hyperreninemia. Computed tomography and an abdominal echogram indicated a tumor in the right phrenic area and two tumors in the retroperitoneum near the pancreas head. After the surgical resection of these tumors, the primary reninism was diminished. The pathological diagnosis of these tumors was leiomyosarcoma. Plasma active and inactive (trypsin-activated) renin activities (PRA) were 85.7 and 38.9 ng angiotensin I/ml/h, respectively. These PRA did not respond to either postural stimulation or suppression by the volume expansion. Active and inactive renin activities in a right phrenic area tumor were 208 and 32 ng angiotensin I/mg protein /h, respectively. Those of an abdominal tumor were 196 and 30 ng angiotensin I/mg protein/h, respectively. Renin mRNA identical in molecular size to that of the human kidney was identified by northern blot analysis. This is the first case report of renin producing leiomyosarcoma derived from the lung, which is characterized by relatively lower plasma prorenin concentrations.
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PMID:A case of renin producing leiomyosarcoma originating in the lung. 182 28

Specific renin has been identified in the outer layers of the adrenal of rat, mouse and human. Nephrectomy causes a marked elevation of adrenal renin, presumably through hyperkalemia. The subcellular distribution of adrenal renin was investigated by Percoll density gradient. The renin activity in the dense granules from the capsules of nephrectomized rats was 15 times greater than that of intact rats. Most of the active form renin was found in the dense renin granules. Immunohistochemical studies revealed that the dense granules increased in number after bilateral nephrectomy. Immunogold staining of these granules showed unequivocally the presence of renin therein. Adrenal capsules in organ culture were found to release renin at a steady rate. Renin release from bilaterally nephrectomized rat adrenals was 4.6 times greater than from the organs of intact animals. Further, adrenal slices from human adrenocortical tumor tissues which contained specific renin in a sizable quantity were found to release renin in a similar fashion to rats. The mechanism of the control of renin secretion from the adrenal gland was different from the kidney in that the release was stimulated by potassium chloride or angiotensin II but not by ACTH, suggesting stimulation by intracellular calcium. These results provide convincing evidence that the adrenal synthesizes renin, stores it in specific secretory granules, and secretes it in a regulated manner. It is most likely that the adrenal renin plays a role in the production of aldosterone in the adrenal cortex or in the secretion of catecholamines from the adrenal medulla through intra- and/or extracellular formation of angiotensin II.
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PMID:Renin in adrenal: an overview of its synthesis, subcellular localization, and functions. 182 83

Adrenocortical causes of hypertension are established by examining the mineralocorticoid hormones produced in the zona glomerulosa and zona fasciculata. In the zona glomerulosa, aldosterone excess leads to hypertension, hypokalemia, and suppressed plasma renin activity, with increased concentrations of urinary aldosterone (either as the 18-glucuronide or free aldosterone) as an index of its production. Identifying a tumor by computed tomography scan verifies the diagnosis of a correctable lesion. If no tumor is found, several maneuvers are used to identify primary adrenal hyperplasia, a disorder with autonomous aldosterone production, for which reduction of adrenal mass is curative. The zona fasciculata has two major pathways: the 17-deoxy pathway, where deoxycorticosterone (DOC) and corticosterone are the significant steroids, and the 17-hydroxy pathway, which leads to cortisol production. Tumors of the 17-deoxy pathway, DOC-producing adenomas, have increased concentrations of DOC and its precursor steroids, normal concentrations of cortisol, and suppression of aldosterone production secondary to suppression of the renin system. Two enzymatic defects in the zona fasciculata, 11 beta- and 17 alpha-hydroxylase deficiency, can be first readily identified by the virilization in the former, hypogonadal features in the latter. Steroid patterns are diagnostic. DOC is produced in excess in both deficiencies and is the cause of the hypertension. Deficient or impaired 11 beta-hydroxy steroid dehydrogenase in the apparent mineralocorticoid excess syndrome or after licorice ingestion retards the conversion of cortisol to inactive cortisone in the kidney, leading to mineralocorticoid hypertension; this leads to suppression of the renin system and subsequently of aldosterone.
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PMID:Steroid characteristics of mineralocorticoid adrenocortical hypertension. 191

Excess production of aldosterone secondary to an adrenal tumor or bilateral hyperplasia is a known, but infrequent, cause of hypertension. A more frequent adrenal abnormality, observed in 30-40% of hypertensive patients, is a functional derangement in aldosterone secretion. Two such conditions have been described: low renin essential hypertension and non-modulating essential hypertension. Both have in common 1) an abnormality in the interaction of angiotensin II (Ang II) with the adrenal and 2) sodium sensitivity of the blood pressure. However, the pathophysiological mechanisms for the sodium sensitivity and hypertension are different. In normal subjects, the response of the adrenal glomerulosa cell to Ang II varies with the level of sodium intake, with sodium restriction enhancing the response. In one group of hypertensive patients with low plasma renin levels, the normally reduced aldosterone responses to Ang II on the high salt diet do not occur. Thus, these individuals have an enhanced adrenal response to Ang II under circumstances in which it should be reduced, thereby leading to lower renin levels and a tendency toward sodium retention. The second group has the opposite defect; that is, on a low sodium diet, they have a reduced adrenal response to Ang II. This results in a normal or high plasma renin level. The sodium sensitivity of their blood pressure arises not from the adrenal abnormality but from the associated defect in sodium-dependent, Ang II-mediated changes in renal blood flow. Thus, on a high salt diet, these patients, who are termed "non-modulators," fail to increase renal blood flow, thereby leading to a sodium-retaining state.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Functional derangements in the regulation of aldosterone secretion in hypertension. 193 78

A case of left adrenal adenoma with bilateral testicular Leydig cell tumor in a 38-year-old man is reported. He had received bilateral orchiectomy for testicular Leydig cell tumor at the age of 37. After operation computed tomography revealed left adrenal mass and aldosterone-secreting adrenal tumor was suspected. Left adrenalectomy was performed and histopathological diagnosis was adrenocortical adenoma. Serum ACTH, aldosterone and plasma renin activity were still high after operation. The adrenal cortex and gonads are of common embryologic origin and the histologic pattern may overlap. Examination of the adrenal gland is necessary for the patient with a testicular Leydig cell tumor.
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PMID:[Adrenal adenoma with bilateral testicular Leydig cell tumor: a case report]. 195 32

Severe hypertension developed in a fifty-five year-old woman after surgical removal of a retroperitoneal tumor, when the renal artery was injured. Renal arteriography after the surgery demonstrated a segmental infarction of the right kidney. A close relationship between activation of the renin-angiotensin system and the development of severe hypertension was observed. Satisfactory control of blood pressure concomitant with reduction of plasma renin activity was achieved by a combination of an angiotensin-converting anzyme inhibitor, beta-blocking agent, and calcium-entry blocker. The mechanism of activation of the renin-angiotensin system in renal infarction is discussed.
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PMID:Severe hypertension with segmental renal infarction following surgical removal of a retroperitoneal malignant hemangiopericytoma: a case report. 201 23

The authors describe a Juxtaglomerular Cell Tumor (JGCT) in a hypertensive young man whose symptomatology disappeared when the JGCT was removed. The clinical diagnosis was made before surgery by selective determination of plasma renin activity level in both renal veins and in the draining vein of the tumor. This neoplasm is benign and usually occurs in young patients. The morphological, immunocytochemical and ultrastructural features are described. Other renin-secreting tumors and the theories about histogenesis of JGCT are discussed.
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PMID:Juxtaglomerular cell tumor of the kidney. Morphological, immunohistochemical and ultrastructural studies of a new case. 206 20

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.
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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

Mesenchymal renal tumors in F-344 newborn rats were induced by a single dose of dimethylnitrosamine. The induced tumors were successfully transplanted into adult rats under the renal capsule. Neither the primary nor the transplanted neoplasms from various generations of grafts changed their morphological features during the tumor passage, having the same cellularity with high mitotic activity and the tendency to invade the host kidney rapidly. On the basis of lectin histochemistry and immunohistology, the tumor proved to be a mesenchymal neoplasm without any obvious capacity of the proliferating cells to differentiate into any well-known organoid element normally found in mature renal parenchyma. However, the proliferating neoplastic cells were found to have a strong vimentin positivity with desmin expression. Ultrastructurally, myofilaments with attachment bodies characteristic of smooth muscle cells were generally present in various amounts in many tumor cells. In addition, on the basis of the physiological data and on kidney/tumor renin activity obtained, it is interesting to note that the tumor-graft-invaded kidneys retained their enzyme activity, despite the obvious loss of renal tissue including glomeruli. However, the immunohistochemical findings with anti-renin antibody have clearly shown that this is not due to a renin-producing tumor but rather to the surviving (probably) non-neoplastic arterioles retaining the capacity to produce renin. Although these arterioles have mostly been found next to necrotic areas, commonly occurring in dimethylnitrosamine-induced transplantable renal tumors, the question of a possible physiological role of renin in tumor necrosis or in angiogenesis has remained open.
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PMID:Morphological and immunohistochemical characteristics of dimethylnitrosamine-induced malignant mesenchymal renal tumor in F-344 rats. 214 98


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