Adrenal Insufficiency Flashcards
What is adrenal insufficiency?
Have decreased cortisol +/- decreased aldosterone
What are the common etiologies of ACTH-independent adrenal insufficiency?
ACTH-independent = not a pituitary issue
ADDISON
1. Autoimmune – antibodies vs the adrenal enzymes
2. Drugs - injury to the adrenal and drugs that increase the metabolism cortisol
3. Destruction of adrenal gland
4. Infectious - TB HIV
5. Skin changes (1ary only)
6. Orthostatic dizziness (1ary only)
7. Na down - hyponatremia
Familial ACTH-resistance
What are common etiologies of ACTH-dependant adrenal insufficiency?
not a problem with the adrenal gland
- pituitary or brain issue
- tumour in the pituitary or brain
- rads to neck or brain
- iatrogenic - abrupt stopping of steroid medication
- treatment for Cushing’s syndrome
- pituitary hemorrhage or infarction
Adrenal insufficiency: explain the patho for s/s related to decreased androgen?
impacts libido and hair growth
What is an adrenal crisis? s/s
life-threatening, medical emergency
shock like s/s
fever, DLOC, unstable, hypotension
how would you treat an adrenal crisis?
5 S’s management
- Steroids - for the decreased cortisol
- Salt - tx the dehydration, give fluids
- Sugar - tx the hypoglycemia
- Supportive care
- Search for etiology
What tests would you order to diagnose adrenal insufficiency and in what order?
- serum cortisol (low)
- serum ACTH (interpret in the context of serum cortisol – cortisol low and ACTH high ➔ primary cause; cortisol low and ACTH low ➔ suggests secondary cause)
- Cosyntropin/ACTH stimulation test (cortisol rise suggests secondary/tertiary cause, NOT adrenal issue)
- if thinking primary - serum aldosterone (low), serum renin (high), serum DHEA (low)
- imaging to visualize potential tumours
How would you treat and advice a patient with adrenal insufficiency?
- glucocorticoid replacement (short-acting hydrocortisone) ➔ therapy for life
- mineralocorticoid replacement (fludrocortisone) ➔ only for a primary where the adrenal is not functioning
- PT education on diet (higher salt and good hydration)
- androgen replacement for females if needed
- Pt education about stress dosing to mimic real cortisol levels
- medical alert bracelet
why do we need to do steroid tapering?
Needs to be done because exogenous steroids suppress the hypo-pituitary-adrenal axis and overtime the adrenal is atrophied due to the suppression
so need to give time to the adrenals to bounce back
what s/s do you see in both primary and secondary adrenal insufficiency?
Weakness and fatigue
Nausea and vomiting
Myalgias
Hypoglycemia
Hypotension
Abdo pain
what s/s are unique to 1ary/ACTH independent causes of adrenal insufficiency?
hyperpigmentation
salt craving - hyponatremia
orthostatic hypertension
decreased libido, menses irregularities, and loss of axillary pubic hair
what s/s are unique to 2ary/ACTH dependent causes of adrenal insufficiency?
visual disturbances/abnormalities
headaches