Adrenal Disease Flashcards
In the adrenal medulla, what cells produce what type of catecolamines?
Chromafin cells produce noradrenaline and adrenaline.
Name the 3 layers of the adrenal cortex and what they produce.
From Out to In (The deeper you go the sweeter it gets)
- Zona Glumerulosa (Salt - Mineralocorticoids)
- Zona Fasciculata (Sugar - Glucocorticoids)
- Zona Reticularis. (Sex Hormones)
Name the 4 main adrenal disorders.
- Cushings Disease - Increased glucocorticoids.
- Primary Hyperaldosteronism (Conn’s) - Increased mineralocorticoids.
- Addison’s disease (Adrenal failure)
- Phaeochomocytoma (Increased adrenalin)
What is the most common cause of Cushing’s disease?
Exogenous cortisol/steroid use.
Describe the difference between ACTH dependent and ACTH indepdenet cushing’s syndrome?
1/ Corticotropin-dependent (ACTH dependent) causes account for about 80-85% of cases:
- 80% are due to pituitary adenomas (Cushing’s disease).
- The remaining 20% are due to ectopic corticotropin syndrome, which is usually due to small-cell carcinoma of the lung and bronchial carcinoid tumours, but may occur with almost any endocrine tumour, eg phaeochromocytoma, pancreaticneuroendocrine tumours, medullary thyroid cancer, gut carcinoids.
2/ Corticotropin-independent Cushing’s syndrome is most often due to a unilateral tumour: adrenal adenoma in 60% and adrenal carcinoma in 40% of cases.
Who should we test for Cushing’s disease?
- People with multiple fractures
- Children with low height and increased weight.
- Unusual features for age (OP, HTN)
What are the first line investigations for Cushing’s disease?
- 24 hour urinary free cortisol (2 samples required)
- Late night salivary cortisol (2 samples required)
- Dexamethasone suppression test.
What are the treatment options for ACTH dependent and ACTH independent Cushing’s syndrome?
- ACTH depdenent - Pituitary surgery or treatment for cancerous cause.
- ACTH independent - unlateral adrenelectomy
What is the most common cause of primary hyperaldosteronism (Conn’s syndrome)?
Bilateral adrenal hyperplasia.
What electrolyte imbalance occurs in hyperaldosteronism?
High Sodium (salt retention)
Water retention
Low Potassium.
ALSO Low Renin
Who should we suspect might have primary hyperaldosteronism?
If they are hypertensive AND
- BP is not responding to 3 agonists.
- Low potassium
- < 40 years.
- Incidental adrenal mass on imaging.
How does one investigate for primary hyperaldosteronism?
Aldosterone to Renin Ratio
Take mid morning after patient has been up for atleast 2 hours.
In what situations can you get false positives and false negatives in the Aldosterone-to-Renin Ratio?
False positives - methyldopa, clonidine, B-Blockers, NSAIDs.
False negatives - ACE-i, CCB, AR2B, Diuretics.
Switch antihypertensives to Doxazosin or Verapamil whilst test is carried out.
What is a phaeochromocytoma?
A neuroendocrine tumour of the chromafin cells.
What is a paraganglioma?
Tumour of the sympathetic and parasympathetic tissue in the head and neck. (It can rarely secrete catecholamines)