Internal Medicine
Online ISSN : 1349-7235
Print ISSN : 0918-2918
ISSN-L : 0918-2918
Massive Adrenal Hemorrhage Secondary to Metastasis of Lung Cancer
Akitoshi KINOSHITAMasamoto NAKANONaofumi SUYAMAHiroshi TAKATANITetsuro KANDASusumu FUJIMOTOMikio OKAShigeru KOHNO
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1997 Volume 36 Issue 11 Pages 815-818

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Abstract

Hemorrhagic adrenal metastasis from lung cancer is extremely rare, although adrenal involvement is common in widely disseminated cancer. We report a case of massive adrenal hemorrhage secondary to metastasis of lung cancer. A 47-year-old female was treated by left upper lobectomy and mediastinal lymph node resection for an adenocarcinoma with intrapulmonary metastasis in the left upper lobe. Eight months later, she presented with right flank and back pain, and abdominal ultrasonography and computed tomography showed a right solitary adrenal tumor with massive hemorrhage. The tumor was not resectable and partially responded to chemotherapy. A massive adrenal hemorrhage, secondary to metastasis of lung cancer, presents with nonspecific clinical signs and symptoms. In lung cancer patients with an acute flank or back pain, hemorrhagic adrenal metastasis should be considered in the differential diagnosis.
(Internal Medicine 36: 815-818, 1997)

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© The Japanese Society of Internal Medicine
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