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Endocrine Abstracts (2013) 31 P121 | DOI: 10.1530/endoabs.31.P121

Birmingham Heartlands Hospital, Heart of England NHS Trust, Birmingham, West Midlands, UK.


Case: A 73-year-old Pakistani gentleman with known hypertension and type two diabetes mellitus initially presented to hospital hypotensive, with epigastric pain and vomiting. An abdominal CT confirmed no abdominal aortic aneurysm, but discovered incidental findings of a 5.5×3×3.7 cm left-sided adrenal mass and a 1.5 cm gallbladder stone. He was treated for suspected cholecystitis and 24-h urinary free catecholamines requested. Unfortunately he was lost to follow-up.

He was admitted few years later with symptoms of vomiting and bilateral flank pain. On this occasion he was hypertensive (211/123). Urine dipstick was positive for leucocytes, protein and blood with his biochemistry mimicking an acute kidney injury pattern. Given the raised WCC (24.1) and renal angle tenderness, he was treated for pyelonephritis. A repeat CT abdomen confirmed the previous adrenal mass with no change in size. Repeat urinary free catecholamines were elevated. The urinary free adrenaline level was 1470 nmol/coll (8–101) and noradrenaline level 748 nmol/coll (82–650). Both noradrenaline and adrenaline creatinine ratios were also raised. An MIBG scan demonstrated increased uptake in the left adrenal mass. A diagnosis of phaeochromocytoma was confirmed.

Following adequate adrenergic block with phenoxybenzamine, he underwent an elective laparoscopic left-sided adrenalectomy. He recovered well post-operatively with his urinary catecholamines both within normal range. Histology confirmed the mass was a phaeochromocytoma. Following surgery both his blood pressure and capillary blood sugars normalised post-operatively and therefore no longer required insulin or anti-hypertensives.

Discussion: Phaeochromocytomas are commonly associated with impaired glucose tolerance through excessive production of catecholamines, hormonal antagonists of insulin. If a phaeochromocytoma is diagnosed and managed appropriately, it can lead to a significant reduction in the patient’s insulin requirement and even resolution of their diabetes. Clinicians should maintain a high level of suspicion of secondary reversible causes when managing diabetic patients.

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