| Literature DB >> 26997629 |
Abraham M Kaslow1, Anne Riquier-Brison2, Janos Peti-Peterdi2, Nick Shillingford3, Josephine HaDuong3, Rajkumar Venkatramani4, Christopher P Gayer5.
Abstract
A previously healthy 7-year-old male presented with hypertensive emergency, hypokalemia, and elevated plasma renin activity and aldosterone levels. There was no evidence of virilization or cushingoid features. MRI of the abdomen revealed a large (5 × 5 × 3 cm) peripherally enhancing, heterogeneous mass arising from the left adrenal gland. The patient was treated for a suspected pheochromocytoma. However, his blood pressure was not responsive to alpha-blockade. Blood pressure was controlled with a calcium channel blocker and an angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitor. A complete surgical resection of the mass was performed. Postoperatively, his blood pressure normalized and he did not require antihypertensives. On pathological examination, the tumor tissue stained negative for chromogranin and positive for renin. The final diagnosis was renin-secreting adrenal corticoadenoma, an extremely rare adrenal tumor not previously reported in a pediatric patient. Malignant hypertension due to a renin-secreting tumor may need to be distinguished from a pheochromocytoma if alpha-adrenergic blockade is ineffective.Entities:
Keywords: Adrenal mass; aldosterone; ectopic renin; malignant hypertension; pheochromocytoma
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26997629 PMCID: PMC4823597 DOI: 10.14814/phy2.12728
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Physiol Rep ISSN: 2051-817X
Laboratory results
| Serum/urine marker | Value | Age‐matched normal range |
|---|---|---|
| Urinary catecholamine breakdown products | ||
| HVA (mg/g creatinine) | 11.5 | 3–15 |
| VMA(mg/g creatinine) | 14.3 | 3–9 |
| Serum catecholamines | ||
| Epi (pg/mL) | 213 | 456 |
| NoEpi (pg/mL) | 1247 | 1252 |
| Spot urine catecholamines | ||
| Epi ( | 52 | 4–32 |
| NoEpi ( | 317 | 20–108 |
| 24‐h urine catecholamine | ||
| Epi ( | 3 | 1–7 |
| NoEpi ( | 66 | 5–41 |
| 24‐h urine metanephrines ( | 60 | 11–139 |
| 24‐h urine normetanephrines ( | 269 | 31–398 |
| Plasma renin activity (ng/mL per h) | 132.4 | 0.25–5.82 |
| Serum aldosterone (ng/dL) | 71 | <9 |
HVA, homovanillic acid; VMA, vanillylmandelic acid; Epi, epinephrine; NoEpi, norepinephrine.
Figure 1T2‐weighted MRI of abdomen, coronal view. The arrow indicates a 5‐cm lesion above the left kidney consistent with an adrenal mass.
Figure 2Histochemical analysis of adrenal mass. (A) H&E stain, 200× magnification. This section shows a monotonous population of neoplastic cells with abundant clear cytoplasm and small bland appearing nuclei. (B) 200×. Renin immunolabeling is demonstrated in red and is diffusely present in the tumor section. Normal adrenal tissue displays green autofluorescence.