Title: Pheochromocytoma Presented by Susie Clabots, Linnea Cooper
1PheochromocytomaPresented by Susie Clabots,
Linnea Cooper, and Stephen Coots
2Pheochromoctoma What is it?
- Tumor in the medulla of the adrenal gland.
- Mostly benign
- Often produces large amounts of catecholamines.
- Reported number of tumors vary widely. Occurs in
approximately 1 in 1000 people. - Estimated 800 new cases annually
(Mastropietro 1985)
3Endocrine Glands and Hormones
- Posterior pituitary
- Oxytocin- milk let down, contractions during
childbirth - ADH- water balance
- Pituitary- MSH
- Thyroid
- T3, T4, Calcitonin
- Parathyroid
- PTH
- Hypothalamus controls hormone production in
pituitary - http//www.hormone.org/Endo101/
4Adrenal glands
- Outer- cortex
- Glucocorticoids
- Control blood sugar, burning of protein and fat,
response to stress like illness or injury - Mineralcorticoids
- Aldosterone control blood volume, regulate blood
pressure by working on kidney - Activation of R-A-A, as a result of dec blood
flow to kidney, releases angiotension II - Elevated potassium/low sodium leads to
aldosterone secretion - Androgens
- Growth and development in both sexes
- Stimulate pubic and axillary hair growth, sex
drive in females
5- Inner- medulla
- Produces epinephrine, norepinephrine, dopamine
- Catecholamines are hormones when secreted by
medulla but neurotransmitters when secreted by
nerve cell. - www.mayoclinic.com
6Cortisol
- Increases blood glucose
- stimulation of hepatic gluconeogenesis
- inhibiting protein synthesis
- stimulate lipolysis in adipose tissue
- Decrease peripheral glucose in fasting state.
- Anti-inflammatory action
- Increase cortisol during times of stress to more
effectively deal with it. - Alter cell-mediated response
7Negative feedback
- Endocrine system is regulated primarily by
negative feedback. - Glands respond by increasing or decreasing the
amount of hormone produced based on the feedback
it gets from body signals. - When the levels of these hormones get to a
certain level, the release of the hormones is
shut off. - http//www.hormone.org/Endo101/
8Changes in the elderly
- Inc secretion of norepinephrine, no change in
epinepherine. - Decreased B-adrenergic receptor response to
norepi. - Dec responsiveness to medications that work on
b-receptors - May account for increased
- prevalence of hypertension
- with aging
- (Graber-Obrien 2007)
9Chromaffin Cell tumor
- Chromaffin Cells are found in the adrenal medulla
and the ganglia of the sympathetic nervous
system. - Cat release not initiated by neural impulses
- They secrete norepinephrine, epinephrine,
dopamine.
A Primer on Chromaffin Cells http//webpages.ull.e
s/users/isccb12/ChromaffinCell/Primer.html
10Who gets it?
- Less often diagnosed in African American
- Equal occurrence in females and males
- Can occur at any age. Most common in people
between 30 and 60 - Usually on Right side
- Incidence decreases with age(Hammer 2006)
11Associated with..
- Multiple endocrine neoplasia, type II (MEN-II)
- Thyroid cancer (medullary)
- Von Hippel-Lindau disease
- Rare multi-system disorder at higher risk for
developing - Neurofibromatosis
- Includes multiple tumors in the
skin(neurofibromas), pigmented skin spots, tumors
of optic nerve, and bone lesions. Higher risk of
having pheo. - www.mayoclinic.com
12Von Hippel Lindau Syndrome (VHL)
- VHL tumor suppressor protein helps protect the
body from tumors. When this protein is rendered
inactive by a germline mutation malignant and
benign tumors are more likely to occur, including
pheo.
www.emedicine.com
13Neurofibromatosis
- Autosomal dominant disorder
- Comes in many different forms (eight or more
phenotypes and at least two different genetic
disorders) - Can effect the skin, bones, nervous system, and
endocrine system. - Most commonly effects the skin.
- Increased chance of pheo
www.emedicine.com
14Multiple Endocrine Neoplasia (MEN)
- Definition Two endocrine neoplasia tumor types
occur in the body with evidence of either a
causative mutation or hereditary transmission. - Occurs by a mutation that renders MENIN, a tumor
suppressor protein, inactive or by mutations to
the RET gene - Occurs twice as often in men as women.
- Genetic disorders account for about 10 of pheos
www.emedicine.com
15Malignant Pheochromocytoma
- 3-36 of pheochromocytomas
- Location of metastasis predicts survival
- Lung and liver worst, bone best
- 5 year survival 34-60
- Less than 40 respond to therapy, reduction in
size lessens symptoms only - Chemotherapy should be aware of potentially
fatal complications arising from excessive
catecholamine release as tumor cells are
destroyed (usually within the first 24 hr). - http//www.endotext.org/adrenal/adrenal34/ch01s07
.html
16Pheo Outside the Adrenal Glands
- About 10 of pheochromocytomas occur outside the
adrenal glands. They are referred to as
Paragangliomas (also extra-adrenal
pheochromocytomas). - Very rarely malignant.
- Similar symptoms to pheochromocytomas.
- Some extra symptoms depending on the location of
the tumor. - About 85 of paragangliomas occur in the abdomen
17So you have an Adrenal Mass?
18Clinical manifestation
- Severe episodic hypertension
- Accompanied by severe, pounding HA of sudden
onset, tachycardia/arrythmias, profuse sweating,
anxiety, palpitations, unexplained abd or chest
pain, pallor, weight loss, fever, hypertensive
retinopathy, nausea, weakness, flushing and
constipation. - The syndrome can vary depending on the types of
catecholamines being produced, the amount and
frequency of their release into the circulation,
and other factors (Onusko 2003). - Massive catecholamine release can be induced by
positional change - Average dec 14mmHg in pt opposed to 4mmHg in pt
with essential HTN (Hammer 2006)
19Hypertensive Crisis
- Life-threatening, compromise vital organs
- Results from increase in catecholamines from the
tumor. - BP gt180/110
- Blood vessels become inflamed and leak fluid
- Heart not able to keep up with demand
- Leads to coronary artery disease, left
ventricular hypertrophy, heart failure - www.mayoclinic.com
20Differential Dx
- Pt with pheo have mildly elevated baseline BP
- present with HTN crisis with BPs 200/110 followed
by severe exhaustion - HTN not labile
- unable to equate it with stress or emotional
distress - Panic Attacks
- Mildly elevated BP
- Feeling of doom is primary sign
- (Hammer 2003)
21Attacks due to.
- SNS stimulation
- Accompanied by anxiety.
- Provoked by some medications antihypertensives,
opiods, contrast dye, tricyclic antidepressants - Lasts minutes to hours
22Case study 1
- 1. The Physician informs T.L. that an adrenal
tumor is causing his symptoms. T.L. is obviously
upset with his diagnosis. He states he doesnt
understand how a tumor on top of his kidney can
cause high BP. He asks whether this means he has
cancer. How would you respond? - Most pheo are benign and can be removed. Only
6-10 of pheos are cancerous and metastasize.
Typically, they are limited to one local area and
will not spread to other parts of the body. - Malignant (cancerous) tumors spread to
neighboring tissue and blood vessels and can
metastasize to other parts of the body.
23Case study 2
- The physician advises T.L. to undergo an
adrenalectomy. He is immediately started on
phenoxybenzamine (Dibenzyline) 10mg PO g12h.
This medication is titrated up q3d until T.L.s
supine BP is below 160/90 mmHg and his standing
BP is above 85/40. Propranolol (Inderal) 20mg PO
qid is added to control his tachyarrhythmia.
What is the connection between these two drugs
and the diagnosis?
24Phenoxybenzamine (Dibenzyline)
- Class long acting alpha adrenergic blocker
- Indications Management of blood pressure
- Action relaxes smooth muscle, causes BP to
decrease - Dosage initially 10 mg twice daily. Can be
increased every other day, usually to 20-40 mg 2
or 3 times a day. - Adverse side effects Dizziness, drowsiness,
fainting, lightheadedness. (Alcohol, hot weather,
exercise, and fever can increase these effects.).
Postural hypotension, tahcycardia Also, pt
should sit up or stand slowly, especially in the
morning. Sit down at first sign of dizziness or
weakness. - Interactions Potentiates effect of medicines
that stimulate both alpha and beta adrenergic
receptors (i.e. epinephrine) and so exaggerrated
hypotensive response and tachycardia can occur.
Dibenzyline can blocks hyperthermia production by
levarterenol and blocks hypothermia production by
reserpine.
25Propanolol (Inderal)
- Class Antiarrhythmics
- Pharmacologic beta blockers
- Indications Management of arrhythmias.
Management of HTN. - Manage pheochromocytoma.
- Action Blocks stimulation of beta1 (myocardial)
and beta2 (pulmonary, - vasular and uterine) adrenergic receptor sites.
- Therapeutic effects Decreases HR and BP,
suppression of - arrhythmias, prevention of MI.
- Dosage for adjunct management of
pheochromocytoma 20mg 2 to 3 - times a day concurrently with alpha-blocking
therapy. - Adverse effects fatigue, weakness, dizziness,
drowsiness, impotence, - arrythmias, bradycardia, CHF, pulmonary edema,
bronchospasm - Interactions General anesthesia, IV phenytoin,
and verapamil (can cause - additive myocardial depression). Additive
hypotensive effects with other antihypertensives,
acute ingestion of alcohol, or nitrates.
Concurrent use of amphetamines, cocaine,
ephedrine, epi, norepi, may result in unopposed
alpha-adrenergic stimulation (excessive HTN,
bradycardia).
26Diagnostic Procedures
- Only 0.1 of HTN
- Plasma Metanephrine (High sensitivity, lower
specificity) - gt236 ng/L confirms dx
- Measurement of urinary fractioned metanephrines
(catecholimine metabolites) as well as
fractionated catecholamines and creatinine - Done as 24 hr urine
- Sometimes tumor doesnt produce enough
catecholamines to elicit a reading - SNS nerve fibers also produce catecholamines
- Vanillylmandelic acid (VMA) 24 hr urine, less
sensitive - Plasma catecholamines/stimulation test
- CT/MRI for tumor location
- Clonidine suppression test
- (Hammer 2003)
27Plasma catecholamines collection
- Drugs, diet and stress can all raise levels
- Acetaminophen interferes- stop taking 5 days
prior. - Caffeine, nicotine interfere with results
- Emotional stress interferes
- Interfering medications should be stopped 2 weeks
prior tricyclic antidepressants, antipsychotics,
levadopa, ethanol, phenoxybenzamine, withdrawing
from clonidine - Supine position for draw, after night fast
- (Hammer 2003)
28Labs drawn
- Routine urinalysis,
- Complete blood cell count,
- blood chemistry profile (potassium, sodium,
creatinine, fasting glucose, fasting lipid
levels), - 12-lead electrocardiogram are recommended for
all patients with hypertension. - (Onusko 2003)
29Treatment
- Surgical removal of tumor
- Laparoscopic adrenalectomy
- If surgery not option metyrosine used to
diminish catecholamine production and simplify
chronic management - Preoperatively alpha-adrenergic blockers
- Sympathetic blocking agens (minipress) HTN and
other symptoms - B-blockers
30Laproscopic Transperitoneal Surgery
- Currently standard of practice
- 2 incision
- Reduced post op pain
- Reduced length of stay
- Earlier return to regular activities
- Decreased postop complications
- 2/61 patients
- Essential preoperative alpha an beta-blockers and
tight BP control intraoperatively. - (Jaroszewski 2003)
31Interventions
- Preoperatively calm environment, rest
- Assess observe for classic triad severe
headache, tachycardia, profuse sweating. - Orthostatic hypotension- SE of meds and surgery
- Intraoperative
- monitor for hypovolemia and hypotension
- monitor glucose levels
- Postoperatively
- Case manage refer to health care provider
32Nursing Diagnosis
- Anxiety r/t symptoms from increased
catelcholamines- headache, palpitations,
sweating, nervousness, N/V, syncope - Disturbed sleep pattern r/t high levels of
circulating catelcholamines - Ineffective Health Maintenance r/t deficient
knowledge regarding treatment and self-care - Nausea r/t increased catelcholamines
- Risk for ineffective tissue perfusion
cardiopulmonary and renal r/t episodes of
hypertension
33Anxiety r/t symptoms from increased
catelcholamines- headache, palpitations,
sweating, nervousness, N/V, syncope
- Outcome Pt will have vital signs that reflect a
baseline or decreased sympathetic stimulation. - Outcome Pt is able to identify and verbalize
symptoms and possible causes of anxiety - Outcome Pt is able to verbalize and demonstrate
techniques that can help control anxiety. - Interventions Nurse will assess pts level of
anxiety and physical reactions to anxiety. To get
a baseline understanding. - Nurse can educate pt about signs/symptoms of
excessive sympathetic stimulation. So pt can
understand and self-monitor for s/sx. - Nurse will educate pt regarding lifestyle changes
that can help decreased the number of triggers.
(more important pre-operatively, but still
important post-op, esp. if HTN remains). - Nurse will discuss with pt activities that
promote relaxation and also stress reduction
techniques. - Nurse will intervene when necessary. Anxiety is
a normal response to actual or perceived danger
if the threat is removed, the response will stop.
So if pt gets sudden severe headache,
palpitations, diaphoresisthe nurse can attend to
him and reassure him, explain what is happening,
get him to sit down.
34Case study, 3
- Some people experience paroxysmal, or sudden,
periodic attacks of HTN that correspond to the
release of epinephrine and/or norepinephrine.
Under what circumstances would T.L. most likely
experience a paroxysmal hypertensive event? - At work- his position as a supervisor
- Dont know much about him
- Kids, family? Elderly parents? Job stress?
- Being in hospital
- Paying bill
- Exercise
- Caffeine
- B-blockers and anesthesia can increase secretion
of catecholamines - Excessive ingestion of tyrosine-containing foods
(aged cheese, red wine, beer, yogurt) - If on MAOI
35Case study 4
- What measures to prevent a paroxysmal
hypertensive event should you teach T.L.? - HTN resulting from an identifiable, correctable
cause - Avoid tyrosine containing foods (if on MAOI)
- Avoid stress, exercise (until after the surgery),
palpating adrenal glands - Meds should be evaluated to see if they aggravate
his condition - Stop/limit smoking
- Avoid extreme excitement
- Teach stress reduction techniques/limit work/take
time outs
361
(Onusko 2003)
37Case study 5
- Following the surgery, T.L. is taken directly to
the ICU. The anesthesiologist gives the
admitting nurse the following report surgery
went well, and T.L. should wake up shortly his
VS have been running 180/90, 88, 16, 96.1 F hes
got a left subclavian Swan-Ganz catheter and two
large-bore peripheral IVs with D5W running at a
total of 125mL/h urine output during OR was
200mL. What additional data should the ICU nurse
elicit from the anesthesiologist?
38Case study 5.
- How did he handle surgery?
- Family here?
- What drugs did you give him?
- For BP
- Potential interactions of anesthesia and drugs
39Case study, 6
- Identify three postoperative issues R/T T.L.s
care. - Blood glucose- can lead to DM
- Monitor
- Proper diet
- After tumor removal, immediately start D5W and
continue for several hours (Pecak 2008) - Htn can persist (10-30) stress importance of
follow up care - Establish pcp, teach importance, teach s/s htn
crisis - Orthostatic hypotension
- Give fluids right away (Pecak 2008)
- Teach to get up slow, safety measures
- SE of many meds
- Good nutrition, sleep
- Control stress
- Pain- post-op
- Biochemical testing should be repeated after
about 14-28 days from surgery in order to check
for remaining disease - On long term follow-up about 17 of tumors recur,
with about 50 of these showing signs of
malignancy. (Pecak 2008)
40Case study, 7
- For each issue identified in question 6, outline
two to three interventions/measures. - Assess the patient for pain
- Administer pain medication as ordered.
- Administer fluids as ordered.
- Tell the patient youd like to be in the room
when he gets out of bed. - Monitor blood pressure frequently.
- Assess neurological status
- Instruct the patient to shift positions slowly
and give himself time between each shift. - Teach stress reduction techniques
41Case study 8
- During shift assessment (second post operative
day), the nurse notes that T.L. seems less alert,
his grip strength is markedly weaker than
yesterday, and his mucous membranes are dry. The
previous nurse reported that he had vomited twice
in the last hour. The cardiac monitor shows
peaked T waves and a widened QRS complex. VS are
120/72, 94, 14, 101 F. What conclusions can you
draw from the foregoing data? - All these findings suggest adrenal insufficiency
42Adrenal insufficiency
- Result of removal of adrenal gland
- Aldosterone no longer being released
- Normally acts on kidneys, gut, and salivary/sweat
glands to affect electrolyte balance - Cortisol
- Responds to stress, immune system, cv function,
insulin balance - s/s Weakness (99)
- Pigmentation of skin (98)
- Weight loss (97)
- Abdominal pain (34)
- Salt craving (22)
- Diarrhea (20)
- Constipation (19)
- Syncope (16)
- http//www.emedicine.com/emerg/topic16.htm
43Case study 9
- What treatment measures would you anticipate for
adrenal insufficiency? - Steroid replacement therapy (normally should only
be used in Cushing syndrome or bilateral
adrenalectomy) - Fluids
- Electrolyte replacement
- http//archsurg.ama-assn.org/cgi/content/full/141/
8/771?cknck
44Case study 10
- Outline four measures that are critical during
this period. - Ensure IV line patency and insertion site and
maintain adequate fluid infusion rate to prevent
further dehydration from vomiting - Monitor VS q 1 hr
- Administer antipyretics
- Start steroid therapy per physician
45Case study 11
- T.L. is stabilized and is scheduled to be
discharged home. During discharge teaching, T.L.
asks whether he will require medication for the
rest of his life. How should you respond to
T.L.? - Life long therapy is generally needed quality of
life is able to be maintained.
46Reference
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Pheochromocytoma An Update on Risk Groups,
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