Hypoadrenal Disorders Flashcards

1
Q

How many carbon atoms does cholesterol have?

A

27

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2
Q

What determines which steroids the different parts of the adrenal gland produce?

A

The combination of enzymes present in the different parts of the adrenal gland
Hydroxylation in different positions of cholesterol gives different products.

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3
Q

Which enzyme converts cholesterol to pregnenolone?

A

Cytochrome P450 (short chain cleavage)

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4
Q

Which sets of enzymes are switched on by ACTH?

A

Cortisol synthesis enzymes

Sex steroid synthesis enzymes

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5
Q

The pituitary gland produces ACTH in response to what?

A

Stress

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6
Q

Which enzyme converts corticosterone to aldosterone?

A

18-hydroxylase

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7
Q

State 3 causes of adrenocortical failure.

A

Tuberculous Addison’s Disesae (commonest worldwide)
Autoimmune Addison’s Disease (commonest in the UK)
Congenital Adrenal Hyperplasia

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8
Q

State 9 consequences of adrenocortical failure.

A
Postural Hypotension (due to lack of aldosterone) 
Hyperkalaemia 
Exhaustion
Weight loss
Hyponatraemia
Fall in glucose (due to lack of cortisol) 
Pigmentation (due to high ACTH)
Vitiligo 
Eventual death due to severe hypotension
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9
Q

Why do Addison’s patients get vitiligo?

A

Vitiligo is an autoimmune disease where you have antibodies against melanin
Autoimmune diseases tend to go hand-in-hand (predisposition)

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10
Q

Why does Addison’s cause skin pigmentation?

A

Lack of cortisol stimulates production of huge amounts of ACTH.
ACTH is formed from cleavage of POMC to ACTH + alpha-MSH
High ACTH also means high alpha-MSH, which stimulates melanocytes, causing skin pigmentation

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11
Q

State some tests for Addison’s disease.

A

9 am cortisol = low
ACTH = high
Short synACTHen test (250 ug IM) = won’t make cortisol as cortex can’t respond

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12
Q

What is the most common cause of congenital adrenal hyperplasia (CAH)?

A

21-hydroxylase deficiency

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13
Q

What are the 2 degrees of CAH?

A

Partial or Complete (absence of the enzyme)

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14
Q

Why are foetuses with CAH normally fine in utero?

A

In utero, the foetus’ will have maternal cortisol + aldosterone so don’t need to rely on their own endogenous production.

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15
Q

Which hormones are absent in complete 21-hydroxylase deficiency?

A

Cortisol

Aldosterone

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16
Q

What effect does 21-hydroxylase deficiency have on sex steroid synthesis?

A

It funnels the precursors towards the steroid synthesis pathway so there is an increase in adrenal sex steroids.

17
Q

What will happen to a baby with complete 21-hydroxylase deficiency after they are born?

A

They will have a salt losing Addisonian crisis due to the lack of aldosterone.
Survive <24 hours if untreated

18
Q

What are the 2 main features of 21-hydroxylase deficiency?

A

Hypotension

Virilisation (female babies will be born with ambiguous genitalia)

19
Q

Describe the presentation of partial 21-hydroxylase deficiency.

A

Present later because they don’t have a salt losing Addisonian crisis.
Present once they start to see the effects of the excess adrenal sex steroids e.g. hirsuitism + precocious puberty
Also slightly hypotensive

20
Q

Describe and explain the presentation and explanation of complete 11-hydroxylase deficiency.

A

11-deoxycorticosterone accumulates
which has mineralocorticoid effects, thus no salt losing Addisonian crisis
Behave as if they have HIGH aldosterone
HYPERTENSIVE + HYPOKALAEMIC
There will still be some funnelling towards the sex steroid synthesis pathway causing virilisation

21
Q

Describe and explain the presentation of 17-hydroxylase deficiency.

A

High levels of aldosterone = hypertension + hypokalaemia
Lack cortisol + sex steroids so they will not go through puberty
Present ~pubertal age: hypertensive, hypoglycaemia, absent puberty + prone to infections because cortisol is needed to cope with the stress of infections

22
Q

What are the 3 “branches” of hormones produced by the adrenal cortex?

A

Mineralocorticoids: Aldosterone
Glucocorticoids: Cortisol
Sex steroids: Testosterone + Estradiol

23
Q

What would the adrenal glands look like in autoimmune Addisons, TB and metastasis?

A

AI: Atrophied adrenals, very small
TB: Granulomatous infiltration
Metastasis: Large tumour

24
Q

What would you expect to see in a blood test of a patient with Adrenocortical failure?

A

Low Na+

High K+

25
Q

List 4 features of partial 21-hydroxylase deficiency

A

Male pattern balding
Hirsutism
Irregular menstruation
Clitoral enlargement

26
Q

Why do babies with congenital adrenal hyperplasia have enlarged adrenals?

A

ACTH is raised to drive the adrenal cortex to produce its steroids, but only sex steroids can be produced
Excess ACTH makes adrenals grow