A 0900 h serum cortisol < 100 nmol/l (24 h off replacement hydrocortisone) indicated ACTH deficiency and need for lifelong steroid replacement. A 0900 h serum cortisol > 450 nmol/l one week after pituitary surgery is highly suggestive of a normal cortisol response to hypoglycaemia. A 0900 h serum cortisol between 250 and 450 nmol/l one week after pituitary surgery permits safe withdrawal of steroid therapy pending an insulin hypoglycaemia test 1 month after surgery. Patients with 0900 h serum cortisol between 100 and 250 nmol/l should continue replacement steroids until definitive testing. Low dose and standard dose Synacthen tests 1 week after pituitary surgery are unreliable and should not be used.
The optimal means of assessing the integrity of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis after pituitary surgery remains controversial. We compared low-dose (1 micro g iv) and standard-dose (250 micro g im) corticotropin tests performed 1 and 4-6 wk after pituitary surgery with an insulin hypoglycemia test performed at 4-6 wk. Forty-one patients (21 male and 20 female; median age, 52 yr; range, 23-73 yr) who had undergone pituitary surgery were studied (Cushing's disease excluded). Twenty-two of the 41 patients had normal cortisol responses to all tests both at 1 and 4-6 wk after surgery. Eight patients had subnormal cortisol responses to all tests. Of the 11 patients with discrepant results, seven had subnormal responses only after the low-dose corticotropin test; the remaining four patients had borderline responses to one or more tests. At 4-6 wk after surgery, subjects with a 30-min serum cortisol after standard-dose corticotropin of less than 350 nmol/liter (12.7 micro g/dl) consistently had a subnormal response to hypoglycemia, and those with a serum cortisol greater than 650 nmol/liter (23.6 micro g/dl) had a normal response to hypoglycemia. Definitive testing of the HPA axis using the standard-dose corticotropin test can be carried out provided it is performed at least 4 wk after pituitary surgery. A 30-min cortisol level greater than 650 nmol/liter (23.6 micro g/dl) indicates adequacy of the HPA axis, and a level of less than 350 nmol/liter (12.7 micro g/dl) indicates ACTH deficiency. No further testing is then required. An intermediate level of 350-650 nmol/liter (12.7-23.6 micro g/dl) warrants further assessment using the insulin hypoglycemia test.
This study showed no effect of rosiglitazone treatment at maximum approved doses in lowering plasma ACTH levels in patients post bilateral adrenalectomy for Cushing's disease.
Children with Perthes disease have been thought to be of smaller stature than their peers. No reproducible evidence exists to demonstrate an endocrinopathy as the cause. This study reviewed 139 children with Perthes disease. Height and weight were recorded and compared with standardized growth charts. A blood sample was analyzed for thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH), thyroxin (T4), and insulin-like growth factor 1 (IGF1). Two urine samples were collected at 8 am and 8 pm within 24 hours. From these a cortisol/creatinine ratio was calculated. The results were compared with those from 40 healthy matched controls. No significant differences were found between the study or control children for levels of TSH, T4, IGF1, or cortisol. Review of the height and weight results revealed that the study children were of normal body habitus compared with the general pediatric population and do not undergo a period of growth acceleration following the active stages of the disease.
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