Abstract

I agree with Joris et al.’s (1) recommendation that laparoscopic resection of pheochromocytoma must be performed by an experienced surgeon and anesthesiologist. The following case indicates that precise diagnosis and cautious preoperative preparation are also prerequisites for this procedure. A 55-yr-old patient was scheduled for laparoscopic resection of an incidentally detected right adrenal tumor, which was diagnosed as nonfunctioning as a result of the lack of apparent symptoms and the negative results of urinary qualitative detection of vanillylmandelic acid and I131-metaiodobenzylguanidine scintigraphy. Anesthesia was induced uneventfully, but pneumoperitoneum and retroperitoneal dissection abruptly increased systolic blood pressure to >250 mm Hg. Aggressive use of nicardipine maintained the systolic blood pressure at <200 mm Hg with difficulty. Histological investigation and analyses of plasma epinephrine and norepinephrine levels during the surgery (2.83 and 15.07 ng/mL, respectively) revealed that the tumor was pheochromocytoma. Anesthesia and surgery for unsuspected pheochromocytoma are extremely dangerous (2). An increased number of adrenal masses were recently detected incidentally by imaging procedures (3), and 4%–11% of these masses were identified as pheochromocytoma, which can be asymptomatic (4,5). Precise preoperative diagnosis and cautious preoperative preparation are essential for safe anesthetic management of such cases (6). Tokuya Harioka MD Koichiro Nomura MD Satoshi Hosoi MD Kumiko Mukaida MD

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