Kuchel O, Hamet P, Buu N T, Larochelle P
Clin Pharmacol Ther. 1981 May;29(5):687-94. doi: 10.1038/clpt.1981.96.
In more than half of 67 patients suspected of having pheochromocytoma, glucagon stimulation increased plasma free norepinephrine (NE) and epinephrine (E) 50% or more, with rising blood pressure or pulse rate; only three patients, however, harbored a pheochromocytoma. A low degree of catecholamine conjugation accounts for most of the false-positive results. In patients with low conjugated NE +E there was a greater rise in free NE +E and free E as well as in pulse rate after glucagon stimulation than in those with normal levels of conjugated NE+E. Glucagon-sensitive adenylate cyclase was found in pheochromocytomas but not in a functional adrenocortical adenomas. After sham administration of glucagon, there were rises in blood pressure but not in free NE or E in four patients. The glucagon-induced catecholamine test can be false-positive in hyperadrenergic essential hypertensive patients with abnormally low conjugated NE +E. Saline alone in a sham glucagon test in susceptible patients raises systolic blood pressure and pulse rate, and therefore, if plasma free NE and E are measured and found not to rise this type of false-positive result can be eliminated.