Internal Medicine

(Wang) #1

0521779407-17 CUNY1086/Karliner 0 521 77940 7 June 13, 2007 7:57


1168 Pheochromocytoma

➣Phentolamine: IV alpha-adrenergic blocker for acute manage-
ment of hypertension or adrenergic crisis
■Beta-adrenergic blockade:
➣After alpha-blockade established, initiate beta-blockade for
heart-rate control (Note: beta blockers alone lead to unopposed
alpha-blockade and exacerbated hypertension)
■Inhibition of catecholamine synthesis:
➣Metyrosine (alpha-methyl-tyrosine) inhibits catecholamine syn-
thesis

Surgery:
■Usually abdominal approach, occasionally flank or laparoscopic
approach
■Intraoperative hypotension best avoided by preoperative alpha-
blockade and vigorous IV fluid replacement
■Medical and surgical coordination with anesthesia team

follow-up
During Medical Treatment:
■Evaluate q 3–4 d to monitor heart rate, BP, orthostatic BP and pulse,
and side effects (eg, nasal stuffiness) to gradually increase dose of
alpha-blockers

Postoperative:
■Intraoperative fluids and volume replacement for hypotension
■During 1st wk postop, monitor blood glucose or CBG q 4–6 h for
hypoglycemia
■1–2 wks: repeat catecholamine tests to assess biochemical cure of
catecholamine excess

Long-Term:
■Difficult to distinguish benign vs malignant pheochromocytoma at
pathology, so review for pheochromocytoma recurrence or metas-
tases
■Annual evaluation to assess and manage hypertension, screen for
recurrence of symptoms, and measure urinary catecholamines and
metabolites

complications and prognosis
■Acute: hypertensive encephalopathy, hypotension, cardiovascular
collapse
■Chronic: dilated cardiomyopathy, angina and MI, CVA
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