Lecture 2: Adrenal Flashcards
Describe the difference between the short-term and long-term stress response in terms of the HPA axis and the adrenal cortex.
- Short-term causes stimulation of the adrenal medulla to ↑ release of catecholamine (NE and epinephrine)
- Long-term causes stimulation of the adrenal cortex and ↑ release of mineralocorticoids and glucocorticoids
What are the effects of angiotensin II on the adrenal cortex and pituitary gland?
- Adrenal cortex: stimulates secretion of aldosterone
- Posterior pituitary: stimulates the secretion of ADH
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What are the 3 mainstays of treatment in an infant in crisis due to congenital adrenal hyperplasia (21-hydroxylase deficiency)?
- Hydrocortisone (IV or IM)
- Fluids/glucose (IV)
- Management of hyperkalemia: get K+ levels ↓
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Summarize the purpose of mandatory newborn screening, which 7 major classes of disorders are screened for?
- Amino acid disorders
- Endocrine disorders
- Fatty acid oxidation disorders
- Hemoglobin disorders
- Lysosomal storage disorders
- Organic acid conditions
- Others: CF, hearling loss, classic galoctosemia, congenital HD, SCID
What is the most common cause of adrenal destruction responsible for primary adrenal insufficiency (Addison disease) in the US?
Autoimmune
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Which autoimmune causes of adrenal destruction are associated with neurological deterioration which may mimic multiple sclerosis?
Adrenoleukodystrophy and adrenomyeloneuropathy
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What is the inheritance pattern and what is seen with familial glucocorticoid deficiency (ACTH, cortisol, and mineralocorticoid levels)?
- Autosomal recessive
- ACTH resistance due to mutations in the adrenal ACTH receptors –> isolated cortisol deficiency
- ↑ ACTH causes skin pigmentation
- Mineralocorticoid production is always normal
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Which disease of adrenal dysgenesis is associated with hypogonadotropic hypogonadism, myopathy, and high-frequency hearing loss?
Congenital adrenal HYPOplasia (x-linked) = absence of adrenal cortex
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What is the most common cause of impaired steroidognesis leading to primary adrenal insufficiency; what are the levels of adrenal hormones like?
- 21-hydroxylase deficiency
- Deficiency of aldosterone = salt-wasting
- Deficiency of cortisol
- Excessive androgens (virilization of females)
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Nearly all patients with primary adrenal insufficiency complain of what signs/sx’s?
- Fatigue + reduced stamina + weakness + anorexia + weight loss
- Skin hyperpigmentation
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What is the serum Na+, K+, glucose, and calcium like in primary adrenal insufficiency?
- Low serum Na+
- High serum K+
- Fasting HYPOglycemia
- HYPERcalcemia may be present (↓ renal filtration)
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What is the confirmatory test for primary adrenal insufficiency?
- Cosyntropin (synthetic ACTH) stimulation test
- If cortisol levels do no respond after 45 mins., confirms
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Which serum markers can be used to confirm autoimmun Addison disase and which is required for diagnosis of 21-hydroxylase deficiency?
- Serum antibodies to 21-hydroxylase confirm dx of autoimmune Addison disease
- ↑ serum levels of 17-OH progresterone are required for diagnosis
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What is the treatment for primary adrenal insufficiency (Addison disease)?
- Glucocorticoid replacement therapy: hydrocortisone, predisone, prednisolone
- Mineralocorticoid replacement therapy: fludrocortison acetate (Na+ sparing)
- DHEA: given to some post-menopausal women (libido, done density, hormonal balance)
List 5 labs which can be ordered to help diagnose acute adrenal crisis?
- ACTH (cosyntropin) stimulation test
- Cortisol level
- Blood sugar
- Serum K+
- Serum Na+
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If you are dealing with an infant in the first several weeks of life with suspected acute adrenal crisis, what lab needs to be drawn?
17-OH-progesterone level; must rule out 21-hydroxyase deficiency
What are the 3 components of treatment for acute adrenal crisis?
- Hydrocortisone
- Fluids/glucose
- Treat HYPERkalemia if needed
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Low serum ACTH in the setting of low serum cortisol is indicative of what type of adrenal abnormality?
Secondary adrenal insufficiency
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What are 3 possible causes of ACTH-dependent Cushing Syndrome?
- Exogenous ACTH use
- Cushing disease (ACTH-secreting pituitary adenoma)
- Ectopic ACTH syndrome –> small cell carcinoma of lung
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What are some of the possible causes of ACTH-independent Cushing Syndrome?
- Exogenous corticosteroid use (MOST COMMON)
- Adrenocortical tumor
- Bilateral primary adrenocortical hyperplasia: PPNAD, Carney complex, massive macronodular adrenal hyperplasia, McCune-Albright syndrome
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What is seen in McCune-Albright Syndrome?
- Polyostotic fibrous dysplasia
- Café-au-lait spots
- Endocrine hyperfunction from mutliple organs —> bilateral primary adrenocortical hyperplasia
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All (even normotensive) patients with an adrenal incidentaloma require testing for what?
Pheochromocytoma w/ plasma fractionated free metanephrines
What is the most common cause of refractory HTN in youths and middle-aged adults?
Primary aldosteronism (hyperaldosteronism)
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Conn sydrome is primary hyperaldosteronism secondary to what?
Unilateral aldosterone-producing adrenal adenoma
40% of pt’s w/ primary hyperaldosteronism (Conn Syndrome) have a mutation in a gene encoding what?
K+ channel
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What are the signs and sx’s of primary hyperaldosteronism?
- HTN = moderate to severe; some only diastolic HTN
- HYPOkalemia –> muscle weakness, parasthesias w/ tetany, HA, polyuria and polydipsia
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Which acid-base disorder is commonly seen with primary hyperaldosteronism?
Metabolic alkalosis (proton loss, H+ w/ K+)
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All patients with biochemically confirmed primary aldosteronism require what type of imaging?
Thin-section CT scanof adrenal to screen foradrenal carcinoma(althoughrare)
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How does the secretory products differ between pheochromocytomas and paragangliomas?
- Pheochromocytomas secrete BOTH epi and NE
- Paragangliomas secrete NE or are non-secretory
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What is the inheritance pattern of Von Hippel-Lindau disease type 2?
Autosomal Dominant
What are some of the underlying abnormalities associated with Von Hippel-Lindau disease type 2?
- 20% develop pheochromocytomas (which secrete only NE)
- Hemangiomas of retina, cerebellum, brainstem, and SC
- Hyperthyroidism
- Pancreatic cysts + Renal cyts
- Endolymphatic sac tumors
- Cystadenomas of the adnexa or epididymis
- Pancreatic neuroendocrine tumors
- Adenomas + Carcinomas
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What is the single most sensitive test for secretory pheochromocytomas and paragangliomas?
Plasma fractionated free metanephrines
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If the abdomen becomes “seeded” during surgery for a pheochromocytomas this can result in multifocal intra-abdominal tumors known as what?
Pheochromocytomatosis
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Will surgical histopathology for pheochromocytoma and paragangliomas determine if a tumor is malignant?
- NO
- All pheo’s and paragangliomas must be approached as possibly malignant
- Follow-up has to be lifelong