ABSTRACT
A 53 years old man had an angiography for suspected renovascular hypertension (arteritis, renal insufficiency, duplex scanning). It showed a narrow right renal artery streched by a 45 mm mass arising from the adrenal. The computed tomography showed the tumor and the nuclear magnetic resonance imaging indicated a pheochromocytoma. The patient had no complain of headaches, palpitations or sweating. Biochemistry was normal except for a slight serum creatinin elevation and a non significant urinary noradrenaline level. A diagnostic of non functioning pheochromocytoma was made. The therapeutics consisted in a surgical ablation of the tumor and the right kidney (non functioning) and the patient became normotensive thereafter without treatment. The histologic feature was an aortico-sympathetic paraganglia, the adrenal was normal. Paraganglias are arising from the paraganglion system including chemodectoma and glomus jugulare tumor. Non functioning retroperitoneal paraganglias are uncommon: less than 50 in the literature between 1902 and 1992.