AI Article Synopsis

  • Surgical manipulation of paraganglioma can trigger severe hypertensive attacks due to catecholamine release, but the specific risk factors for these attacks, particularly in rare tumors like those in the urinary bladder and retroperitoneum, were previously unclear.
  • This study reviewed the cases of 32 patients diagnosed with paraganglioma over a 15-year period, focusing on factors such as mass size, patient demographics, and pre-operative symptoms to assess their relationship with hypertensive attacks during surgery.
  • Results indicated that larger mass sizes were linked to a higher incidence of hypertensive attacks during surgery, with a cutoff size of 4.25 cm providing a significant predictive value; thus, surgeons should be cautious in handling larger masses to

Article Abstract

Background: Surgical manipulation of paraganglioma can induce a massive release of catecholamines leading to hypertensive attack. But it has been not known about risk factors to cause hypertensive attack because paragangliomas of urinary bladder and retroperitoneum are notably rare tumors and have been recorded as case report or series. We investigated the relationship between mass size and hypertensive attack during surgery in patients with paraganglioma.

Methods: Our retrospective chart review included 32 patients who had a pathological diagnosis of paraganglioma between March 2006 and May 2021, in single center. We analyzed the risk factors such as age, sex, height, weight, blood pressure before surgery, history of hypertension, pre-operative symptoms, mass location, and mass in 24 patients with retroperitoneal paragangliomas including urinary bladder. Hypertensive attack was defined as systolic blood pressure >180 mmHg during excision of the mass from the electric medical chart. The predictive power was assessed by the area under the curve of the receiver operating characteristic curve.

Results: There were 19 retroperitoneal, 5 urinary bladder, 2 middle-ear cavity, 2 mediastinal, 2 neck, 1 spinal cord and 1 duodenal paraganglioma. Seven (29.2%) of the 24 patients had preoperative symptoms such as pain, fluctuation of blood pressure, and palpable mass. Hypertensive attack during surgery occurred in 11 patients (45.8%). There was a significant difference in mass size between groups with (n=11) and without (n=13) fluctuation of blood pressure (P=0.007). The area under curve for predicting surgical complications according to mass size was 0.808 (cutoff size 4.25 cm, sensitivity 72.7%, specificity 76.9%, 95% CI: 0.635-0.981).

Conclusions: Mass size impacted occurrence of hypertensive attack during surgery in patients with retroperitoneal paraganglioma. Surgeons have to be watchful regarding of intraoperative hypertension during resection of retroperitoneal masses exceeding 4.25 cm, which are suspected as paraganglioma.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9641100PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.21037/tcr-22-707DOI Listing

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