| Literature DB >> 25288254 |
Alida Páll, Gergely Becs, Annamária Erdei, Lívia Sira, Arpád Czifra, Sándor Barna, Péter Kovács, Dénes Páll, György Pfliegler, György Paragh, Zoltán Szabó1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Symptomatic paroxysmal hypertension without significantly elevated catecholamine concentrations and with no evidence of an underlying adrenal tumor is known as pseudopheochromocytoma.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25288254 PMCID: PMC4196012 DOI: 10.1186/s40001-014-0053-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Med Res ISSN: 0949-2321 Impact factor: 2.175
Various clinical conditions can present in a similar way to pseudopheochromocytoma
| Endocrine | Hyperthyroidism, carcinoid, mastocytosis, hypoglycemia, insulinoma, menopausal syndrome, adrenal medullary hyperplasia, reninoma |
| Pharmacologic | Tricyclic antidepressants, monoamine oxidase inhibitors, cocaine, alcohol withdrawal, abrupt clonidine withdrawal |
| Cardiovascular | Ischemic heart disease, arrhythmias, baroreflex failure, renovascular disease, postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome |
| Neurologic | Migraine headache, cluster headache, stroke, diencephalic autonomic epilepsy, meningioma |
| Other | Preeclampsia or eclampsia, obstructive sleep apnea, anxiety or panic attacks, acute intermittent porphyria, recurrent idiopathic anaphylaxis |
Figure 1During the first clinical evaluation of the patient a very severe attack could be observed. The patient became unconscious, her systolic blood pressure rapidly rose above 230 mmHg. Similar trends were observed during the repeated paroxysms. BP: blood pressure.
Figure 2Holter electrocardiogram revealed a paroxysmal sinus tachycardia during the attack. No other atrial arrhythmias or life-threatening ventricular arrhythmias (ventricular tachycardia and fibrillation) were observed.
Laboratory data of the patient
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| Na+ | 144 | 133 to146 | mmol/L | |
| K+ | 4.2 | 3.5 to 5.3 | mmol/L | |
| Cl− | 107 | 99 to 111 | mmol/L | |
| Ca2+ (total) | 2.33 | 2.1 to 2.6 | mmol/L | |
| Blood urea nitrogen | 4.2 | 3.6 to 7.2 | mmol/L | |
| Creatinine | 66 | 44 to 97 | μmol/L | |
| eGFR (EPI) | 89 | > 90 | mL/minute/1.73 m2 | |
| Glucose | 6 | 3.6 to 6.0 | mmol/L | |
| HgbA1C | 7.8 | 4.2 to 6.1 | % | |
| Albumin | 42 | 35 to 52 | g/L | |
| Total protein | 63 | 60 to 80 | g/L | |
| AST | 26 | < 40 | U/L | |
| ALT | 38 | < 40 | U/L | |
| LDH | 194 | 135 to 220 | U/L | |
| Alkaline phosphatase | 74 | 40 to 115 | U/L | |
| Amylase | 23 | < 100 | U/L | |
| Lipase | 17 | < 70 | U/L | |
| CRP | 1.9 | < 4.6 | mg/L | |
| WBC | 8.66 | 4.8 to 10.8 | Giga/L | |
| RBC | 3.97 | 4.2 to 5.4 | Tera/L | |
| Hemoglobin | 123 | 115 to 150 | g/L | |
| Hematocrit | 0.35 | 0.35 to 0.47 | ||
| Platelet | 277 | 150 to 400 | Giga/L | |
| MCV | 88.9 | 80 to 99 | fL | |
| MCH | 31 | 27 to 31 | pg | |
ALT: alanine transaminase; AST: aspartate transaminase; CRP: C reactive protein; EPI: epidemiology collaboration; GFR: glomerular filtration rate; HgbA1c: hemoglobin A1c; LDH: lactate dehydrogenase; MCH: mean corpuscular hemoglobin; MCH: mean corpuscular hemoglobin; MCV: mean corpuscular volume; MCH: mean corpuscular hemoglobin; MCH: mean corpuscular hemoglobin; RBC: red blood cell; WBC: white blood cell.
Hormone levels of the studied patient
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| Plasma samples | ||||
| Thyroid stimulating hormone | 2.3 | 0.3 to 4.2 | mU/L | |
| ACTH (8 hours) | < 19 | < 75 | ng/L | |
| Cortisol | 245.8 | 138 to 690 | nmol/L | |
| Plasma renin | Non- detectable | 0.5 to 1.9 x hrs | μg/L | |
| Plasma aldosterone | 54.1 | 28 to 291 | pmol/l | |
| Chromogranin A (with PPI) | 875.4 | 20 to 100 | μg/L | |
| Chromogranin A (without PPI) | 48.3 | 20 to 100 | μg/L | |
| Plasma samples during paroxysm | ||||
| Adrenaline | 0.32 | < 0.41 | nmol/L | |
| Noradrenaline | 3.37 | 0.37 to 2.6 | nmol/L | |
| Dopamine | 2.73 | < 0.88 | nmol/L | |
| Urine samples (24-hour collection) | ||||
| Adrenaline | 16 | 3 to109 | nmol/die | |
| Noradrenaline | 187 | 89 to 473 | nmol/die | |
| Dopamine | 2,171 | 424 to 1,612 | nmol/die | |
| Homovanillic acid | 31 | 9.1 to 33.8 | μmol/die | |
| Vanillyl mandelic acid | 31 | < 34 | μmol/die | |
| 5-HIAA | 23 | 3.7 to 42.9 | μmol/die | |
| Metanephrines | 356 | 375 to 1,506 | nmol/die | |
| Normetanephrines | 1,340 | 573 to 1,932 | nmol/die | |
| 3-metoxytyramine | 702 | < 900 | nmol/die | |
5-HIAA: 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid; ACTH: adrenocorticotropic hormone; PPI: proton-pump inhibitor.
Figure 3For I- MIBG acquisition, 40 MBq radiopharmaceutical was injected. A whole body (4 cm/minute) and abdominal SPECT/CT acquisition were performed on MEDISO AnyScan SC system (Budapest, Hungary) 72 hours after the injection. SPECT parameters were: 1 minute/projection, 64 views, matrix size 64 × 64. A 16-slice CT was used, with 120 mAs and 120 kV abdominal filter. For the SPECT reconstruction OSEM method was performed. None of the adrenal regions showed abnormal focal uptake. MIBG: metaiodobenzylguanidine, SPECT: Single-Photon Emission Computed Tomography, CT: computed tomography, OSEM: Ordered Subset Expectation Maximization.
Data on blood pressure and heart rate obtained after the discharge of our patient revealed the lack of reoccurrence of the paroxysms
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| BP sys (mmHg) | 145 | 133 | 140 |
| BP dia (mmHg) | 85 | 79 | 82 |
| Heart rate (beats/minute) | 93 | 65 | 74 |
BP: blood pressure; dia: diastolic; sys: systolic.
Figure 4The effects of benzodiazepines on GABA (gamma-aminobutyric acid) receptor and cholecystokinin (CCK) are shown. On one hand, binding of GABA molecules to their sites triggers the opening of a chloride ion-selective pore resulting in the hyperpolarization of the cell. On the other hand, benzodiazepines are likely to antagonize the CCK-induced neuronal activation.