Yamakita N, Yasuda K, Noritake N, Mercado-Asis L B, Murase H, Mune T, Morita H, Miura K
Third Department of Internal Medicine, Gifu University School of Medicine, Japan.
Acta Endocrinol (Copenh). 1989 Sep;121(3):334-44. doi: 10.1530/acta.0.1210334.
The clinical and endocrine characteristics of 12 Japanese patients with dexamethasone-suppressible hyperaldosteronism were compared with those in 49 Japanese patients with primary aldosteronism due to aldosteronoma. The results were as follows: 1. Most of the laboratory data in the two groups were almost the same. 2. The grade of vascular damage in both uncontrolled (3) and well-controlled (9) patients with dexamethasone-suppressible hyperaldosteronism did not correlate with blood pressure response. 3. The responsiveness of plasma aldosterone to exogenous ACTH in 6 patients with dexamethasone-suppressible hyperaldosteronism was not different from that in 9 patients with aldosteronoma. Even in 3 well-controlled patients in the former group, the plasma aldosterone response was as low as in all the 3 patients with small aldosteronomas. 4. In 4 patients with small aldosteronomas, plasma aldosterone was continuously suppressed with daily dexamethasone to the same degree as in dexamethasone-suppressible hyperaldosteronism. 5. The blood pressure, however, did not improve even in the patients with small aldosteronomas. The possible indistinguishable mechanism in dexamethasone-suppressible hyperaldosteronism and primary aldosteronism with small adenomas and the role of unknown hypertensinogenic steroid(s) other than aldosterone in inducing hypertension in dexamethasone-suppressible hyperaldosteronism are discussed.