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Adrenal surgery: Trends during the seventies
Authors:Bertil Hamberger  Colin F. Russell  Jonathan A. Van Heerden  William H. ReMine  Robert C. Northcutt  Patrick F. Sheedy  Duane M. Ilstrup
Affiliation:4. Rochester, Minnesota U.S.A.;1. Dr. Hamberger is a visiting clinician from the Department of Surgery, Karolinska Hospital, Stockholm, Sweden;2. Dr. Russell is a visiting clinician from the Royal Victoria Hospital, Belfast, Northern Ireland;3. Dr. Russell is a visiting Recipient of an Ethicon Foundation Grant and a Wellcome Research Travel Grant U.S.A.
Abstract:Surgical experience with adrenal disease from 1970 to 1979 was reviewed in 315 patients. The pathologic conditions that were encountered were hypercortisolism (74 patients), hyperaldosteronism (46 patients), adrenocortical carcinoma (35 patients), pheochromocytoma (77 patients), and nonfunctioning adenoma (47 patients). In addition, 5 patients with metastatic lesions, 14 with cysts, and 4 with myelolipoma were surgically treated. The accuracy of localizing adrenal lesions increased from about 50 percent to almost 100 percent during the decade studied. The increase was due mainly to the introduction of computerized tomography, the most important advance in the management of adrenal disease. The present study shows that adrenal surgery can be performed with low morbidity and mortality. Operative deaths were confined to patients with malignant disease or increased secretion of cortisol or catecholamines. Only patients with adrenocortical carcinoma (2 year survival probability, 34 percent) or hypercortisolism due to cortical hyperplasia (5 year survival probability, 76 percent) had significantly decreased survival.
Keywords:Requests for reprints should be addressed to Jonathan A. van Heerden   MD   Mayo Clinic   200 First Street SW   Rochester   Minnesota 55905.
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