A 26-yr-old male was submitted to bilateral adrenalectomy in 1977 for Cushing's syndrome. Some months later he developed intense skin hyperpigmentation together with increased ACTH levels (149 to 4000 ng/l). The sellar region was always normal in X-ray studies. In April 1985, when the patient complained of chest pain, a chest x-ray showed a polycyclic mass in the upper left lobe of the lung. ACTH ranged from 20,000 to 100,000 ng/l, with no response to CRF or cyproheptadine administration. Urinary 5-OH-indolacetic acid was negative. Thoracotomy was performed in July 1985 with resection of two intrapulmonary masses. Histologic study demonstrated a carcinoid tumor, with positive neuron-specific enolase and ACTH immunochemical stain. ACTH concentration in tumoral tissue was 91 pg/g tissue. After surgery ACTH fell dramatically to 37 ng/l, and has remained at this level since then, associated with resolution of the skin hyperpigmentation.

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