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Cases reported "Hyperaldosteronism"

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1/56. Primary aldosteronism and adrenal incidentaloma.

    Adrenal incidentaloma are usually found during the assessment of non adrenal disease. In this paper we report the association between a bilateral adrenal hyperplasia and a macronodule of adrenal cortex (adrenal incidentaloma) which is a rare and misleading cause of primary aldosteronism. In the light of this association even if it is likely to remain rare and of those previously published, its existence is an additional reason for suggesting surgical treatment of primary aldosteronism only to patients who satisfy the following criteria: 1) satisfactory control with spironolactone; 2) poor spironolactone tolerance and poor control with other drugs; 3) accept to be operated on and the risk of a possible error.
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2/56. Unmasking of primary hyperaldosteronism by renal transplantation.

    BACKGROUND: Primary hyperaldosteronism is an uncommon cause of hypertension in the general population. Given the mechanism of action of aldosterone clinical manifestations may not occur in the setting of end stage renal disease. However, if a successful renal transplant is performed clinical manifestations may occur. methods: We present a case of a patient with a preexisting adrenal adenoma who only presented with clinical signs of hyperaldosteronism after renal transplantation. patients' work-up included plasma aldosterone, plasma renin activity, serum cortisol, and estimation of trans tubular potassium gradient. RESULTS: The patient's serum aldosterone was markedly elevated with a relatively suppressed plasma renin activity. Trans tubular potassium gradient was high in the presence of hypokalemia. CONCLUSION: Previously silent hyperaldosteronism may be unmasked by a successful renal transplant.
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3/56. Primary aldosteronism in a patient with familial adenomatous polyposis.

    patients with familial adenomatous polyposis (FAP) frequently have extracolonic manifestations of their disease. Prior reports have indicated an increased prevalence of adrenal lesions in patients with FAP. Although most of the adrenal lesions represent nonfunctioning adenomas, some patients have had hypercortisolism due to adrenocortical carcinoma or bilateral nodular hyperplasia. We present a case of a patient with FAP who had mineralocorticoid excess due to an aldosterone-producing adrenocortical adenoma.
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4/56. Primary hyperaldosteronism without suppressed renin due to secondary hypertensive kidney damage.

    Primary hyperaldosteronism is characterized by high plasma and urinary aldosterone and suppressed PRA. Renin suppression is due to aldosterone-dependent sodium retention and mild extracellular volume expansion. We observed three patients with primary hyperaldosteronism, severe refractory hypertension, and normal to high normal PRA levels whose aldosterone/renin ratios were still elevated because of disproportionately high aldosterone levels. All available medical data on the patients as well as publications on the aldosterone/renin relationship in primary hyperaldosteronism were reviewed to explain the unusual findings. In one patient, histologically proven renal arteriolosclerosis was the probable cause of the escape of PRA from suppression by an aldosterone-producing adenoma. In the other two patients, hypertensive kidney damage due to primary hyperaldosteronism was the most likely explanation for the inappropriately high PRA, as in patient 1. All patients had high normal or slightly elevated serum creatinine levels and responded to 200 mg spironolactone/day with increased serum creatinine and hyperkalemia. hyperkalemia was probably due to a decreased filtered load of sodium and a spironolactone-induced decrease in mineralocorticoid function. Two patients were cured of hyperaldosteronism by unilateral adrenalectomy but still need some antihypertensive therapy, whereas one patient has probable bilateral adrenal disease, with normal blood pressure on a low dose of spironolactone. In patients with severe hypertension due to primary hyperaldosteronism, PRA can escape suppression if hypertensive kidney damage supervenes. An increased aldosterone/PRA ratio is still useful in screening for primary hyperaldosteronism. These patients may respond to spironolactone therapy with a strong increase in serum creatinine and potassium. Early specific treatment of primary hyperaldosteronism is therefore indicated, and even a patient with advanced hypertension will profit from adrenalectomy or cautious spironolactone treatment.
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5/56. A case of unilateral adrenal hyperplasia: the diagnostic dilemma of hyperaldosteronism.

    OBJECTIVE: To report the successful laparoscopic surgical management of a case of right unilateral adrenal hyperplasia. methods: We present a case of unilateral adrenal hyperplasia and review the pertinent literature. The effectiveness of surgical treatment of unilateral adrenal hyperplasia is evaluated. RESULTS: A 50-year-old man had a 7-year history of hypertension, which had been treated with antihypertensive medications. On initial assessment, he was taking long-acting diltiazem, 240 mg twice a day, and his blood pressure was 150/84 mm Hg. He was noted to have recurrent hypokalemia, low plasma renin activity, increased plasma aldosterone concentration, and high urinary aldosterone levels. magnetic resonance imaging of the adrenal glands revealed a normal left adrenal gland and fullness of the right adrenal gland. Selective adrenal vein catheterization showed findings consistent with a right-sided adrenal gradient. Surgical removal of the right adrenal gland laparoscopically alleviated his symptoms and cured his hypertension and hypokalemia. Pathologic examination of the right adrenal gland revealed diffuse hyperplasia of the zona fasciculata and zona reticularis. plasma aldosterone, renin, and potassium levels returned to normal postoperatively, and his blood pressure declined to 120/70 mm Hg. At 1-year follow-up, the patient remained normotensive without the need for antihypertensive agents. CONCLUSIONS: This rare type of hyperaldosteronism, known as unilateral adrenal hyperplasia, is difficult to categorize not only because it fails to typify a conventional subtype but also because it is difficult to confirm the pathologic diagnosis. Recognition of the variety of provocative, biochemical, and imaging results that may be seen in this disorder is important in making the correct diagnosis. Determining unilaterality of disease by selective adrenal vein sampling can result in a cure of hypertension and hypokalemia by surgical resection.
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6/56. Anterior ischemic optic neuropathy associated with idiopathic aldosteronism and hypertension.

    A 49-year-old man suffered from bilateral anterior ischemic optic neuropathy almost simultaneously, and was diagnosed with idiopathic aldosteronism associated with hypertension. Because this patient had multiple organ disorders, multiple cerebral infarctions, and a mild loss of renal function, it was important to treat his primary disease.
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7/56. Effect of Sar1-ala8-angiotensin ii on blood pressure and renin in Bartter's syndrome, before and after treatment with prostaglandin synthetase inhibitors.

    Three patients suffering from Bartter's syndrome were studied before and after 5 days of treatment with the prostaglandin synthetase inhibitors, aspirin and indomethacin. saralasin was given by intravenous infusion in increasing doses from 0.6 to 42 micrograms/min.kg/BW. During saralasin infusion a blood pressure reduction was observed in all patients. aspirin treatment did not affect this response and nor did it affect other manifestations of the syndrome. indomethacin treatment changed the blood pressure response to saralasin in such a way that the blood pressure was increased in one patient and was unchanged in the other. indomethacin also tended to normalize other features of Bartter's syndrome, such as the hyperreninaemia and angiotensin unresponsiveness, but did not affect the hypokalaemia. The saralsin effect on blood pressure is thus evidently inversely related to the prevailing activity of the renin-angiotensin system in this condition also, and the patients obviously depended on the renin-angiotensin system to maintain their blood pressure. Our findings, together with data in the literature, indicate that angiotensin unresponsiveness of the vascular bed is not a primary feature in Bartter's syndrome. Chloride loss is currently thought to be the basic abnormality and this may link the Bartter's syndrome with other diseased states characterized by chloride loss, such as the syndrome of habitual vomiting and chronic treatment with loop diuretics.
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8/56. Adrenal cortical diseases: international case conference.

    Six pathologists from japan and the United Kingdom evaluated four different cases of adrenocortical disorders independently. These adrenocortical disorders included an adrenal tumor in a 45-yr-old female without any endocrine abnormalities, bilateral adrenocortical lesions in a 55-yr-old female with cushing syndrome, an adrenocortical mass in a 44-yr-old man with hypertension, and an adrenocortical lesion in a 62-yr-old female with chronic hypertension for 30 yr. In this article, we provide a clinical summary, macroscopic and histologic findings, and histologic diagnosis of these four adrenocortical cases.
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9/56. Conn's syndrome associated with Behcet's disease.

    A 39-yr-old woman, who had been treated for Behcet's disease for 4 yr, was admitted for further investigation of recently identified hypokalemia and hypertension. Suppressed plasma renin activity with elevated plasma aldosterone concentration and an anomalous postural decrease in plasma aldosterone were observed. An abdominal CT scan revealed a right adrenal mass. The patient was diagnosed with Conn's syndrome. The association of Conn's syndrome with Behcet's disease was thought to be coincidental. To our knowledge, this is the first case of Conn's syndrome associated with Behcet's disease.
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10/56. Autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease with primary hyperaldosteronism.

    We report three cases of primary aldosteronism associated with autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease. The diagnosis of primary hyperaldosteronism was based on the presence of hypokalaemia with excessive urinary potassium excretion and/or the characteristic hormonal changes. Renal function impairment due to autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease could mask hypokalaemia. The interpretation of adrenal imagery may be hindered by adjacent renal cysts. In one case an adrenal adenoma was detected and surgically removed, with only partial correction of the blood pressure. This could be explained by the persisting underlying autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease. We conclude that in a hypertensive patient with polycystic kidney disease, extrarenal causes of hypertension may be present.
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