1. This study sought to assess the incidence of primary aldosteronism in 199 hypertensives who were normokalaemic and in whom the question of primary aldosteronism had never been raised. 2. The screening test applied was the aldosterone to renin ratio in plasma, which was raised in 40 and normal in 159 patients. A second ratio was normal in 14 of these 40. 3. Twenty-two patients with two further raised ratios required fludrocortisone suppression testing. This has been completed in 17, and failure to suppress led to a diagnosis of primary aldosteronism in all. 4. A dexamethasone suppression test (DST) excluded ACTH-dependent hyperaldosteronism and laterality of aldosterone production was determined by adrenal vein sampling. 5. Unilaterality in five patients led to adrenalectomy in four and spironolactone in one. Bilaterality in six patients led to spironolactone. 6. This study so far provides a proven (minimum) incidence for primary aldosteronism of 8.5%, a probable incidence of 12.0% (including two raised ratios) and a possible (maximum) incidence of 13.0% (leaving out those with second ratio normal). Exclusion of hypokalaemic hypertensives will lead to an underestimation of the true incidence of primary aldosteronism. 7. Based on this and other evidence, it is estimated that the incidence of primary aldosteronism in the 'essential hypertensive' population is between 5 and 15%, and is probably around 10%.
Using the transperitoneal, laparoscopic approach, we performed 67 successful adrenalectomies between June 1993 and July 1995 at Greenslopes Hospital, Brisbane. There were 30 women and 37 men. Syndromes of primary adrenal hormone overproduction--primary aldosteronism (n = 52), pheochromocytoma (n = 6), and hypercortisolism (n = 1)--were present in 59 patients and apparently nonfunctioning adrenal tumors (of which one was malignant) in 8 patients. There was a significant difference in the time of operation between patients weighing < 80 kg and those weighing > 80 kg. Operations on males were slower than those on females, possibly explained by males being significantly heavier. Left-sided tumors outnumbered right-sided tumors; removal of right-sided adrenals took, on average, longer, but this difference was not significant.
Since February 1996 we have prospectively assessed residual adrenal autonomy by the fludrocortisone suppression test (FST) in 23 patients 3 months after unilateral adrenalectomy for Conn syndrome and in 45 patients after a longer interval. In regard to blood pressure, 36 (53%) patients were cured of hypertension and the remaining 32 (47%) patients had improved hypertension control at the time of their latest postoperative clinical assessment. In regard to the outcome of surgery, patients who achieved normal suppressibility of aldosterone were regarded as cured, and those who had greater suppressibility after surgery were considered improved. Time since surgery for the whole group averaged 26 months. By these biochemical criteria, 42 patients (62%) were cured by surgery, and the rest improved; 16 (76%) of 21 women were cured, and 26 (55%) of 47 men. The women (mean +/- SD age 47 +/- 11 years) were significantly (p < 0.05) younger than the men (52 +/- 9 years). Preoperative aldosterone levels before and after FST were similar in the cured and improved groups and fell significantly (p < 0.01) in both groups following surgery. After surgical reduction of autonomous aldosterone production, mean plasma renin activity levels increased sixfold in the cured group and threefold in the improved group. Surgical mortality in this group of 68 patients with Conn syndrome was zero.
Many cases of potentially curable primary aldosteronism are currently likely to be diagnosed as essential hypertension unless screening tests based on suppression of renin are carried out in all hypertensive patients. More than half of the patients with primary aldosteronism detected in this way have normal circulating potassium levels, so measurement of potassium is not enough to exclude primary aldosteronism. When primary aldosteronism is diagnosed, fewer than one-third of patients are suitable for surgery as initial treatment, but this still represents a significant percentage of hypertensive patients. After excluding glucocorticoid-suppressible primary aldosteronism, adrenal venous sampling is essential to detect unilateral production of aldosterone and diagnose angiotensin-responsive aldosterone-producing adenoma. One cannot rely on the computed tomography scan. If all hypertensive patients are screened for primary aldosteronism and the workup is continued methodically in those with a positive screening test, patients with unilateral overproduction of aldosterone who potentially can be cured surgically are not denied the possibility of cure.
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