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| Adrenal Cortical Adenoma |
| Etiology Unknown. |
| Pathogenesis Unknown., |
| Epidemiology More frequently seen in women than men More common in the fourth and fifth decades of life May be associated with Cushing's syndrome (primary hypercortisolism), primary hyperaldosteronism (Conn's syndrome), or may be non-functioning. |
| General Gross Description Golden-yellow to yellow-orange Bulges from the cortical surface Surrounded by a delicate capsule Weight < 30 grams |
| General Microscopic Description Cortical cells with round to oval nuclei, small nucleoli, and abundant often lipid-laden cytoplasm Mixture of cell types, some small and lacking in lipid, others much larger Cytologic atypia may occur and does not indicate malignancy |
| Clinical Correlation 10-15% of adults with Cushing's syndrome characterized by central obesity, moon facies, hirsutism, hypertension, weakness and skin striae have an autonomous source of excess cortisol emanating from an adrenal adenoma 65% of patients with primary hyperaldosteronism have a solitary adrenal cortical adenoma Less than 0.2% of patients with hypertension have an aldosterone secreting adenoma. Complete surgical excision of the neoplasm is curative |
| References Cotran RS, Kumar V, Robbins SL: Robbins Pathologic Basis of Disease. 5th ed. Philadelphia, W.B. Saunders, 1994, pp. 1150-1154,1160-1. |
| Adrenal Cortical Adenoma |
| Synopsis by: Melinda Sanders M.D. (T93000M81400)[5] |
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