Cases reported "Adrenal Cortex Neoplasms"

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1/105. Primary aldosteronism with aldosterone-producing adrenal adenoma in a pregnant woman.

    A 30-year-old pregnant woman complained of muscle weakness at 29 weeks' gestation. She was hypertensive with severe hypokalemia. Lower plasma renin activity and higher aldosterone level than the normal values in pregnancy suggested primary aldosteronism. A cesarean delivery was performed at 31 weeks' gestation because of pulmonary congestion. The neonatal course was uncomplicated. The laparoscopic adrenalectomy for a 2.0-cm right adrenal adenoma resulted in normalizing of her blood pressure and serum potassium level. Although primary aldosteronism is rare, especially during pregnancy, it should be always considered as one of etiologies of hypertension in pregnancy.
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ranking = 1
keywords = muscle
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2/105. Adrenal cancer with hypertension but low plasma renin and aldosterone.

    patients with malignant lesions of the adrenal gland may present with a syndrome of excess mineralocorticoids. Both primary hyperaldosteronism and excess mineralocorticoids other than aldosterone resulting from adrenal carcinoma have rarely been reported. In most patients with adrenal tumors secreting mineralocorticoids other than aldosterone, distant metastasis had already occurred at the time of diagnosis and the prognosis was poor. We present a rare case of adrenal cancer with hypertension in a patient with low plasma renin activity and a low plasma aldosterone concentration. The patient's blood pressure returned to normal after removal of the tumor. The patient is still alive and without recurrence 6 years after surgery. This case illustrates the value of thorough evaluation of hypertension and prompt surgical treatment for patients with adrenal cancer.
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ranking = 376.45566635033
keywords = cancer
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3/105. A rare combination consisting of primary hyperaldosteronism and glucagonoma.

    A 59-yr-old man with multiple pancreatic tumors is presented. Previously, he had undergone left adrenalectomy for primary hyperaldosteronism and left nephrectomy for renal cell carcinoma at the ages of 39 and 55 yr, respectively. This time, 3 yr after removal of renal cancer, two solid lesions in the pancreas associated with hyperglucagonemia were detected. Under a diagnosis of pancreatic metastasis from renal cell carcinoma or islet cell tumor of the pancreas, distal pancreatectomy with splenectomy and enucleation of the tumor in the pancreas head were performed. Microscopically, a glucagonoma, measuring 2.3 mm in diameter, was detected among five pancreatic metastases from renal cell carcinoma. Four years after surgery, the patient remains well, without signs of recurrence despite multiple pancreatic metastases. This is the first report of such a rare combination consisting of aldosterone-secreting adrenal adenoma and glucagonoma.
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ranking = 62.742611058388
keywords = cancer
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4/105. 11-Deoxycorticosterone-producing adrenocortical carcinoma.

    A woman presented with a history of weight loss and muscle weakness. A laboratory test revealed hypokalemia and elevation of plasma 11-deoxycorticosterone (DOC). CT showed a left adrenal mass. A left adrenalectomy was performed. The histological and immunohistochemical diagnosis showed a DOC-producing adrenocortical carcinoma. This cancer is very rare; only 10 cases including the present case have appeared in the literature.
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ranking = 63.742611058388
keywords = cancer, muscle
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5/105. Adrenocortical oncocytoma.

    The histopathology and ultrastructural features of an adrenocortical oncocytoma are reported. The tumour was discovered incidentally during investigation for hypertension in a 72 year old female. Oncocytic tumours of the adrenal cortex are rare, with only 20 examples described in English language reports. Most have been non-functioning and benign, like the present example. Molecular studies may help assess the significance of oncocytic change in the pathogenesis and behaviour of oncocytic neoplasms.
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ranking = 309.7051859624
keywords = neoplasm
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6/105. A patient with preclinical Cushing's syndrome and excessive DHEA-S secretion having unilateral adrenal carcinoma and contralateral adenoma.

    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.
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ranking = 309.7051859624
keywords = neoplasm
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7/105. Clinics in diagnostic imaging (39). Conn's syndrome due to adrenocortical adenoma (Conn's tumour).

    A 33-year-old man presenting with muscle weakness and hypertension was found to have hypokalaemia and metabolic alkalosis. Computed tomography (CT) showed an adrenal mass. Conn's syndrome due to an adrenocortical adenoma was confirmed at surgery. hypertension-related adrenal disorders such as Cushing's syndrome, carcinoma and phaeochromocytoma are discussed. CT is currently the single most useful imaging method for identifying adrenal masses.
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keywords = muscle
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8/105. Two cases of osteosarcoma occurring as second malignancy of childhood cancer.

    We report on two patients in whom osteosarcoma occurred as second malignancy of childhood cancer. One patient had a malignant teratoma and the other adrenocortical carcinoma as the primary cancer. The emergence of cancer in cured cases and long-term survival cases of childhood cancer may result in an increase in the number of osteosarcomas seen in adolescence occurring as second malignancy. Anti-cancer drugs in large does were used for the treatment of a malignant teratoma in the former. These anti-cancer drugs may be involved in the occurrence of the second malignancy. In the latter, the patient has the germ-line mutation of p53 tumor suppressor gene, so genetic factors are presumably related to the occurrence of the second malignancy.
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ranking = 627.42611058388
keywords = cancer
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9/105. Management approaches to adrenal incidentalomas. A view from Ann Arbor, michigan.

    Adrenal masses are discovered incidentally in 1 to 3% of abdominal CT scans performed for investigation of nonadrenal-related abdominal complaints. Although most incidentally discovered masses are clinically silent, 10% are hormone-secreting and are associated with subtle symptoms of hormone excess. The major concern is the possibility that such a mass is malignant and requires surgical intervention. Benign adrenal cortical adenomas are 60 times more common than primary adrenal cortical carcinomas, which are rare, and many of the lesions that are malignant are metastatic from extra-adrenal neoplasms. Size is a significant factor in determining the probability that the lesion is benign or malignant, and there is concensus that most benign lesions are smaller than 3 cm, whereas most malignant lesions are larger than 6 cm. uncertainty remains, however, as to the potential malignant character of masses measuring 3 to 6 cm; thus, size alone is insufficient for determining if an incidentally-found adrenal mass is benign or malignant, and information obtained from other diagnostic techniques, such as CT, MR imaging, and adrenal scintigraphy with 131I 6 beta-iodomethylnorcholesterol, should be considered. Fine needle biopsy of an adrenal mass is not recommended unless there is strong suspicion that the mass is metastatic from an extra-adrenal neoplasm.
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ranking = 619.41037192481
keywords = neoplasm
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10/105. A case of adrenocortical carcinoma associated with recurrence after laparoscopic surgery.

    Laparoscopic adrenalectomy has become increasingly popular because of its minimally invasive nature, but guidelines for selection of cases suitable for this surgical procedure have not been established. We report a 52-year-old woman with adrenocortical carcinoma, manifesting as Cushing's syndrome, treated with laparoscopic adrenalectomy. The tumour was removed in toto and had been histologically diagnosed as adrenocortical adenoma. However, the patient developed intra-abdominal peritoneal dissemination of carcinoma 15 months after surgery. review of the histopathological findings of the resected adrenocortical tumour revealed that the neoplasm met five out of nine histological criteria for adrenocortical malignancy, and was diagnosed as adrenocortical carcinoma. Histopathological examination of the tumour was also consistent with adrenocortical carcinoma. The patient responded extremely well to chemotherapy, including carboplatin, etoposide and o,p'-DDD (1,1-dichlorodiphenyldichloroethane), and a subsequent CT (computed tomography) scan 12 months after the start of chemotherapy demonstrated no evidence of disease. However, the patient developed neurological impairment, including dysarthria, as a side-effect of o, p'-DDD. The patient died of aspiration pneumonia due to a decreased pharyngeal reflex. Postmortem examination revealed no foci of residual carcinoma. This case report emphasizes the importance of excluing possible adrenocortical malignancy in patients considered for laparoscopic adrenalectomy, histopathological diagnosis of adrenocortical malignancy and careful monitoring for neurotoxicity during o,p'-DDD treatment.
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ranking = 309.7051859624
keywords = neoplasm
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