Adrenalectomy in primary aldosteronism: a long-term follow-up study in 52 patients
- PMID: 1413836
- DOI: 10.1007/BF02067355
Adrenalectomy in primary aldosteronism: a long-term follow-up study in 52 patients
Abstract
From 1975 to 1989, 52 patients with primary aldosteronism underwent adrenalectomy. There were 16 men and 36 women. The average age was 42.5 years, ranging from 28 years to 70 years. They were all hypertensive, with average pre-operative diastolic pressures varying from 105 to 140 mm Hg (median 117 mm Hg). The subjective symptoms most frequently reported were headache (71%) and asthenia (53%). In all patients except two, serum potassium concentration was 3.3 mEq/L (median 2.7 mEq/L) at the time of diagnosis. Plasma aldosterone concentration was elevated in all patients, 48 +/- 5.3 ng/mL in the recumbent position and 52.6 +/- 6.0 ng/mL in the upright position. The operations carried out were 50 unilateral and 2 bilateral adrenalectomies. In 4 patients a transperitoneal approach was employed and in the remaining 48 patients an extraperitoneal flank incision was used. The histological findings were 47 adenomas (with dimension ranging from 1 to 4.5 cm), unilateral macronodular hyperplasia in 2 patients, an adenoma plus controlateral hyperplasia in 1 patient, bilateral hyperplasia in 1 patient, and unilateral hyperplasia in 1 patient. After long-term follow-up (median 77 months, range 13 to 189 months), 15 patients remained hypertensive (diastolic blood pressure up to 100 mm Hg). In 9 of these patients the hypertensive illness had been present for more than 5 years prior to operation. In the remaining 37 (71%) patients, the arterial pressure returned to normal and in almost half of the patients this result was evident one or two days after operation.
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