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بسم الله الرحمن الرحيم.

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Presentation on theme: "بسم الله الرحمن الرحيم."— Presentation transcript:

1 بسم الله الرحمن الرحيم

2 Disorders of the adrenal glands

3 Disorders of the adrenal glands result in classic
endocrine syndromes such as -cushing syndrome, -hyperaldosteronism, & -catechol excess from pheochromocytoma. The diagnosis of these disorders requires careful endocrine evaluation & imaging with CT or MRI.

4 Diseases of the adrenal cortex.
Cushing syndrome. Clinical condition caused by overproduction of cortisol. If we exclude exogenous causes -80% bilateral adrenocortical hyperplasia stimulated by overproduction of adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH). -10% of cases are due to ectopic production of ACTH from non pituitary tumors, -5% due to adrenal adenoma, & -5% adrenal carcinoma.

5 Pathophysiology. Overproduction of cortisol by adrenocortical tissue leads to catabolic state. This cause liberation of amino acid from muscle tissue which are transformed into glucose & glycogen in the liver by gluconeogenesis. The resulting weakened protein structures (muscle & elastic tissue) cause protuberant abdomen & poor wound healing, generalized muscle weakness, & marked osteoporosis, which is made worse by excessive loss of calcium in the urine.

6 In addition, glucose is transformed largely into fat &
appear in characteristic site such as the abdomen, supraclavicular fat pads, & cheeks. There is tendency to diabetes & hypertension. The cortisol excess also suppresses the immune mechanisms, which make the patient susceptible to repeated infection.

7 Clinical findings. -Central obesity, -striae, -hypertension, -emotional lability, & -osteoporosis. Laboratory finding. -Polycythemia is present in over half of the cases, but -anemia may occur in pt with malignant tumor ectopically secreting ACTH. -Increase serum sodium & CO2 levels & -decrease in serum potassium levels. -Hyperglycemia may occur.

8 Specific tests for cushing syndrome.
a.24-h urinary cortisol. (normal range microgram/24 h), a value > 2-fold elevated is typical of cushing syndrome. False positive elevations can occur in acute illness, depression, & alcoholism.

9 b. suppression of ACTH & plasma cortisol by
dexamethasone. If dexamethasone is given at 11 PM, ACTH is suppressed in normal persons but not in those with cushing syndrome. CT &MRI of both the pituitary & abdomen may help to localize the site of pathology.

10 Treatment. Medical treatment is indicated in pt who cannot undergo surgery. Surgical therapy. -Transsphenoidal resection of pituitary adenoma, or total bilateral adrenalectomy (in pt with unresectable pituitary tumor & radiotherapy & chemotherapy fail to control cortisol excess). -removal of primary tumor in cases of ectopic ACTH. -Adrenal adenoma & adrenal carcinoma are now removed laparoscopically.

11 Congenital adrenal hyperplasia (CAH)
A congenital defect in certain adrenal enzymes result in the production of abnormal steroids, causing pseudohermaphroditism in female & macrogenitosomia in males. The enzyme defect is associated with excess androgen production in utero.

12 In female the mullerian duct structures ( e.g. ovaries,
uterus, & vagina) develop normally, but the excess androgen exerts a masculinizing effect on the urogenital sinus & genital tubercle. So that externally, the appearance is that of severe hypospadias with cryptorchidism.

13 Clinical finding. -In the newborn girls, the appearance of external genitalia resembles severe hypospadias with cryptorchidism. -Infant boys appear normal at birth. *The earlier the intrauterine life the fetus has been exposed to excess androgen, the more marked the anomalies. -In untreated cases, hirsutism, excess muscle mass, and eventually, amenorrhea are the rule. -Breast development is poor.

14 In males growth of phallus is excessive.
The testes are often atrophic because of inhibition of gonadotropins secretion by the elevated androgens. Laboratory findings. Urinary 17-ketosteroid levels are higher than normal for sex & age. Plasma testosterone also elevated. CT may show hypertrophied adrenals.

15 Treatment. It is imperative to make the diagnosis early. Treatment of the underlying cause is medical, with the goal of suppressing excessive ACTH secretion. thus minimizing excess androgenicity. This is accomplished by adrenal replacement with cortisol or prednisone in doses sufficient to suppress adrenal androgen production & therefore prevent virilization & rapid skeletal growth.

16 Adrenocortical tumors
Adrenocortical tumors producing androgens are most frequently carcinomas, however, few benign adenomas have been reported. Most of the carcinomas also hypersecrete other hormones (i.e. cortisol) & thus the clinical presentation is variable.

17 Female patients present with androgen excess, which
may be severe enough to cause virilization. Many of these patients also have cushing syndrome & mineralocorticoid excess (hypertension & hypokalemia). In adult male -excess androgen may cause no clinical manifestation, & diagnosis in these patient may be delayed until there is abdominal pain or an abdominal mass -These patient may also present with cushing syndrome or mineralocorticoid excess.

18 The tumor can be located by CT scan, which is also
used to define the extent of tumor spread. Local invasion & distant spread to the liver & lungs are common at the time of diagnosis. The primary therapy is surgical resection of the adrenal tumor.

19 Primary aldosteronism
Excessive production of aldosterone, due mostly to aldosteronoma or to spontaneous bilateral hyperplasia of the zona glomerulosa of the adrenal cortex, leads to combination of hypertension, hypokalemia, nocturia, & polyuria. A syndrome resembling nephrogenic diabetes insipidus may occur as a result of reversible damage to the renal collecting tubules. The alkalosis may produce tetany.

20 Clinical finding -Hypertension is usually the presenting symptoms & the accompanying hypokalemia suggest mineralocorticoid excess. -Headache are common, nocturia is invariably present, & rare episodes of paralysis occur with very low serum potassium levels. -Numbness & tingling of the extremities are related to alkalosis that may lead to tetany.

21 Laboratory finding. High serum sodium & CO2 + low serum potassium & increase urinary potassium. Definite diagnosis by measuring elevated serum & urine aldosterone with suppression of plasma renin to be differentiated from renal hypertension with also elevated aldosterone & renin levels.

22 Localization. -CT scan will localize adenoma in 90% of cases. -If no adenoma visualized adrenal vein sampling of aldosterone & cortisol will correctly differentiate adenoma from hyperplasia in virtually all cases.

23 Treatment If the site of the tumor has been established only the affected adrenal need to be removed. The procedure of choice is laparoscopic unilateral adrenalectomy. Medical treatment is recommended for -bilateral hyperplasia -mild hypertension in older person. Spironolactone ( aldactone) mg orally 4-times daily. Or Amiloride potassium sparing diuretic may be given in dose up to mg /day. Other antihypertensive may also be necessary.

24 Disease of the adrenal medulla
Pheochromocytoma derived from the neural crest, it is one of the surgically curable hypertensive syndrome, there is no sex predilection. It account 1% of hypertension, but it is readily diagnosed if the possibility is kept in mind. It usually occur spontaneously 10% associated with other disorders like neurofibromatosis, 10% bilateral, 10% extra-adrenal, 10% malignant.

25 Clinical findings -Hypertension is both systolic & diastolic. May either sustained or paroxysmal (coming on for variable length of time & then subsiding to normal level). Trigger mechanisms is emotional stress, or straining at stool. -Headache, increase sweating without appropriate cause, -tachycardia with palpitations, &

26 -postural hypotension is frequent finding.
-Profound weakness may occur after an attack of hypertension. -Weight loss is common. -Decrease gastrointestinal motility occurs, leading to nausea, vomiting & constipation. -Episodes of emotional instability.

27 Biochemical diagnosis.
Elevated plasma & urinary catecholamine (Epinephrine norepinephrine) or metabolites (Vanillylmandelic acid) during the attack is usually diagnostic. Localization. CT scan is the initial imaging procedure of choice &MRI or radionuclide scanning may be used in certain cases. Pheochromocytoma 98% intra-abdominal & 90% intra-adrenal.

28 Treatment Usually surgical the use of long acting alpha-adrenergic blocker has minimize surgical mortality & morbidity.

29 Incidentaloma The most common presentation of adrenal masses is incidental observation on cross-sectional imaging performed for other reasons. D.Dx quite broad & include -benign adenoma, -functional adrenal tumors, -metastases, & -benign adrenal lesion such as myelolipoma & neurofibroma.

30 A systemic approach is required to differentiate
functional adrenal masses that deserve removal & those lesions with significant risk of carcinoma from the more common benign nonfunctional adenoma.

31 Metabolic evaluation. A careful history & physical examination with focus on -obesity pattern, -virilization, -glucose intolerance & -hypertension is warranted. Laboratory examination serum electrolytes including glucose & potassium should be done. If hypokalemia is present then other testes for aldosterone are indicated.

32 A 24 hr urinary free cortisol to rule out cushing &
urinary metanephrines & normetanephrines to rule out pheochromocytoma are recommended. If the test that identified adrenal mass ultrasound or CT then MRI may be indicated if needed. *Lesions that are primarily cystic on CT or MRI are typically benign & can be followed with serial imaging.

33 *All functional adrenal masses & those over 5 cm
should be removed . laparoscopic adrenalectomy is the preferred technique except in very large masses. *Nonfunctional adrenal masses < 5cm removed if they have feature of malignancy irregular, hemorrhagic or demonstrated growth. *Those <3 cm generally be followed up with serial CT every 6 months.

34 Neuroblastoma Are of neural crest origin & may develop from any sympathetic chain. *Most arise in the retroperitoneum, - 45% involve adrenal gland.( poorest prognosis) *in childhood neuroblastoma is the third most common neoplastic disease after leukemia and brain tumors.

35 *most are encountered in the First 2.5 years of life,
but a few are seen as late as the sixth decade, when they seem to be lees aggressive. *Abnormalities of muscle and heart and hemihypertrophy have been observed in association with neuroblastoma.

36 *Metastases spread through both the bloodstream &
lymphatic. Common sites include skull & long bone, regional LN, liver & lung. *Best prognosis if metastasis limited to the liver & subcutaneous fat.

37 Staging of neuroblastoma
Stage1- confined to the structure of origin. Stage2- beyond the organ but not crossing midline. Stage3- beyond the midline. Stage4- remote. Involving skeletal, soft tissue or distant LN Stage5- stage 1 or 2 with remote spread confined to one of the following liver, skin, & bone marrow.

38 Clinical findings *Abdominal mass usually noted by parent, physician or patient usually palpable may be visible. *70% of pt have metastasis when 1st seen. *Symptoms related to metastases include fever, malaise, bone pain, failure to thrive & constipation or diarrhea. *Ocular proptosis from metastases to skull *Hypertension is often noted

39 Laboratory finding * 70% elaborate norepinephrine & epinephrine *Urinary VMA level should be measured. Can be used as tumor markers for diagnosis, response to therapy & prognosis. Bone marrow aspiration may reveal tumor cells. CT used for diagnosis & staging.

40 DDX. -wilms tumor, -hydronephrosis, -polycystic renal disease, -neonatal adrenal hemorrhage. Treatment -surgical excision. -For stage 4 & high risk stage 3 chemotherapy typically given followed by surgery & radiation therapy for residual disease.

41 Best prognosis -Stage 1 & 2 disease (have 80% survival rate) -Infant -tumor confined to the primary site High risk including -age >1 yr. -Metastasis -amplification of the MYCN oncogene -Particular histologic finding.


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