999 resultados para Primary Aldosteronism


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BACKGROUND: In recent years, the assessment of the plasma aldosterone-to-renin ratio (ARR) has become an established screening method for the diagnosis of primary aldosteronism. Plasma renin activity (PRA) is usually measured to define ARR although, increasingly, renin concentration alone is often measured in clinical routine. OBJECTIVE: To determine the threshold of ARR using active renin concentration to screen for primary aldosteronism. DESIGN AND PARTICIPANTS: To determine the ARR threshold based on plasma immunoreactive renin concentration (irR), we measured plasma aldosterone concentration (PAC), irR and PRA in 36 hypertensive patients, nine thereof with adrenal adenoma, and compared ARRs calculated from irR and PRA, respectively. SETTING: Single-centre, hypertension clinic in a tertiary care hospital. RESULTS: PRA ranged from 0.41-14.9 ng/ml per h and irR from 1.1-72 ng/l. There was an excellent correlation between PRA and irR (r = 0.98, P < 0.0001) and between ARRPRA and ARRirR (r = 0.96, P < 0.0001). An ARRPRA > 750 pmol/l per ng/ml per h was previously found to be highly predictive of primary aldosteronism because 90% of the corresponding patients failed to suppress PAC upon saline infusion or fludrocortisone. The corresponding threshold value for ARRirR was 150 pmol/ng in our patients. Using these cut-offs, nine subjects had both increased ARRPRA and ARRirR while, in three patients, either ARRPRA or ARRirR were increased. The nine patients with increased ARRPRA and ARRirR also had PAC > 650 pmol/l. Only these patients had adrenal adenomas. CONCLUSIONS: The ARR threshold to screen for primary aldosteronism may be based on measurement of irR. An ARRirR > 150 pmol/ng may indicate primary aldosteronism.

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Primary aldosteronism (PA) is a common form of endocrine hypertension previously believed to account for less than 1% of hypertensive patients. Hypokalemia was considered a prerequisite for pursuing diagnostic tests for PA. Recent studies applying the plasma aldosterone/plasma renin activity ratio (ARR) as a screening test have reported a higher prevalence. This study is a retrospective evaluation of the diagnosis of PA from clinical centers in five continents before and after the widespread use of the ARR as a screening test. The application of this strategy to a greater number of hypertensives led to a 5- to 15-fold increase in the identification of patients affected by PA. Only a small proportion of patients ( between 9 and 37%) were hypokalemic. The annual detection rate of aldosterone-producing adenoma (APA) increased in all centers ( by 1.3-6.3 times) after the wide application of ARR. Aldosterone-producing adenomas constituted a much higher proportion of patients with PA in the four centers that employed adrenal venous sampling ( 28 - 50%) than in the center that did not (9%). In conclusion, the wide use of the ARR as a screening test in hypertensive patients led to a marked increase in the detection rate of PA. Copyright © 2004 by The Endocrine Society

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Once considered rare, primary aldosteronism (PAL) is now regarded as the commonest potentially curable and specifically treatable form of hypertension. At Greenslopes Hospital Hypertension Unit (GHHU), the decision in 1991 to screen all (and not just hypokalemic or resistant) hypertensives by aldosterone/renin ratio (ARR) testing led to a 10-fold increase in detection rate of PAL and four-fold increase in removal rate of aldosterone-producing adenomas (APAs). The GHHU/Princess Alexandra Hospital Hypertension Unit PAL series stands at 977 patients and 250 APAs removed with hypertension cured in 50-60% (remainder improved). Reliable detection requires that interfering medications are withdrawn (or their effects considered) before ARR measurement, and reliable methods (such as fludrocortisone suppression testing) to confirm PAL. Adrenal venous sampling is the only dependable way to differentiate APA from bilateral adrenal hyperplasia. Genetic testing has facilitated detection of alucocorticoid-remediable, familial PAL. Identification of mutations causing the more common familial variety described by GHHU in 1991 should further aid in detection of PAL. (C) 2003 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.

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Recognition that primary aldosteronism (PAL) is a common specifically treatable form of hypertension and that most patients are normokalemic has led to a marked increase in demand for aldosterone/renin ratio (ARR) testing as a means of screening for this disorder. The value of this screening test depends on an appreciation of many factors (such as diet, posture, time of day, presence of hypokalemia, medications, age, and renal function), which can affect the results, on the care with which these factors are either controlled or their effects taken into account, and on access to reliable and reproducible assays for renin and aldosterone. Even then, physiological day-to-day variability reduces the value of a single estimation, and repeated testing is necessary before a decision that PAL is highly likely (warranting further testing) or highly unlikely can be made. Provided that testing of aldosterone suppressibility is always carried out to confirm or exclude the diagnosis, and the subtype is determined by hybrid gene testing and adrenal venous sampling, wide application of the ARR can have a major beneficial clinical impact with improved therapeutic outcomes, including possible cure in those with unilateral disease.

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The prevalence of "primary aldosteronism" (PAL) cannot be precisely determined at this time, given 1) lack of a universally accepted definition, and 2) normotensive as well as normokalemic phases in the evolutionary development of a disease eventually characterized by hypertension and hypokalemia. The exception is fully genetically characterised forms such as glucocorticoid-suppressible hyperaldosteronism, the true prevalence of which could be proven today by universal screening using a single blood sample, but this is neither practical nor appropriate. Controversy has arisen regarding the rareness, or otherwise, of PAL because of 1) rediscovery in the last 12 years of the normokalemic phase described by Conn, 2) application of widely available methods for measurement of aldosterone and renin to "screening", 3) variable quality of these methods, and of their application, and 4) lack of the necessary "diagnostic", in addition to "screening", tests in some studies. PAL is significantly more common than previously thought, and a very important potentially curable form of hypertension. Early diagnosis and specific treatment avoids morbidity. The current focus on increased detection is essential, and will help to resolve the question of prevalence.

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Les tumeurs du cortex surrénalien sont variées et fréquentes dans la population. Bien que des mutations aient été identifiées dans certains syndromes familiaux, les causes génétiques menant à la formation de tumeur du cortex surrénalien ne sont encore que peu connues. Un sous-type de ces tumeurs incluent les hyperplasies macronodulaires et sont pressenties comme la voie d’entrée de la tumorigenèse du cortex surrénalien. L’événement génétique le plus fréquemment observé dans ces tumeurs est l’expression aberrante d’un ou plusieurs récepteurs couplés aux protéines G qui contrôle la production de stéroïdes ainsi que la prolifération cellulaire. L’événement génétique menant à l’expression aberrante de ces récepteurs est encore inconnu. En utilisant le récepteur au peptide insulinotropique dépendant du glucose (GIP) comme modèle, cette étude se propose d’identifier les mécanismes moléculaires impliqués dans l’expression aberrante du récepteur au GIP (GIPR) dans les tumeurs du cortex surrénalien. Une partie clinique de cette étude se penchera sur l’identification de nouveaux cas de tumeurs surrénaliennes exprimant le GIPR de façon aberrante. Les patients étudiés seront soumis à un protocole d’investigation in vivo complet et les tumeurs prélevées seront étudiées extensivement in vitro par RT-PCR en temps réel, culture primaire des tumeurs, immunohistochimie et biopuces. Le lien entre le GIP et la physiologie normal sera également étudiée de cette façon. Une autre partie de l’étude utilisera les nouvelles techniques d’investigation à grande échelle en identifiant le transcriptome de différents cas de tumeurs exprimant le GIPR de façon aberrante. L’importance fonctionnelle des gènes identifiée par ces techniques sera confirmée dans des modèles cellulaires. Cette étude présente pour la première des cas de tumeurs productrices d’aldostérone présentant des réponses aberrantes, auparavant confinées aux tumeurs productrice de cortisol ou d’androgènes surrénaliens. Le cas probant présenté avait une production d’aldostérone sensible au GIP, le GIPR était surexprimé au niveau de l’ARNm et un fort marquage a été identifié dans la tumeur spécifiquement. Dans les surrénales normales, cette étude démontre que le GIP est impliqué dans le contrôle de la production d’aldostérone. Ces résultats ont été confirmés in vitro. Finalement, le profilage à grande échelle des niveaux d’expression de tous les gènes du génome a permis d’isoler une liste de gènes spécifiquement liés à la présence du GIPR dans des hyperplasies du cortex surrénalien. Cette liste inclus la périlipine, une protéine de stockage des lipides dans les adipocytes et la glande surrénale, dont l’expression est fortement réprimée dans les cas GIP-dépendant. Des études dans un modèle cellulaire démontrent que la répression de ce gène par siRNA est suffisante pour induire l’expression du récepteur au GIP et que cette protéine est impliquée dans la stimulation de la stéroïdogénèse par le GIP. En alliant des méthodes d’investigation in vivo de pointe à des techniques in vitro avancée, cette étude offre de nouveaux regards sur les liens entre le GIP et la physiologie de la glande surrénale, que ce soit dans des conditions normales ou pathologiques.

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Essential, primary, or idiopathic hypertension is defined as high BP in which secondary causes such as renovascular disease, renal failure, pheochromocytoma, hyperaldosteronism, or other causes of secondary hypertension are not present. Essential hypertension accounts for 80-90% of all cases of hypertension; it is a heterogeneous disorder, with different patients having different causal factors that may lead to high BP. Life-style, diet, race, physical activity, smoke, cultural level, environmental factors, age, sex and genetic characteristics play a key role in the increasing risk. Conversely to the essential hypertension, secondary hypertension is often associated with the presence of other pathological conditions such as dyslipidaemia, hypercholesterolemia, diabetes mellitus, obesity and primary aldosteronism. Amongst them, primary aldosteronism represents one of the most common cause of secondary hypertension, with a prevalence of 5-15% depending on the severity of blood pressure. Besides high blood pressure values, a principal feature of primary aldosteronism is the hypersecretion of mineralcorticoid hormone, aldosterone, in a manner that is fairly autonomous of the renin-angiotensin system. Primary aldosteronism is a heterogeneous pathology that may be divided essentially in two groups, idiopathic and familial form. Despite all this knowledge, there are so many hypertensive cases that cannot be explained. These individuals apparently seem to be healthy, but they have a great risk to develop CVD. The lack of known risk factors makes difficult their classification in a scale of risk. Over the last three decades a good help has been given by the pharmacogenetics/pharmacogenomics, a new area of the traditional pharmacology that try to explain and find correlations between genetic variation, (rare variations, SNPs, mutations), and the risk to develop a particular disease.