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J.Jpn. Surg. Soc.. 106(8): 479-483, 2005
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DIAGNOSIS AND SURGICAL TREATMENT OF ADRENAL TUMORS
Adrenal surgery is necessary for the management of functioning adrenal tumors, such as aldosterone-producing adenoma, cortisol-producing adenoma, and pheochromocytoma. The role of adrenal imaging in primary hyperaldosteronism is to separate the surgically resectable unilateral aldosteronoma from bilateral hyperplasia. Once the clinical diagnosis of primary hyperaldosteronism is confirmed, adrenal computed tomography (CT) with 3-mm sections should be the first imaging study. If the results of CT and NP-59 scintigraphy are equivocal, adrenal venous sampling is necessary. Cortisol-producing adrenocortical adenomas are seen as adrenal masses 2.5 cm or larger in diameter in CT scanning. When an adrenal mass measures more than 5 cm in diameter, a functioning adrenal carcinoma should be considered. Symptomatic pheochromocytomas are almost always 2 cm or larger. On MR scanning, pheochromocytomas are extremely bright on T2-weighted images. In patients with ectopic pheochromocytomas,
131I-MIBG scintigraphy should be mandatory. In the past decade, laparoscopic adrenalectomy has replaced open adrenalectomy as a standard operative procedure for benign adrenal tumors. Adrenal-sparing laparoscopic surgery has recently become a feasible option in patients with hereditary bilateral pheochromocytomas.
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