We report a case of a dopamine-secreting giant primary adrenal ganglioneuroma (GN) in a 29-year-old male patient. Although the patient was clinically silent, the 24-hour urine levels of dopamine, normetanephrine, homovanillic acid and vanillyl mandelic acid were elevated. Abdominal ultrasonography and magnetic resonance imaging showed a large solid tumor with calcifications and a slightly lobular edge on the left adrenal gland. A tumor, 13 × 23 × 25 cm in size, was completely resected without morbidity. A 2-year follow-up with computed tomography showed that the postoperative course of the patient was uneventful.
CITATION STYLE
Polat, A. V., Kamali Polat, A., Aslan, K., Atmaca, H., & Karagoz, F. (2014). Dopamine-secreting giant adrenal ganglioneuroma: Clinical and diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging findings. JBR-BTR, 97(2), 109–112. https://doi.org/10.5334/jbr-btr.30
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