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42 year old man presents to ANW ER with fatigue and dizziness Past medical history includes Hypertension Hypokalemia Fatty infiltration of the liver Allergic rhinitis Viral encephalitis in the 1980’s without residual deficit. ANW ER HPI Feeling poorly for several weeks Feels fatigued, tired Dizzy at times with occasional frontal headache Chest feels tight Also feels anxious Has episodes of flushing and sweats Can not recall specific provocative or palliative associations with these symptoms but does note he seems to have these symptoms when he has been told his potassium is low Additional ROS Occasional loose stool, up to 3x a day, not bloody No fevers or chills diet changes, sick contacts etc. Also endorses polyuria, polydypsia, nocturia, and occasional blurred vision. Medications Alprazolam prn Atenolol 100mg qd Norvasc 10mg qd Cozaar / HCTZ 100/25 qd Viagra prn Flonase Potassium Chloride 20Meq TID Allergy to aspirin “facial swelling” Mom has DM and HTN MGM had HTN Never smoked, rare Etoh, no street drugs sexually active with male partners, practices safe sex and has multiple prior negative tests for std’s and HIV. Exam BP 179/100 | Pulse 78 | Temp 98.8 | Resp 18 | Ht 6' 2" (1.88m) | Wt 245 lbs (111.1kg) | SaO2 98% on room air Anxious Normal head and neck exam Lungs clear Normal cardiac exam, no bruits, bounding pulses, no edema Abdomen benign no masses or tenderness Normal neurologic exam, normal visual acuity, no field cuts no objective weakness, normal reflexes Labs Laboratory: 9/17/07 1505 WBC 8.8 HGB 16.3 MCV 85 PLT 232 INR -- SODIUM POTASSIUM CHLORIDE CO2TOTAL BUN CREATININE GLUCOSE CALCIUM PHOSPHORUS ALBUMIN -BILITOTAL BILIDIRECT ALT -AST -PHOSPHORUS PROTEIN -- TRPTQUANT TROPTQUAL 9/10/07 1245 7.0 17.0 86 241 -9/17/07 1505 138 2.6LL 26 15 1.0 145H --------9/17/07 1505 < 0.01 -- 9/10/07 1245 139 3.0L 99 28 17 1.1 153H 10.2 ---- -- 9/10/07 1245 < 0.01 -- 100 Imaging CXR normal Non contrast head CT normal EKG sinus, normal rate, normal intervals, no acute ST changes, normal axis, t waves flat diffusely inverted in v3-v6, no evidence of hypertrophy. Patient admitted for evaluation of hypertension, hypokalemia and lightheadedness Additional history Hypertension followed by MD for 5 years may have had it before that time Hypokalemia dating back 3 years, on replacement for one year Pt had been treated for his htn with atenolol, norvasc and cozaar. Hyzaar substituted for cozaar 8 months ago. Has never had good control of his blood pressure loose stools have been more recent 3-4 weeks. Outpatient work up of htn MRI 10/2005 : IMPRESSION: 1. Normal abdominal renal MRA with no evidence of renal artery stenosis. 2. Bilateral normal kidney size and parenchymal thickness. 3. No other abnormalities identified. 4. No adrenal masses are identified Labs 8/07 Plasma Renin activity level <0.1 ng/ml/hr ( 0.6 – 3 ) Aldosterone level 20 ng/dL ( 1 – 21 ng/dl) No potassium drawn at that time, though recently 3.1 Hospital Day #1 HCTZ stopped Cozaar, atenolol, norvasc continued Hydralazine added prn Urine metanephrines sent Potassium replaced Nephrology consultation obtained Telemetry, serial troponins, diarrhea evaluation should pt have loose stools ordered. Hgb A1c and fasting gluc ordered. Hospital Day #2 BP 157/89 , potassium 3.4 following replacement Renal consultation “In august he had a simultaneous renin and aldo level of 0.1 and 20.0 respectively when his potassium was low at 3.1. Last year he had an abd ct scan that showed a possible adrenal adenoma. Suggest repeating renin and aldo levels when potassium replete. Check 24 hour urine for aldosterone and get ct scan with special cuts of the adrenal glands. It is suggestive of hyperaldosteronism and it is possible that this is the problem.” CT abdomen 9/2006 At the proximal medial limb of the left adrenal gland there is a 12 mm hypodensity suggestive of, but not diagnostic of an adrenal adenoma. Repeat CT Abdomen 9/07 FINDINGS: A 12 x 16 mm low density lesion in the adrenal gland which does not enhance in the arterial phase but it enhances at 70 seconds. This lesion was also likely present on the MR October 21, 2005 not detected at that time due to adjacent volume averaging. IMPRESSION: 1. Fatty infiltration of the liver. 2. Indeterminate right adrenal mass. It was present on the MR in 2005 and is stable in size. The lesion likely represents a lipid poor adenoma. Hospital day #3 BP 150/88 Repeat renin and aldo levels pending 24 hour urine collection in process Surgical consult obtained to evaluate pt for possible resection of right adrenal adenoma Renal “Suppression test complete, but this will take days to get back. Given the pt's clinical scenario, already proven hyperaldo state, and the appearance of this adrenal mass, that is not c/w a simple adenoma per radiologists description, it seems that it should be removed regardless of hormonal activity. I would be comfortable with moving forward with surgery if surgeon is in agreement.” Hospital day 5 Pt taken to OR for uneventful right laparoscopic adrenalectomy 2 cm soft mass noted in or sent to pathology. Renin and Aldosterone levels return Renin < 0.6 ng/ml/hr ( 0.6 – 3 ) Aldosterone 18ng/dl ( 1 – 21 ng/dl) Potassium 3.6 at time labs drawn 24 hour urine Aldosterone ALDOSTERONE, URINE 30.2 H 2.3-21.0 MCG/24 H 24 hour metanephrines wnl Path report DIAGNOSIS RIGHT ADRENAL GLAND, LAPAROSCOPIC ADRENALECTOMY: 1. Adrenal cortical adenoma consistent with "aldosteronoma" 2. No evidence of malignancy 9/26/07 Pt discharged home Hospital day 9, postop day 5 BP 135/83 Pt discharged on cozaar 100 qd atenolol 100 qd hydralazine 50mg bid norvasc 10 qd KCl 20meq bid Serum Aldosterone 4.0 Renin activity < 0.6 Follow up 10/2 bp 122/84 hydralazine stopped, atenolol reduced to 50 qd Recheck potassium 5.0 KCl supplementation stopped 10/4 bp 100/70 atenolol stopped Seen in f/u by nephrology norvasc stopped 11/15 atenolol 50mg po qd Cozaar 100mg qd BP 122/80 Primary Aldosteronism Initially felt to account for roughly 1 % of hypertensive patients In a 2000 study J Clin Endocrinol Metab Sixty-three (18%) of the 350 hypertensive patients (215 women and 135 men; age range, 23-75 yr) were screened positive for primary aldosteronism According to the textbook The presence of primary mineralocorticoid excess (with aldosterone )should be suspected in any patient with the triad of hypertension, unexplained hypokalemia, and metabolic alkalosis How does it work? Aldosterone is synthesized in the adrenal cortex in the zona glomerulosa Aldosterone acts primarily in the distal nephron to increase the reabsorption of Na+ and Cl- and the secretion of K+ and H+ 30 to 90 minute latent period before electrolyte excretion is affected. angiotensin II (the production of which varies inversely with volume) and an elevation in the plasma K+ concentration are the major stimuli of aldosterone secretion. Aldosterone release can also be enhanced by ACTH and hyponatremia According to reality Normokalemia may be more common than hypokalemia in patients diagnosed with primary aldosteronism. In a retrospective international report less than 50 percent of diagnosed cases were hypokalemic at presentation J Clin Endocrinol Metab 2000 Aug Only 13 of these 63 subjects (21%) were hypokalemic J Clin Endocrinol Metab 2004 Mar This study is a retrospective evaluation of the diagnosis of PA from clinical centers. Only a small proportion of patients (between 9 and 37%) were hypokalemic. So what do you do? It has not been considered feasible to screen every hypertensive patient for primary aldosteronism. However, screening has been recommended in hypertensive patients with one or more of the following features Hypokalemia (including patients treated with low-dose diuretics as currently recommended) Severe, resistant, or relatively acute hypertension, which are suggestive of some form of secondary hypertension (eg, renal artery stenosis, pheochromocytoma) An adrenal incidentaloma Screening Plasma aldosterone concentration to plasma renin activity (PAC/PRA) ratio Primary aldosteronism should be suspected when PRA is suppressed and PAC is increased Secondary hyperaldosteronism (eg, renovascular disease) should be considered when both the PRA and PAC are increased and the PAC/PRA ratio is <10 (eg, renovascular disease) Pt should have nl potassium at time of test and can not be taking spironolactone or eplerenone In a patient already receiving spironolactone, therapy should be discontinued for at least six weeks The combination of a PAC above 20 ng/dL (555 pmol/L) and a PAC/PRA ratio above 30 had a sensitivity and specificity of 90 percent for the diagnosis of aldosteroneproducing adenoma To confirm pt needs to be salt loaded either po or with saline 24-hour urine specimen is collected for measurement of aldosterone, sodium, and creatinine. The 24-hour urine sodium excretion should exceed 200 meq to document adequate sodium loading. Urine aldosterone excretion >14 µg/24 hours (39 nmol/day) in this setting is consistent with hyperaldosteronism. CT or MRI to evaluate hyperplasia vs discrete adenoma Adenomas account for approximately 30 to 60 percent of cases and should be considered for surgical removal. Adrenal hyperplasia is generally a milder disease with less hypersecretion of aldosterone and less hypokalemia; it should be treated with an aldosterone receptor antagonist. Outcomes Surgery Hypokalemia improved in all patients Hypertension is improved in all and is cured in approximately 30 to 60 percent of patients. Resolution of hypertension associated with Lack of family history of hypertension Shorter duration of hypertension and use of two or fewer antihypertensive agents Younger age Higher preoperative ratio of plasma aldosterone concentration to plasma renin activity, and higher urine aldosterone level