ENDOCRINE - STEROIDS Flashcards
What are Corticosteroids used for?
- inflammatory long term diseases
- as immunosuppresants
What are the 2 categories of corticosteroids? give examples
- Mineralocorticoid - fluid retention - e.g. fludrocortisone, hydrocortisone
- Glucocorticoid - anti inflammatory - e.g. dexamethasone, prednisolone, deflazcone
What are the side effects of mineralocorticoids?
- Na+ and water retention = hypertension
- K+ and Ca2+ loss
What are the side effects of glucocorticoids?
Diabetes (high glucose), osteoporosis (low ca), peptic ulceration
- Endocrine = hyperglycaemia
- Musculoskeletal = Myopathy (caution with statins), Osteoporosis (if using steroids for more than 3 months prophylaxis with alendronic acid is needed)
- GI = peptic ulcers, GI upset, dyspepsia - take w food
- Psychiatric reactions = paranoia, suicidal depression
- Immunosuppression = infections = occurs w long term use, avoid live vaccines, avoid people with chicken pox (including pts who stopped taking steroids less than 3 months ago after long term treatment)
- Adrenal suppression - avoid abrupt withdrawal if using for more than 3 weeks
- Glaucoma and cataracts
- Cushings - skin thinning, bruising, striae, mood face, purple skin, acne, fat deposits in face
- growth restriction in kids
What are some counselling points you would tell to patients starting glucocorticoid therapy?
- Risk of infections
- adrenal suppression
- psychiatric reactions
- withdrawal info
- take with or after food
How would you minimise side effects of Corticosteroids?
- Lowest effective dose for minimum period
- Local treatment > systemic route
- Single dose in the morning - cortisol secretion is low in the morning
- alternate day administration
- intermittently with short courses
In which patient groups must you avoid abrupt withdrawal of Corticosteroids?
Patient groups that are at risk of
- Long term use (> 3 weeks)
- > 40mg prednisolone daily or equivalent for more than 1 week
- short course within 1 year of stopping long term steroids
- taking evening doses
What do you need to monitor in pregnant women taking steroids?
fluid retention
What is addisons disease?
adrenal gland damaged so not enough cortisol (natural glucocorticoid) and aldosterone (natural mineralocorticoid) are released
How would you treat addisons disease (replacement therapy)?
- Hydrocortisone and fludrocortisone
- Hydrocortisone = higher dose in morning and lower dose in evening
What is hypopituitarism?
pit gland does not stimulate hormone secretion by target glands
How do you treat hypopituitarism?
Hydrocortisone
What causes Cushing’s syndrome?
- high cortisol - can be with high doses of glucocorticoids
- tumour
Symptoms of Cushing’s syndrome?
- skin thinning
- easy bruising
- reddish-purple stretch marks (striae)
- fat deposits in face
- moon face
- acne
- hirsutism (excessive hair)
- amenorrhoea (no periods)
How do you treat Cushing’s syndrome?
ketoconazole - avoid in life threatening hepatotoxicity