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by riahi
787 days ago
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Tough case. Adrenal adenomas are common incidental findings. ~15% are hormonally active, which means the vast majority are not. As a radiologist, I sometimes wonder about whether I make too many recommendations to referring doctors (consider endocrine evaluation for a potentially hormonally active adrenal nodule). A FREQUENT attack on us as a specialty is that we "find too many incidentals" (see attacks on mammography, breast cancer screening, other sorts of screening, ad nauseam). Perhaps I'll keep doing the adrenal nodule recommendation, although I usually only make the recommendation if it's 1cm or larger. |
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Are you provided these details as well?
* Hypertension 20+ years
* Resistant hypertension - four medications with one being a diuretic.
* Early onset hypertension (high school)
* Low potassium
Coupled with the history, Hyperaldosteronism seems much more probable.
There are a ton edge cases/conditions to keep in one's head. I'm sure that's a problem in all domains, definitely medicine.
I wish it could be a multidisciplinary team decision. But then it would become an issue of reaching consensus. And probably too expensive.