Endocrine Pathology: Adrenal Gland Flashcards

1
Q

Adrenal Cortex Hyperfunction

  1. AKA
  2. symptoms are caused by
A
  1. Cushing’s syndrome

2. chronic excess of cortisol (glucocorticoids)

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2
Q

Adrenal Cortex Hyperfunction

1. Caused by? (4) Give examples

A
  1. exogenous sources of glucocorticoid therapy used over a long period of time (most common)
  2. pituitary or hypothalamic sources with hypersecretion of ACTH (basophilic adenoma, endogenous sources more common in young women)
  3. Ectopic production of ACTH by nonendocrine tumor (small cell carcinoma of the lung, endoogenous source more common in middle age men)
  4. Primary pathology of adrenal cortex causing excess secretion of cortisol independent of ACTH (rare compared to the other causes)
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3
Q

Adrenal Hyperfunction

  1. What does exogenous cortisol do to adrenal cortex?
  2. What does an ACTH producing pituitary adenoma do to the adrenal cortex?
  3. What does an ectopic source of ACTH do to adrenal cortex?
A
  1. cortical atrophy
  2. bilateral diffuse or nodular hyperplasia of the cortex
  3. cortical hyperplasia
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4
Q

Adrenal Hyperplasia

  1. What can occur besides growth?
  2. Histo look
  3. Gross look of an adenoma
  4. Gross look of a carcinoma
  5. Histo look of adrenal carcinoma
A
  1. pigmentation due to lipofusion
  2. loses holes that are lipid producing cells
  3. yellow mass (due to cholesterol), rest of adrenal gland is OK and may be functioning;
  4. large, hemorrhagic, looks infiltrative
  5. marked anaplasia
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5
Q

Adrenal Hyperplasia: Clinical manifestations

  1. What happens to glucocorticoids?
  2. Other symptoms
A
  1. increased glucocorticoids (w/ or w/o increased ACTH depends on pathogenesis)
  2. central obesity, moon faces, plethora (hypervolemia), loss of muscle mass, weakness, fatigability, acne, hirsutism, menstrual abnormality, hyperglycemia (diabetes), hypertension, osteoporosis, skin striae, easy bruisability, poor wound healing, psychosis
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6
Q

Primary Hyperaldosteronism

  1. Define
  2. Etiology (2)
  3. Who gets the second one?
A
  1. condition characterized by excess secretion of cortical aldosterone independent of renin-angiotensin system
  2. Bilateral idiopathic cortical hyperplasia (60%);
    Conn’s syndrome- solitary adenoma of the cortex (35-40%); females>males; 30-40 y/o
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7
Q

Primary Hyperaldosteronism: Clinical Manifestations

  1. What happens to aldosterone and renin?
  2. What happens to serum sodium and extracellular fluid volume?
  3. What happens to serum potassium?
  4. other symptoms
A
  1. increased aldosterone, decreased renin
  2. increased serum sodium, increased extracellular fluid volume
  3. decreased serum potassium
  4. HTN, weakness, parathesias, visual disturbances
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8
Q

Secondary Hyperaldosteronism

  1. What happens to aldosterone and renin?
  2. Why?
A
  1. both are increased

2. renal ischemia –> renin release –> aldosterone release

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9
Q

Androgenital Syndromes

  1. Define
  2. Etiologies (2)
A
  1. conditions characterized by structural or biochemical abnormalities of the adrenal cortex which leads to a disorder of sexual differentiation
  2. Adrenal cortical carcinoma/adenoma secreting excess androgen
  3. defect of enzyme involved in synthesis of cortical steroids; different syndromes develop based on which enzyme is deficient; usually autosomal recessive
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10
Q

21 hydroxylase deficiency

  1. What is it a type of?
  2. What does the enzyme usually do?
  3. What happens when it is missing?
  4. When does it present in females?
  5. When does it present in males?
  6. What happens to actual cortical glands?
A
  1. adrenogenital syndrome
  2. converts progesterone to deoxycortisone (which is later converted into cortisone)
  3. deficiency of aldosterone and salt wasting, decreased production of cortisol;
    shift in steroidogenesis in favor of increased androgen production
  4. at birth due to ambiguous genitalia
  5. harder to tell, a few days after birth when baby becomes dehyrdated
  6. bilateral cortical hyperplasia due to increased ACTH
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11
Q

21 hydroxylase deficiency/ Androgen secreting adenoma: Clinical Manifestations (2)

A
  1. Virilism

2. Salt loss- depending on enzyme deficiency

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12
Q

Adrenal Cortex Hypofunction: Primary Acute Adrenocortical Insufficiency

  1. Define
  2. Usually caused by?
  3. 2 Other causes
A
  1. sudden significant loss of corticosteroids necessary to maintain normal metabolic homeostasis or inability to respond immediately with enough corticosteroids to meet metabolic demand
  2. physicians w/ rapid withdrawal of steroids when a pt’s adrenals have been suppressed by long term steroid therapy
  3. Destruction of the adrenal gland (Waterhouse-Friderichsen syndrome)
  4. insufficient levels of steroids to meet a crisis or stress in a pt with chronic cortical insufficiency
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13
Q

Waterhouse-Friderichsin Syndrome

  1. What is the underlying cause?
  2. What happens?
  3. What is the usual cause?
A
  1. Septicemia, usually meningococci
  2. Hypotension, shock, DIC —> massive bilateral adrenal hemorrhage and destruction
  3. Neisseria meningitis
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14
Q

Primary Chronic Adrenal Cortical Insufficiency: Addison’s Disease

  1. Define
  2. Etiologies (4)
  3. Pathology
A
  1. chronic destruction of the adrenal cortex leading to hypofunction (90%) destroyed
  2. Autoimmune adrenalitis (70%; Autoimmune polyendocrine (APS) type 1; APS type 2; isolated autoimmune adrenalitis (polygenic)
  3. TB
  4. AIDS
  5. Metastatic Cancer, especially lung, stomach, and breast
  6. Varies with etiology
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15
Q

Primary Chronic Adrenal Cortical Insufficiency: Addison’s Disease

  1. What happens to cortisol? ACTH? what happens to 17-ketosteroids and 17-hydroxycorticoids in urine?
  2. What happens to sodium? chloride? HCO?, glucose? serum potassium?
  3. Other symptoms
  4. Why does the skin become hyperpigmented?
A
  1. decreased cortisol, may have increased ACTH; 17-keto/17-hydroxy in urine decrease
  2. decrease in Na, Cl, HCO3, and glucose, increase serum Potassium
  3. hyperpigmentation of skin, hypotension, weakness, fatigability, anorexia
  4. MSH is released along with ACTH, used as a precursor for melanocytes
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16
Q

Secondary Adrenocortical Insufficiency

  1. Define
  2. Etiology (2)
A
  1. hypoadrenalism caused by a reduction in ACTH levels

2. Prolonged steroid therapy (most common); multiple causes including pituitary or hypothalamic destruction

17
Q

Secondary Adrenocortical Insufficiency: Clinical Manifestations

  1. What happens to ACTH? cortisol? androgens? mineralocorticoids?
  2. What happens when exogenous ACTH is given? What does this tell you?
  3. Is there hyperpigmentation? why?
A
  1. decreased ACTH, cortisol, and androgens; normal mineralocorticoids
  2. cortisol rises; tells you that this is secondary (does not occur in primary)
  3. no; melanotropic hormone is low along with low levels of ACTH (they are released together)
18
Q

Pheochromocytoma

  1. Define
  2. Where do they occur?
  3. Malignant or benign? How do you tell?
  4. Are most sporadic or related to a disorder? What disorders?
A
  1. neoplasm arising from neuroendocrine cells (chromaffin cells) in the paraganglion system (adrenal medulla/extra-adrenal paraganglion system)
  2. 85-90% arise in adrenal medulla
  3. could be either or; tell by malignancy
  4. most are sporadic, 25% occur due to MEN syndrome or familial paragangliomas 1,3, and 4 (mutations in succinate dehydrogenase complex enzymes)
19
Q

Pheochromocytoma: Clinical Manifestations

  1. Symptoms (5)
  2. What causes symptoms?
  3. How is it diagnosed?
  4. What familial syndromes is it found in?
A
  1. HTN (sustained or in paroxysms), headache, sweating, anxiety, tremor
  2. release of catecholamines which can precipitate an AMI, CHF< ventricular fibrillation, CVA
  3. chemical diagnosis; evaluation of urinary catecholamine metabolites including metanephrine (from epi) and vanillymandelic acid (VMA, from NE)
  4. MEN type II or IIA, MEN type III or IIB, von Hippel-Lindau, von Recklinghausen, Sturge-Weber, SDH syndromes
20
Q

Neuroblastoma

  1. Define
  2. Gross look; where does it arise?
  3. Micro look
  4. Who gets it?
  5. How does it present?
A
  1. neoplasm which arises in the adrenal medulla or extra-adrenal paraganglion tissue
  2. large bulky tumors; 25% in adrenal glands, others in paravertebral regions of the posterior mediastinum and abdomen
  3. small, primitive appearing cells w/ dark nuclei in sheets or Homer-Wright rosettes
  4. one of the most common childhood neoplasms; 90% occur before 5 y/o
  5. large abdominal mass in a child younger than 2 years w/ a fever; older child presents with metastases
21
Q

Multiple Endocrine Neoplasia Syndromes

  1. Define
  2. What do you get in MEN 1?
  3. MEN IIa?
  4. MEN IIb?
  5. Mutant gene locus in MEN I
  6. Mutant gene locus in MEN II
A
  1. MENs are inherited conditions (autosomal dominant) which are characterized by multiple endocrine neoplasms
  2. parathyroid, pancreas, pituitary, adrenal and thyroid lesions
  3. medullary thyroid carcinoma, pheochromocytoma
  4. medullary thyroid carcinoma, pheochromocytoma, mucocutaneous ganglioneuromas
  5. MEN I (tumor suppressor gene)
  6. RET (proto-oncogene)