Abstract

The feasibility of differentiating patients with pheochromocytoma from other hypertensive patients by measuring urinary excretion rates of norepinephrine during sleep, a period of physiologic suppression of norepinephrine release, was investigated. The mean excretion rates of norepinephrine in 248 normal subjects and in 109 patients with essential hypertension were 1.03 ± 0.03 and 1.12 ± 0.06 (SEM) μ/hour, respectively, whereas the lowest excretion rate among the six patients with pheochromocytoma was about seven times higher. Plasma norepinephrine concentration in patients with pheochromocytoma was also consistently above the range observed in both normotensive and hypertensive subjects. CT scan correctly identified the same tumors visualized by selective arteriography. It is suggested that the usefulness of these approaches will provide simpler means of screening and detecting pheochromocytoma.

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