Twenty three patients (19 girls, 4 boys) presented with typical features of premature pubarche between the ages of 2-7 yr. The patients were studied for the presence of an adrenal steroidogenic defect by ACTH stimulation testing (Cortrosyn, 0.25 mg iv bolus dose). Based on published nomogram standards for serum 17-hydroxyprogesterone (17-OHP), seven patients (30%) were diagnosed as having the nonclassical symptomatic form of 21-hydroxylase deficiency [mean post ACTH 4244 +/- 1113 (SD) ng/dl]. Three patients (13%) were diagnosed to have a mild form of 3 beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase deficiency based upon the response of serum delta 5-17-hydroxypregnenolone (delta 5-17P) and dehydroepiandrosterone, and the ratio of delta 5-17P/17-OHP to ACTH stimulation (delta 5-17P: 1543 +/- 272 ng/dl vs. Tanner stage I control subjects, 350 +/- 197 ng/dl; dehydroepiandrosterone: 675 +/- 190 ng/dl vs. Tanner stage I control subjects, 82 +/- 79 ng/dl; delta 5-17P/17-OHP: 8.1 +/- 2.6 vs. Tanner stage I control subjects, 1.4 +/- 0.6). No enzyme defect could be identified in the remaining 13 patients (57%). Eleven patients with premature pubarche, with and without an adrenal enzymatic defect, underwent dexamethasone suppression. In all patients the measured steroid levels were suppressed. Thus, the dexamethasone suppression test alone did not distinguish the pathogenesis of premature pubarche. In conclusion, premature pubarche is more commonly due to a partial enzyme defect in adrenal steroidogenesis than has been previously recognized.
We determined the adrenal steroid responses to metyrapone, ACTH, and CRH in 12 ACTH-intact and 5 ACTH-deficient hypopituitary children to determine the mechanisms that control adrenal androgen secretion. Serum adrenal androgen concentrations [dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA) and delta 4-androstenedione (delta 4-A)] rose in response to oral administration of metyrapone (450 mg/m2 X dose, every h for 7 doses) in ACTH-intact hypopituitary children with multiple or isolated pituitary hormone deficiencies [mean postmaryrapone level: DHEA, 225 ng/dL (range, 27-566); delta 4-A, 313 ng/dL (range, 105-651)], except in 2 young children in whom DHEA did not rise. These adrenal androgens did not rise in all ACTH-deficient hypopituitary children [mean postmetyrapone level: DHEA, 11.0 ng/dL (range, 3-16); delta 4-A, 6.2 ng/dL (range, 3-10)]. The increases in both serum cortisol and adrenal androgens, including DHEA sulfate, in response to short term ACTH infusion (40 U in 6 h) in ACTH-intact hypopituitary children were normal or above normal, while these steroid responses were significantly (P less than 0.05-0.01) lower in ACTH-deficient hypopituitary children compared to normal values. However, prolonged administration of ACTH (40 U/day, or im) for 6 days to 2 ACTH-deficient hypopituitary children resulted in normal DHEA responses to the 6-h ACTH stimulation test (DHEA levels after the first test, 14 and 30 ng/dL, after priming, 80 and 50 ng/dL). Furthermore, CRH administration to 4 ACTH-deficient patients caused a rise in serum DHEA and cortisol in patients with a normal ACTH response, while those with a poor ACTH response had a lesser rise in DHEA and cortisol. These data suggest that ACTH is the major tropic hormone for adrenal androgen secretion.
An adolescent girl with idiopathic hypothalamic dysfunction and hypopituitarism was treated with human growth hormone between 1969 and 1979, dying of parainfluenza pneumonia 2 months after her last hormone treatment. Although she had no signs of progressive neurologic disease, reexamination of autopsy material revealed a focus of spongiform change and astrogliosis in the corpus striatum. Thus, this growth hormone recipient, who died of intercurrent infection, was unexpectedly found to be in an early, preclinical phase of Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease.
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