RESUMO
Pheochromocytoma is a cause of hypertension that frequently can be cured by surgery. The aim of this paper, based on 5 cases of pheochromocytoma, is to relate our experience in diagnosis and treatment in this pathology. In four of 5 patients with pheochromocytoma we observed unusual characteristics of the disease. Association with neurofibromatosis in one case, with rheumatic mitral regurgitation in another; and in a third case the tumor was malignant. One patient had catecholamine-mediated electrocardiographic changes which disappeared with treatment. Since symptoms of adrenergic hyperactivity were present in all cases, the rise in the levels of vanilmandelic acid and urinary metanephrines were useful in confirming the diagnosis. Computed tomography and I-131 meta-benzylguanidine for radioisotopic imaging, displayed not only all tumoral masses but also bone metastases in the malignant case. During the follow-up period, from the sixth month to the fourth year after surgery, four patients were asymptomatic, and have normal urinary catecholamine metabolite levels. The patient with a malignant form of pheochromocytoma continued to show elevated catecholamines release and remained hypertensive in spite of adrenal mass resection.