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. 2000 Mar;25(1):19-27.

[Incidentalomas of the adrenal glands. Personal cases and review of the literature]

[Article in Italian]
Affiliations
  • PMID: 11148846

[Incidentalomas of the adrenal glands. Personal cases and review of the literature]

[Article in Italian]
C Letizia et al. Minerva Endocrinol. 2000 Mar.

Abstract

Background: The growing use of sensitive non-invasive methods to image the abdomen such as ultrasonography, computed tomography (CT) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), have resulted in increasing recognition of adrenal incidentalomas.

Methods: In this study, we report the clinical, endocrine and radiologic evaluation of 75 patients (50 women and 25 men, mean age 56 +/- 14 years) with adrenal incidentaloma (size 1 to 18 cm, mean 3 +/- 2.5 cm). None of the patients showed any symptoms or clinical signs that might indicate the existence of adrenal dysfunction. The patients underwent basal and dynamic evaluation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis, renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system, and adrenomedullary function. Moreover, CT and MRI scan and Iodo-cholesterol (NP-59) scintigraphy were performed.

Results: The endocrine evaluation indicated 11 cases of pre-clinical Cushing's syndrome, 2 cases of pheochromocytoma and 62 not-functionally adrenal masses. On the basis of endocrine and morphologic data, 29 patients underwent surgical treatment: 20 adrenocortical adenoma, 2 pheochromocytomas, 2 not-cortisol-secreting adrenal carcinomas, 1 adrenal lymphoma, 1 adrenal metastasis, 1 myelolipoma, 1 hemorrhage and 1 pseudocystis.

Conclusions: In conclusion, patient with an incidentally discovered mass has to be investigated to detect malignancy and subtle hormonal overproduction, to select the cases for surgical treatment.

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