Paradoxical ACTH Response to Glucocorticoids in Cushing's Disease
- 27 October 1977
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Massachusetts Medical Society in New England Journal of Medicine
- Vol. 297 (17) , 904-907
- https://doi.org/10.1056/nejm197710272971703
Abstract
To define further the defect in the steroid feedback mechanism in Cushing's disease, we studied the acute effects of intravenous administration of glucorticoids on plasma ACTH levels in seven patients with this disease after total adrenalectomy. In seven other patients with hypoadrenocorticism ACTH was readily suppressed; a significant decrease (72.5±5 per cent, mean ± S.E.M., P <0.002) occurred within 15 minutes of the start of an infusion of 50 mg per hour of cortisol. In contrast, in the seven adrenalectomized patients with Cushing's disease, cortisol induced a transient paradoxical rise in ACTH levels, with a maximum at 15 minutes (347±99 per cent, P<0.05). A similar ACTH response was observed with dexamethasone. Cushing's disease is characterized by a paradoxical transient rise in ACTH after glucocorticoid administration. This effect was more pronounced in adrenalectomized than in nonadrenalectomized patients. (N Engl J Med 297:904–907, 1977This publication has 19 references indexed in Scilit:
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