1 / 34

A Case From The Clinic

A Case From The Clinic. Paul J. Scheel, Jr., MD Director Of Nephrology The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. Patient W.T. 56 year old AA male Hypertension x 28 years Hypokalemia past 2 years during annual physical. ( 2.8,3.1, 3.0) Past Medical History : Negative

saburo
Download Presentation

A Case From The Clinic

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. A Case From The Clinic Paul J. Scheel, Jr., MD Director Of Nephrology The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine

  2. Patient W.T. • 56 year old AA male • Hypertension x 28 years • Hypokalemia past 2 years during annual physical. ( 2.8,3.1, 3.0) • Past Medical History : Negative • Past Surgical History: Absent

  3. Patient W.T. • Current Meds: • Procardia XL 90 mg twice daily • Amiloride 10 mg orally each day • Metoprolol 100 mg twice daily • Clonidine 0.2 three times daily

  4. Patient W.T. • Family History: Mother and Father both deceased ( 64,59) both with hypertension, One of 7 children all with hypertension • Social History: Recently retired from Federal Government. No Tob or Alcohol, No history of recreational drug use. • Review of Systems: Occasional fatigue and erectile dysfunction.

  5. Patient W.T.Physical Exam • General: Appeared Well • Vitals: BP 160/92, P 62, R 12 Wt 175 # • HEENT: Normal Fundi • Neck: No Bruits • Back: No Buffalo Humping • CV: Displaced PMI, S4, All peripheral pulses strong without bruits. • Abdomen: No masses No striae, No Bruits • Skin: No Echymoses

  6. Patient W.T.Labs 26 143 108 25 3.2 0.9 U/A: Dip negative , No Cells

  7. Hypertension and HypokalemiaDifferential Diagnosis • Mineralocorticoid Excess • Hyperaldosteronism • Excess deoxycorticosterone • Renal Vascular Disease • Cushing’s • Congenital Adrenal Hyperplasia • Renin Secreting tumors

  8. When to Evaluate • Unexplained Hypokalemia ? • Severe, Resistant Hypertension or a Change in BP Pattern ? • Adrenal Incidentaloma • Physical Exam Suggestive of Excess Cortisol. • Hypertension Alone ?

  9. Incidence Of HyperaldosteronismPAC/PRA > 30

  10. Primary HyperaldosternoismPrevalence by JNC VI • I: BP 140-159/90-99 • II: BP 160-179/100-109 • III BP > 180/>110

  11. Pathophysiology Na, K Circulating Blood Volume Renal Perfusion Pressure Aldosterone Release Renin Release Angiotensinogen Angiotensin II Angiotensin I

  12. Pathophysiology Tubular Lumen Peritubular Capillary Na 3Na 2K Aldosterone Receptor Aldosterone K

  13. Diagnosis • Plasma Renin Activity • Plasma Aldosterone • Plasma Aldosterone: Renin Ratio • 24 Hour Urine ( For What ?)

  14. Plasma Aldosterone: Renin • 8 am paired plasma Aldosterone + Renin • For Diagnosis of Hyperaldosteronism Plasma Aldosterone > 20 • Patients must be off Aldactone for 6 weeks • Calcium Channel Blockers, Alpha Blockers, Beta Blockers OK • ACEI : May falsely elevate renin

  15. Plasma Aldosterone : Renin • Interpretation of Results: • Normal - 4-10 • Hyperaldosteronism – 30-50 Must know lower limit of lab for plasma renin. Is is 0.6 or 0.1 ? May significantly affect ratios

  16. PAC/PRA • PAC > 20 and PAC/PRA > 30 • Sensitivity and Specificity of 90% for diagnosis of aldosterone producing adenoma

  17. 24 Hour Urine Collection • Historically used to document K+ Wasting • Now more useful to document other potential etiologies for low K + • 24 hour Urine should be sent for: • K + • Na + • Creatinine • Aldosterone

  18. 24 Hour Urine CollectionResults • In setting of hypokalemia • Inappropriate K + Wasting > 30 meq/day • < 30 meq /day suggest extra renal losses • Aldosterone > 14μg/day ( 39nmol/day) • 24 hour urine sodium must be > 200 meq/day • Must be accurate 24 hour collection (creatinine) • Woman 10-12 mg/kg body wt/24 hrs • Men: 12-15 mg/kg/body wt/24 hrs

  19. Hypertension and Hypokalemia Plasma Renin and Plasma Aldosterone PRA PRA PRA PAC PAC PAC Secondary Hyperaldosteronism Hyperaldosteronism Work Up CAH DOC-Tumor Cushings Syndrome Renovasular Disease Diuretic Use Renin Tumor

  20. HyperaldosteronismConfirmatory Evaluation • Increased PAC:PRA • Confirmatory Testing Requires • High Sodium Diet followed by 24 hr urine • Saline Suppression Test with repeat of PAC:PRA • Fludrocortisone Suppression ( 0.2 mg b.i.d. x 2 days) Aldosterone level on day 3 > 5 confirmatory OR OR

  21. HyperaldosteronismClassification • Adrenal Hyperplasia • Adrenal Adenoma • Adrenal Carcinoma • Familial Hyperaldosteronism I + II

  22. Radiologic Testing • CT or MRI • Unilateral Adrenal Mass > 5 cm Carcinoma • Can Identify Adenomas > 1 cm • Bilateral Abnormal Glands or Normal Bilateral Glands Suggest Hyperplasia

  23. Radiologic Testing • Adrenal Vein Sampling: • Selective Catheterization of Adrenal Veins • > 5x PAC From One Side Unilateral Disease • Must Also Measure After ACTH Stimulation Measuring both Aldosterone and Cortisol. • Cortisol Should be 10x Cortisol From Peripheral Vein

  24. Patient W.T • Plasma Aldosterone 25, PRA 0.63 Ratio 40 • Saline Suppression PAC 21, PRA 0.4 Ratio 52.5 • CT Scan: No abnormality • Dexamethasone Suppression PAC 17, PRA 0.4 , Ratio 42.5

  25. Confirmed Hyperaldosteronism Negative CT Empiric Treatment Aldactone 100 mg- 200mg Adrenal Vein Sampling

  26. Medical Therapy • Aldactone: Usual therapeutic dose is 100-200mg in divided doses per day. • Amiloride or Triamtene, ? Eplerenone • Lifestyle Modification • Ideal Body Wt • Exercise • Smoking Cessation • Moderation of Alcohol Consumption • Sodium Restriction ( < 100 mEq/day)

  27. Negative CT • Adenomas < 1 cm will be missed • Sensitivity compared to adrenal vein sampling with subsequent surgery and histologic confirmation of adenoma as low as 53 % .

  28. Confirmed Hyperaldosteronism Negative CT Empiric Treatment Aldactone 100 mg- 200mg Adrenal Vein Sampling Adrenalectomy

  29. Adrenal Vein SamplingPatient W.T. Aldosterone 3229 ng/dl Aldosterone 39 ng/dl Cortisol 1062 mcg/dl Cortisol 598 mcg/dl

  30. Confirmed Hyperaldosteronism Adrenal Adenoma Laparoscopic Adrenalectomy Adrenal Vein Sampling Medical Therapy

  31. Patient W.T.

  32. Patient W.T. • Patient Now 3 months S/p Adrenalectomy • Bp 127/71 on Atenolol 50 mg once daily

  33. Conclusions: • Hyperaldosteronism suspected in a patient with hypertension and unexplained hypokalemia or Severe Hypertension alone • Screen with PAC:PRA • Confirmatory Testing with Saline Suppression Test or Salt loading followed by 24 hr Urine.

  34. Conclusions: • CT or MRI can detect lesions > 1 cm • Normal CT or MRI does not rule out microadenoma • Adrenal Vein sampling is difficult to perform but is crucial to differentiating unilateral vs bilateral disease • Surgical Therapy = Adrenalectomy • Medical Therapy = Aldactone, ? Eplerenone

More Related