Adrenocortical adenoma
| Adrenocortical Adenoma | |
|---|---|
| Other names | Adrenal cortical adenoma, adrenal adenoma |
| Adrenal adenoma in a patient with Conn syndrome | |
| Specialty | Endocrinology, oncology |
An adrenocortical adenoma or adrenal adenoma is commonly described as a benign neoplasm emerging from the cells that comprise the adrenal cortex. Like most adenomas, the adrenocortical adenoma is considered a benign tumor since the majority of them are non-functioning and asymptomatic. Adrenocortical adenomas are classified as ACTH-independent disorders, and are commonly associated with conditions linked to hyperadrenalism such as Cushing's syndrome (hypercortisolism) or Conn's syndrome (hyperaldosteronism), which is also known as primary aldosteronism.[1] In addition, recent case reports further support the affiliation of adrenocortical adenomas with hyperandrogenism or florid hyperandrogenism which can cause hyperandrogenic hirsutism in females.[2] "Cushing's syndrome" differs from the "Cushing's disease" even though both conditions are induced by hypercortisolism. The term "Cushing's disease" refers specifically to "secondary hypercortisolism" classified as "ACTH-dependent Cushing's syndrome" caused by pituitary adenomas. In contrast, "Cushing's syndrome" refers specifically to "primary hypercortisolism" classified as "ACTH-independent Cushing's syndrome" caused by adrenocortical adenomas.
- ^ "Definition: adrenocortical adenoma from Online Medical Dictionary".
- ^ LaVoie, Melanie; Constantinides, Vasilis; Robin, Noel; Kyriacou, Angelos (30 July 2018). "Florid hyperandrogenism due to a benign adrenocortical adenoma". BMJ Case Reports. 2018: bcr-2018-224804. doi:10.1136/bcr-2018-224804. PMC 6067132. PMID 30061126.