Eleven patients with major depression and 12 control subjects were administered corticotropin-releasing hormone (CRH), aqueous arginine vasopressin (AVP), and insulin hypoglycaemia (IH) to test for differences in hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis function. Patients with major depression demonstrated lower ACTH responses to CRH when compared with controls, and a trend toward such after administration of AVP. Despite lower ACTH responses in patients with depression, there were no differences in cortisol responses to these stimuli. In the CRH and AVP tests, there was no correlation between the basal cortisol and ACTH responses in either controls or patients, but in the IH test there was a negative correlation between these responses for both groups. The ACTH responses to CRH and AVP were positively correlated in controls and patients. Cortisol responses to all three provocative stimuli were positively correlated in both subject groups. These findings are consistent with the hypothesis that hypothalamic or supra-hypothalamic overactivity may be involved in the development of HPA-axis abnormalities in patients with depression.
Four hypotheses have been proposed to explain why nonsuppression on the dexamethasone suppression test occurs in patients with major depression. These include 1) increased metabolism of dexamethasone, 2) decreased sensitivity of pituitary glucocorticoid receptors to dexamethasone, 3) hyperresponsivity of the adrenal gland to ACTH stimulation, and 4) increased central drive of the pituitary from hypothalamic/limbic structures that overrides the action of the dexamethasone. A critical review of the literature suggests that the last hypothesis is most closely supported by the data. Despite this conclusion, factors other than depression may be involved in hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis dysfunction.
Forty depressed patients and 36 age- and sex-matched controls were given 250 micrograms ACTH1-24 by IV bolus. Plasma steroid hormone levels were measured prior to and 60 min after ACTH administration. The depressed patients had significantly greater cortisol (F), 11-deoxycortisol (S), androstenedione (AD), and 17 alpha-hydroxyprogesterone (17 alpha-OHP) responses (delta; p less than 0.05) and a marginally greater 11 beta-hydroxyandrostenedione (11 beta-OHAD) response (delta; p = 0.091) than the controls. There was no significant difference in the corticosterone (B) response between the two groups. With the exception of 11 beta-OHAD, all the steroid hormones were significantly negatively correlated with age in the controls, but only S and AD marginally demonstrated this relationship in the depressed patients. F, S, AD, 17 alpha-OHP, and B, but not 11 beta-OHAD, were significantly positively correlated with each other in the controls, but only F was significantly correlated with AD in the depressed patients. These data suggest that the hypercortisolemia found in some depressed patients involves increased precursor and metabolite levels both at baseline and in response to exogenous ACTH, compared to controls. Furthermore, variability in these precursors is greater in depressed patients, and their relationship to age is lost. These findings are consistent with the hypothesis that adrenal products other than cortisol also could be related to affective symptoms.
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