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Adrenocortical hemorrhagic necrosis: the role of catecholamines and retrograde medullary-cell embolism.
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1981
Year
Adrenal GlandAdrenocortical Hemorrhagic NecrosisMedicinePhysiologyForensic ToxicologyMedullary-cell EmbolismRat ModelsToxicologyNeurologyRetrograde EmbolizationAdrenal DiseaseClinical ChemistryPharmacologyAdrenal NecrosisEmergency Medicine
We investigated the pathogenesis of adrenal necrosis using animal models of the disease (induced by administration of acrylonitrile, cysteamine, or pyrazole) and human cases. Results of electron-microscopic and histochemical time-response studies with rat models revealed an early, retrograde embolization of medullary cells and cell fragments in the cortical capillaries that showed prominent endothelial injury. The experimental adrenal lesions were prevented by surgical removal of the medulla one month before administration of adrenocorticolytic chemicals, or by the administration of the alpha-adrenergic antagonist phenoxybenzamine hydrochloride. Histochemical staining for medullary (argyrophil) granules in human cases of adrenal necrosis demonstrated tissue fragments that stained positively for silver in vascular cortical spaces in nine of ten autopsy specimens and in all four surgical cases we reviewed. Thus, catecholamines released from the adrenal medulla and from the retrograde medullary emboli in the cortex may have a role in the pathogenesis of adrenocortical necrosis.