The size of an adrenal tumor should not be the primary factor in determining whether a laparoscopic adrenalectomy should be performed. Large adrenal tumors that are confined to the adrenal gland on CT can be removed with a laparoscopic approach.
Patients having LA had longer operative procedures but shorter hospital stays and faster return to normal activity than patients having OA. Procedure-related complications for LA were due to bleeding into the retroperitoneum or abdominal wall. Significant postoperative cardiac and respiratory complications occurred only in the OA group.
We describe two Caucasian women with the concurrence of Graves' disease and the moyamoya phenomenon (radiological evidence of collateral cerebral blood vessels like "puffs of smoke" due to cerebrovascular occlusive disease). One patient presented with acute cerebrovascular ischemia due to Moyamoya disease shortly after radioactive iodine therapy for Graves' disease and the second presented with Graves' disease 10 years after being diagnosed with moyamoya dysplastic cerebral vessels. The optimal treatment of hyperthyroidism in these patients is unknown; however, careful control of the hyperthyroidism by any modality seems reasonable. Our limited experience suggests that antithyroid drugs and radioactive iodine therapy are rational options. Thyroidectomy appears to be a safe therapeutic alternative, although long-term efficacy may be difficult to assure. Both of our patients had to be treated twice for hyperthyroidism. Whether Graves' disease and Moyamoya coexist because of an aggressive autoimmune mechanism is a concept that remains to be settled.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.