| Literature DB >> 28053800 |
Hye Seung Lee1, Yoo Jin Choi1, Chungyeul Kim1, Baek-Hui Kim1.
Abstract
Background. Adrenal collision tumors (ACTs), in which distinct tumors coexist without intermingling in the same adrenal gland, are rare and their actual prevalence is unknown. ACTs commonly consist of adrenal cortical adenoma, pheochromocytoma, or metastatic malignant tumor. Case Report. A 32-year-old woman who had been experiencing gastric discomfort for one month was referred to our hospital with abnormal imaging findings. The physical examination and the laboratory data including endocrine studies were unremarkable. Abdomen computed tomography (CT) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) showed two adjacent masses in the left suprarenal fossa, and a laparoscopic left adrenalectomy was done. Histological and immunohistochemical (IHC) examinations revealed two distinct tumors: a pigmented adrenal cortical oncocytoma (ACO) and a ganglioneuroma, respectively. Conclusion. Both tumors are rare in the adrenal gland and exist as ACTs only exceptionally rarely. This is the first reported case of coexisting oncocytoma and ganglioneuroma in the same adrenal gland to our knowledge.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 28053800 PMCID: PMC5178330 DOI: 10.1155/2016/5790645
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Case Rep Surg
Figure 1Imaging findings of the patient. (a) Computed tomography shows two adjacent round solid masses in the left suprarenal fossa: a 4 cm low-density mass (arrowhead) and another 1.8 cm enhancing mass (arrow). (b) On T2 magnetic resonance imaging, the 4 cm mass (arrowhead) showed intermediate signal intensity with subtle peripheral and delayed centripetal enhancement in the arterial phase, suggesting a neurogenic tumor. In contrast, the 1.8 cm mass (arrow) showed similar intensity to the spleen.
Data of endocrine tests.
| Test | Value | Normal range |
|---|---|---|
| RI-aldosterone (erect) (serum) (ng/dL) |
| 2.7–27.2 |
| Renin (erect) (plasma) (ng/mL/hr) |
| 3.95–1.30 |
| Cortisol (serum) (suppressed) ( | 1.81 | <2 |
| ACTH (Plasma) (pg/mL) | 2.0 | 10–50 |
| Metanephrine, total (urine, 24 hrs) (mg/day) | 0.3 | <0.8 |
| Epinephrine (urine, 24 hrs) (ug/day) | 12.0 | 0–20 |
| Norepinephrine (urine, 24 hrs) (ug/day) | 39.0 | 15–80 |
| VMA (urine, 24 hrs) (mg/day) | 3.4 | 0–8 |
| Epinephrine (plasma) (pg/mL) | 49.3 | <111 (supine), |
| Norepinephrine (plasma) (pg/mL) | 107.1 | 70–750 (supine), |
| Metanephrine (plasma) (nmol/L) | 0.18 | <0.5 |
| Normetanephrine (plasma) (nmol/L) | 0.54 | <0.9 |
Significantly increased values are written in bold.
Figure 2Histological findings of the patient. (a) The gross specimen shows a 2 cm dark-brownish mass (arrow) and a 4.5 cm whitish solid mass (arrowhead) within the adrenal cortex. (b) The 2 cm mass showed abundant eosinophilic, granular cytoplasm with variable sized brown pigments (40x). (c) The 4.5 cm mass showed fascicles of Schwann-like cells and some clusters of ganglion cells (40x).