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Endocrine MedSurg II Exam 1
Endocrine MedSurg II Exam 1
128
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Graduate
01/06/2010

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Term
Describe the hypothalamic axis, target organ and its effect on that organ for ACTH.
Definition
The hypothalamus secretes CRH (corticotropin-releasing hormone) which tells the anterior pituitary to secrete ACTH which goes to the adrenal cortex and causes the secretion of androgens and cortisol from the cortex.
Term
Describe the hypothalamic axis, target organ and its effect on that organ for TSH.
Definition
The hypothalamus secretes TRH (thyrotropin-releasing hormone) which tells the anterior pituitary to secrete TSH which goes to the thyroid gland and causes the secretion of T3 and T4.
Term
Describe the hypothalamic axis, target organ and its effect on that organ for GH.
Definition
The hypothalamus secretes GHRH (growth hormone releasing hormone) which tells the anterior pituitary to secrete GH which goes to the liver, bone, muscle and adipose to promote growth and lipid/carbohydrate metabolism.
Term
Describe the hypothalamic axis, target organ and its effect on that organ for PRL.
Definition
Normally the hypothalamus secretes dopamine which inhibits the release of PRL, during breastfeeding this inhibitory hormone is not secreted and PRL acts on the mammary glands to stimulate milk production.
Term
Describe the hypothalamic axis, target organ and its effect on that organ for FSH.
Definition
The hypothalamus secretes GnRH (gonadotropin-releasing hormone) which tells the anterior pituitary to secrete FSH which goes to the testes in men, secreting inhibin and the ovaries in women, secreting estrogen and inhibin.
Term
Describe the hypothalamic axis, target organ and its effect on that organ for LH.
Definition
The hypothalamus secretes GnRH (gonadotropin-releasing hormone) which tells the anterior pituitary to secrete LH which tells the testes to secrete testosterone and the ovaries to produce progesterone.
Term
Describe the hypothalamic axis, target organ and its effect on that organ for Oxytocin.
Definition
The hypothalamus makes oxytocin and transports it to the posterior pituitary where it is secreted, it can go to the uterus and cause contractions, to the breast to cause "milk letdown" and to the prostate which causes smooth muscle contraction.
Term
Describe the hypothalamic axis, target organ and its effect on that organ for ADH (Anti-diuretic hormone).
Definition
The hypothalamus secretes a preprohormone of ADH that goes to the posterior pituitary and is secreted as ADH which travels to the kidneys to stimulate water retention and raise BP by contracting arterioles.
Term
Describe the feedback system for oxytocin.
Definition
It is one of the few positive feedback systems in the body as suckling by an infant on the mothers breast causes more oxytocin to be released.
Term
Describe the feedback system for Prolactin.
Definition
It is not positive or negative feedback but it has a constant supply of its inhibitory hormone (Dopamine) but just after childbirth dopamine levels drop and PRL levels begin to rise.
Term
What hormone is responsible for GH inhibition?
Definition
GHIH - Growth hormone-inhibiting hormone (Somatostatin)
Term
What results from hypersecretion of GH in children? Adults? Hyposecretion in children?
Definition
Hyper in children = gigantism.
Hyper in adults = acromegaly.
Hypo in chidlren = pituitary dwarfism.
Term
What are the most common congenital hypothalamic diseases?
Definition
The most common congenital hypothalmus disorders are the midlien cleft syndromes of, most commonly, the optic and olfactory tracts, the septum pellucidum, the corpus collosum, the anterior commissure , the hypothalamus and the pituitary.
Term
What is the most common type of neuroendocrine tumor?
Definition
Pituitary adenoma
Term
Describe the excess hormone produced and the disorder associated with a somatotrophic neuroendocrine tumor.
Definition
GH is produced and can lead to gigantism or acromegaly.
Term
Describe the excess hormone produced and the disorder associated with a lactotrophic neuroendocrine tumor.
Definition
Prolactin is produced and can lead to hypogonadism and galactorrhea (milky nipple discharge unrelated to the normal milk production of breast-feeding).
Term
Describe the excess hormone produced and the disorder associated with a corticotrophic neuroendocrine tumor.
Definition
ACTH is produced and it can lead to Cushing's disease.
Term
Describe the excess hormone produced and the disorder associated with a gonadotrophic neuroendocrine tumor.
Definition
FSH and LH are produced and can lead to hypopituitarism and other mass effects.
Term
Describe the excess hormone produced and the disorder associated with a thyrotrophic neuroendocrine tumor.
Definition
TSH is produced and can lead to hyperthyroidism.
Term
What are some common S&S to neuroendocrine tumors?
Definition
It depends on the type of tumor but headache, nausea, vomiting, altered consciousness, visual field defects and seizures are common.
Term
What are the effects of hyperprolactinemia in women? Men?
Definition
Women = oligomenorrhea (infrequent menstruation), amenorrhea, galactorrhea (milky nipple discharge unrelated to childbirth) and infertility.
Men = hypogonadism, decreased libido, ED and infertility.
Term
What tests are diagnostic of hyperprolactinemia?
Definition
Elevated serum PRL and an MRI/CT showing a pituitary adenoma.
Term
What are some physiologic causes of hyperprolactinemia?
Definition
Exercise, pregnancy, breast feeding, nipple stimulation and stress (trauma/surgery).
Term
What are some pharmacologic causes of hyperprolactinemia?
Definition
Amphetamines, Cimetidine, Ranitidine, Estrogens, Opioids, Nicotine, Verapamil and Cocaine.
Term
What are some pathologic causes of hyperprolactinemia?
Definition
Chronic chest wall stimulation, cirrhosis, renal failure, hypothyroidism, MS, spinal cord lesion and SLE.
Term
What are the pharmacologic treatment options for hyperprolactinemia? (w/ max dose)
Definition
Cabergoline (Dostinex) is first line and best tolerated. Max dose is 1.5 mg 2x/week. Bromocriptine used to be first line but is not any longer.
Term
What are the surgical indications for hyperprolactinemia due to a pituitary adenoma?
Definition
Intolerance to medical treatment, headaches, visual field defects, CSF leakage due to tumor or a central nervous system deficit.
Term
What is the class, indication, dose, SEs, interactions, contraindications, OD and patient education for Synthroid (levothyroxine)?
Definition
Class = Synthetic T4.
Indication = Hypothyroidism.
Dose = 1.6 mcg/kg/day, increase at 6 weeks if needed (increase by 25 mcg).
SEs = heat intolerance, weight loss, fever, sweating, tachycardia, decreased bone density (hyperthyroidism SEs).
Interactions = Amiodarone, iron and calcium supplements, hypoglycemic agents.
Contraindications = acute MI, adrenal insufficiency, thyrotoxicosis.
OD = Hyperthyroidism effects.
Pt Education = Do not discontinue or change medication. Do not use as weight loss agent. Do not take food 4 hours before or after taking pills.
Term
What is the class, indication, dose, SEs, interactions, contraindications, OD and patient education for Tapazole (methimazole)?
Definition
Class = Thiourea.
Indication = Hyperthyroidism.
Dose = 5-15 mg/day (divided into 3 doses).
SEs = epigastric distress, loss of hair, skin pigmentations and jaundice.
Interactions = anticoagulants, digoxin, thiophylline and BBs.
Contraindications = nursing mothers.
OD = headache, fever, joint pain, edema and aplastic anemia.
Patient education = Come see me if you have fever/sore throat.
Term
What is the class, indication, dose, SEs, interactions, contraindications, OD and pt education for Zometa (zoledronic acid)?
Definition
Class = Bisphosphonates.
Indications = malignant hypercalcemia, multiple myeloma and osteoporosis (but not hypercalcemia due to hyperparathyroidism).
Dose = 4mg/5ml IV x every month infused over at least 15 minutes. (must check calcium and renal function before infusion).
SEs = fever.
Contraindications = Renal impairment.
Pt education = do not get pregnant.
Look up OD -
Term
What is the class, indication, dose, SEs, interactions, contraidications and pt education for Solu-Cortef (hydrocortisone sodium succinate)?
Definition
Class = Corticosteroids.
Indication = adrenal insufficiency.
Dosage = 20-240 mg po daily.
SEs = vision loss, weight gain, depression, insomnia, thinning of the skin, slow wound healing, immunosupression, increased risk of osteoporosis.
Interactions = aspirin, rifampin, coumadin and ketoconazole.
Contraindication = any type of infection and live vaccines.
Patient education = immunosupression so come in if they get sick.
Term
What is the class, indication, dose, SEs, interactions and contraindications for Inderal (propranolol)?
Definition
Class = Beta blockers.
Indication = Pheochromocytoma.
Dosage = 60 mg/day PO divided bid/tid.
SEs = CHF, heart block, bradycardia, bronchoconstriction.
Interactions = Amiodarone, lidocaine and alcohol.
Contraindications = asthma, must include alpha blocker too, angina/MI.
Pt education - no alcohol.
Term
Describe hypopituitarist and what is lost.
Definition
Loss of one, all or any combination of anterior pituitary hormones (ACTH, TSH, LH, FSH, GH, PRL).
Term
What is Sheehan's syndrome? What are teh typical S&S?
Definition
Acquired hypopituitarism due to trauma to the head or post-partum. Sx appear months to years later and include: adrenal crisis, hypothyroidism, hypotension, amenorrhea, inability to breastfeed and high cholesterol.
Term
What are the signs and symptoms of LH/FSH deficiency hypopituitarism?
Definition
hypogonadism, infertility, delayed puberty, decreased body hair, decreased libido, amenorrhea, & erectile dysfunction
Term
What are the S&S of ACTH deficiency hypopituitarism?
Definition
weakness, fatigue, weight loss & hypotension
Term
What are the adult S&S of GH deficiency hypopituitarism?
Definition
moderate central obesity, increased systolic BP, increased LDL cholesterol, small heart, growth retardation
Term
What are the general S&S seen with most hypopituitarism deficiencies?
Definition
Headache and visual field defects/blindness.
Term
What are the treatments for hypopituitarism due to a tumor?
Definition
Replace the hormone and remove the tumor.
Term
What causes Dwarfism?
Definition
Low growth hormone levels during development.
Term
What are some common complication due to dwarfism?
Definition
Delay in motor skill development, frequent ear infections, hearing loss, sleep apnea, crowded teeth, kyphoscoliosis, lumbosacral spinal stenosis and arthritis.
Term
What is the treatment and management of dwarfism?
Definition
Refer to endocrinology/orthopedic for GH replacement and possibly surgical intervention for bone abnormalities.
Term
What are the common S&S of Acromegaly/Gigantism?
Definition
Excessive growth of hands, feet, jaw & internal organs, amenorrhea, headache, visual field defects, hypertension, impotence, widening of tooth spaces, deep voice, goiter, hypothyroidism, dilated left ventricle, weakness and soft/doughty/sweaty handshake.
Term
What biomarker is commonly used to test for acromegaly/gigantism?
Definition
IGF-1 (insulin-like growth factor - 1)
Term
What are some complications of acromegaly/gigantism?
Definition
HTN, DM, cardiac enlargement, carpal tunnel syndrome, thumb weakness, visual field defects, cranial nerve palsies, and colon polyps.
Term
Describe the treatment and management of a patient with acromegaly/gigantism.
Definition
Referral to endocrinology or cardiology (if cardiac symptoms), surgical removal of the adenoma and give Cabergoline (blocks PRL production) and Octreotide (acts like somatostatin).
Term
What is the difference between Cushing's disease vs. syndrome?
Definition
Disease is caused by a pituitary adenoma that causes excess ACTH secretion. Syndrome is any cause of excess glucocorticoid.
Term
What are the S&S of Cushing's disease?
Definition
obesity, moon face, buffalo hump, purple striae, hypertension, skin hyperpigmentation, hirsuitism, proximal muscle weakness, DM, headache and visual field defect.
Term
What electrolyte disturbances are seen with Cushing's disease?
Definition
Hypokalemia and hypercalciuria.
Term
What are some complications of Cushing's disease?
Definition
Cushing's syndrome, HTN, DM, increased risk of infection, osteoporosis and visual field impairment.
Term
Describe the treatment and management of Cushing's disease.
Definition
Referral to endocrinology, surgical excision of adenoma, consider discontinuation of excessive corticosteroid use, may need potassium supplements.
Term
What is Nelson's syndrome?
Definition
It is the appearance of a pituitary adenoma after bilateral adrenalectomy for Cushing's disease/syndrome due to the elimination of negative feedback of cortisol, greatly increasing ACTH and MSH.
Term
What are the S&S of Nelson's syndrome?
Definition
Very high levels of ACTH, hyperpigmentation (increased MSH), headache and visual field loss.
Term
What is the treatment for Nelson's syndrome?
Definition
Surgery if adenoma and glucocorticoids (hydrocortisone).
Term
Describe central DI, nephrogenic DI and gestational DI.
Definition
Central DI is inadequate secretion of vasopressin.
Nephrogenic DI is insensitivity to vasopressin.
Gestational DI is a lack of ADH due to an enzyme breakdown during pregnancy.
Term
What are the common clinical signs and symptoms of DI?
Definition
ADH deficiency (not nephrogenic though), polyuria, polydipsia, nocturia, hypernatremia, dehydration, headache, visual disturbances.
Term
What are some common risk factors for diabetes insipidis?
Definition
Transcranial surgery, head trauma w/ basal skull fracture, lithium use and a neoplasm.
Term
How is DI diagnosed?
Definition
Water restriction test and MRI/CT.
Term
What are some complication of DI?
Definition
Dilated urinary tract and dehydration leading to confusion, stupor and coma.
Term
What is the first line Tx for DI?
What else can be used?
Definition
Desmopressin/DDAVP). Can also use Chlorpropamide/Diabinese and HCTZ.
Term
What are the common S&S of hyperparathyroidism?
Definition
Hypercalcemia, bone pain, pathologic fractures, mental changes, fatigue, constipation, HTN w/ shortened QT interval, renal stones, polyuria, polydipsia.
Term
Explain the changes in serum calcium, serum alkaline phosphate, urine calcium and urine phosphate seen with elevated PTH levels.
Definition
They are all elevated.
Term
What are the common risk factors of hyperparathyroidism?
Definition
Age over 50, female, chronic lithium therapy and history of neck radiation.
Term
How will hyperparathyroidism appear on labs?
Definition
High serum calcium, low serum phosphate, low vitamin D, elevated PTH.
Term
What are some common complications of hyperparathyroidism?
Definition
UTI, renal stones, renal failure, pathologic fractures and HTN.
Term
What is the treatment for Hyperparathyroidism?
Definition
IV hydration, furosemide (Loop diuretic), alendronate (Bisphosphonates), cinacalcet (Calcimimetics) and surgery to remove the diseased gland.
Term
What are some common S&S of hypoparathyroidism?
Definition
Tetany, carpopedal spasms, muscle and abdominal cramps, brittle nails, loss of eyebrow hair, postive Chvostek's sign and Trousseau's phenomenon.
Term
Describe the electrolyte abnormalities seen with hypoparathyroidism.
Definition
low serum calcium and magnesium and high serum phosphate.
Term
What are the common risk factors of hypoparathyroidism?
Definition
Thyroidectomy (MC), neck surgery, neck trauma and neck malignancies.
Term
What does hypoparathyroidism look like on x-ray?
Definition
Increased bone density and calcification of the cerebellum and choroid plexus.
Term
What is the formula for corrected serum calcium?
Definition
Serum calcium mg/dL + [0.8 x (4.0 - albumin g/dL)]
Term
What are some complications of hypoparathyroidism?
Definition
Neuromuscular symptoms, cataracts, hypothyroidism, Parkinsonian symptoms and permanent mental damage.
Term
What is the treatment for hypoparathyroidism?
Definition
Treat the cause of the tetany, IV calcium gluconate (until tetany ceases), calcium salts, Vitamin D and calcitriol.
Term
What is Paget's disease and how is it differentiated from hyperparathyroid?
Definition
A chronic disorder of the adult skeleton in which bone turnover is accelerated, normal bone is replaced with softened, less dense, enlarged bone. It is differentiated from hyperparathyroid bc Paget's will have normal serum calcium, phosphate and PTH and a markedly elevated alkaline phosphate. Hyperparathyroidism will have an elevated serum calcium and PTH, a low serum phosphate and a normal alkaline phosphate.
Term
What are the common S&S of hyperthyroidism?
Definition
sweating, diarrhea, heat intolerance, warm/moist skin, tremors, menstrual irregularity, tachycardia, goiter, exopthalmos.
Term
What is usually the first presenting sign of hyperthyroidism in an elderly patient?
Definition
Afib
Term
How will hyperthyroidism appear on labs?
Definition
low TSH and elevated T3/T4.
Term
What is the treatment for hyperthyroidism?
Definition
Refer to endocrinology, remove adenoma, antithyroid meds (Propylthiouracil), and possible ablation with I-131.
Term
What is the most common cause of thyrotoxicosis?
Definition
Graves Disease
Term
What is the etiology of Graves disease?
Definition
Autoimmune disorder of the thyroid where the TSH receptors are stimulated by TSI antibodies.
Term
What conditions are associated with Graves disease?
Definition
pernicious anemia, myasthenia gravis and DM.
Term
What is the treatment for Graves disease?
Definition
refer to endocrinology, propranolol, thiourea drugs (methimazole or propylthiouracil), radioactive iodine (I-131) and thyroid surgery.
Term
Describe Hashimoto's thyroiditis. Who is it common with?
Definition
Transient autoimmune hypothyroidism due to attack of the gland by TPO or thyroglobulin autoantibodies. Common in postpartum patients.
Term
What is a thyroid storm? S&S?
Definition
Extreme form of thyrotoxicosis that is a medical emergency and has a high mortality rate. S&S = marked delirium, severe tachycardia, vomiting, diarrhea, dehydration and very high fever.
Term
What is the treatment for a thyroid storm?
Definition
Thiourea (methimazole), propylthiouracil, propranolol, hydrocortisone and discontinue all aspirin.
Term
What are the S&S of hypothyroidism?
Definition
cold intolerance, constipation, monorrhagia, bradycardia, delayed DTRs, dry skin, coarse voice, enlarged heart, reduced systolic BP, carpel tunnel syndrome, macroglossia, arthralgias and weight gain.
Term
What are the risk factors for hypothyroidism?
Definition
Increasing age, autoimmune disease, previous postpartum thyroiditis and previous head/neck/breast radiation.
Term
How will TSH, T4, serum cholesterol, serum sodium, CPK, LDH and AST (Aspartate aminotransferase) be affected by hypothyroidism?
Definition
TSH will be elevated, T4 will be decreased, cholesterol will be elevated, sodium will be decreased and CPK,LDH and AST will be elevated.
Term
What is the treatment for hypothyroidism?
Definition
First line is Levothyroxine (synthroid).
Term
What is the treatment for Sheehan's syndrome?
Definition
Replace whatever they are deficient in (Synthroid, Hydrocortisone, Estrogen/Progesterone, GH...etc).
Term
What are the typical S&S of Hashimoto's thyroiditis?
Definition
Enlarged thyroid that is firm and finely nodular, dry mouth and eyes, hyperthyroid symptoms and then hypothyroid symptoms.
Term
What are the risk factors for Hashimoto's Thyroiditis?
Definition
Autoimmune diseases, dietary iodine supplements, amiodarone and head/neck radiation.
Term
What biomarkers are useful in diagnosing Hashimoto's Thyroiditis?
Definition
TPO and thyroiglobulin autoantibodies
Term
What are the complications of thyroiditis?
Definition
If left untreated it may progress to hypothyroidism.
Term
What is the workup for a thyroid nodule?
Definition
Thyroid function test, thyroid biopsy (definitive), ultrasound and mandatory foll-up.
Term
What are some common S&S with thyroid nodules?
Definition
Goiter, hoarseness, dysphagia, hyper- or hypo-thyroidism.
Term
What labs should you order with a unknown thyroid nodule?
Definition
First order a TSH/FT4, also order TPO and thyroglobulin autoantibodies, possible US with FNA and RAI uptake test.
Term
Do soft or firm thyroid nodules have a higher suspicion of being malignant?
Definition
Firm
Term
Do "hot" or "cold" RAI uptake test results have a higher suspicion of being malignant?
Definition
Cold
Term
Do cystic or solid lesions have a higher suspicion of being malignant?
Definition
Solid
Term
If a thyroid mass gets larger or small with thyroxine suppression therapy, which is it more suspicious of being malignant?
Definition
Larger
Term
How will neoplastic thyroid diseases appear on thyroid function tests? RAI thyroid scan? How are they definitively diagnosed?
Definition
They will be normal on TFT. They will show a "cold" nodule on thyroid scan. They are definitively diagnosed by a positive FNA.
Term
What are the S&S for a neoplastic thyroid disease?
Definition
Palpable, firm, nontender thyroid nodule, asymptomatic, neck discomfort, dysphagia and hoarseness.
Term
What type of thyroid neoplasm is the most common? Lowest death rate? Highest death rate?
Definition
Most common = Papillary.
Lowest death rate = Papillary.
Highest death rate = Anaplastic.
Term
What is the 5 year survival rate for papillary thyroid carcinomas for stage 1-4 TNM staging?
Definition
1 = 99%.
2 = 99%.
3 = 95%.
4 = 80% (any T any N any M).
Term
What test diagnoses Cushing's syndrome?
Definition
Dexamethasone suppression test.
Term
What are the S&S of acute adrenal insufficiency (Addisonian crisis/Adrenal crisis)?
Definition
Headache, weakness, abdominal pain, fever, confusion, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, dehydration, low BP, hypoglycemia and increased skin pigmentation.
Term
How are serum potassium, sodium and BUN affected with acute adrenal insufficiency/Addisonian crisis?
Definition
Serum potassium is elevated, sodium is low and BUN is elevated.
Term
What are the risk factors for acute adrenal insufficiency (Addisonian crisis)?
Definition
Stress, bilateral adrenalectomy and sudden destruction of the pituitary.
Term
What is the treatment for acute adrenal insufficiency (Addisonian crisis)?
Definition
Send to the ER, admit the patient, call endocrinology, give Hydrocortisone and possible broad spectrum antibiotics and monitor electrolytes, BUN and creatinine.
Term
What are the risk factors for Addison's disease?
Definition
Family history of autoimmune adrenal insufficiency and chronic use of steroids.
Term
What are the S&S of chronic primary adrenal insufficiency (Addison's disease)?
Definition
Weakness, weight loss, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, muscle pain, joint pain, amenorrhea, increased skin pigmentation, hypotension, small heart, decreased cold tolerance, salt craving and orthostatic hypotension.
Term
How will Addison's disease present with respect to cortisol levels, ACTH levels and serum sodium/potassium/calcium/BUN levels?
Definition
Cortisol levels = low.
ACTH levels = high.
Sodium = low.
Potassium = high.
Calcium = high.
BUN = high.
Term
What is the treatment for Addison's disease?
Definition
Refer to endocrinology, hydrocortisone, fludrocortisone and dehydroepiandrosterone.
Term
How will secondary adrenal insufficiency present in respect to ACTH, cortisol, aldosterone, serum sodium and potassium? Why?
Definition
ACTH is decreased due to damage to the anterior pituitary so that results in a decrease in cortisol secretion. Aldosterone is normal though due to compensation of the RAAS. Sodium and potassium are normal.
Term
What are the S&S of hyperaldosteronism (Conn's disease)?
Definition
HTN, polyuria, polydipsia, muscular weakness, and headache.
Term
How does Hyperaldosteronism (Conn's disease) effect serum potassium, sodium and renin?
Definition
Hypokalemia, hypernatremia and low plasma renin.
Term
How is hyperaldosteronism (Conn's disease) diagnosed?
Definition
24 hour urine aldosterone over 20 mcg and adrenal tumor seen on CT.
Term
How will secondary hyperaldosteronism appear on labs (serum renin/aldosterone/sodium/potassium)?
Definition
Renin will be increased, aldosterone will be increased, sodium will be increased and potassium will be decreased.
Term
What are the risk factors for hypoaldosteronism?
Definition
Over 45 years old, chronic renal disease, diabetes, and meds (NSAIDS, ACEi's and diuretics).
Term
What are the S&S of hypoaldosteronism?
Definition
Postural hypotension, anorexia and weight loss.
Term
How will hypoaldosteronism be seen on labs (24 hr urine aldosterone, serum potassium, sodium and renin)?
Definition
24 hr urine aldosterone will be low. Hyperkalemia, hyponatremia and elevated plasma renin.
Term
What is the treatment for hypoaldosteronism?
Definition
Consult nephrologist, Fludrocortisone and increase their salt intake.
Term
What are the S&S of a pheochromocytoma?
Definition
Attacks of headaches, perspiration, palpitations and anxiety, and HTN.
Term
How will a pheochromocytoma affeect serum glucose, calcium, and urine catecholamines?
Definition
Hyperglycemia, hypercalcemia and increased urine catecholamines.
Term
What are the risk factors for a pheochromocytoma?
Definition
Family Hx of pheochromocytoma, MEN type IIa/b and NF1.
Term
What lab findings are diagnostic of a pheochromocytoma?
Definition
Elevated 24 hour urine VMA and catecholamines with an abdominal MRI showing an adrenal medulla tumor.
Term
What is the treatment of a pheochromocytoma?
Definition
Surgery to remove tumor and alpha/beta blockers.
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