Radiology Case Reports (Sep 2017)

Nontraumatic adrenal hemorrhage: the adrenal stress

  • Marco Di Serafino, MD,
  • Rosa Severino, MD,
  • Valeria Coppola, MD,
  • Matilde Gioioso, MD,
  • Rosario Rocca, MD,
  • Francesco Lisanti, MD,
  • Enrico Scarano, MD

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.radcr.2017.03.020
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 3
pp. 483 – 487

Abstract

Read online

Bilateral adrenal hemorrhage is a rare condition, which is burdened by potentially life-threatening consequences related to the development of acute adrenal insufficiency. Despite treatment with stress-dose glucocorticoids, a mortality rate of 15% has been reported, which varies according to the severity of underlying predisposing illness and could be much more higher if the adrenal insufficiency is not promptly recognized. An early diagnosis is crucial, though, because of nonspecific clinical and laboratory findings, adrenal hemorrhage is rarely suspected. Therefore, imaging has a pivotal role for the diagnosis of this uncommon condition but, despite adrenal hematomas characteristically appear round or oval with peripheral fat stranding, their initial presentation could be ambiguous. The authors describe a case of postoperative bilateral adrenal hemorrhage initially presenting at computed tomography scan as thickening of both glands surrounded by fat stranding, which led to close monitoring of adrenal function before unequivocal hemorrhage developed.

Keywords