Author:
Bethge H.,Bayer M.,Winkelmann W.
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Adrenal function tests were performed in 9 patients with Cushing's syndrome (6 with adrenal hyperplasia and 3 with adrenal adenoma) in order to study the hypothalamus-pituitary-adrenal system. These tests involved the determination of a) diurnal rhythm of plasma corticosteroids (11-OHCS) and the effect of corticotrophin (ACTH) and dexamethasone administration, b) urinary corticosteroid excretion (17-OHCS), basal and after ACTH, dexamethasone and metapyrapone treatment and c) cortisol production rate. In addition the patients were submitted to insulin-induced hypoglycaemia and intravenous infusion of synthetic lysine-vasopressin and the plasma corticosteroids were determined. All 9 patients regardless of the nature of adrenal pathology responded to insulin-induced hypoglycaemia in the same manner and failed to show the normal increase of 11-OHCS. During lysine-vasopressin infusion an opposite effect was observed: all 6 patients with hyperplasia showed a distinct rise in plasma corticosteroids in contrast to the 3 patients with adenoma who did not respond at all. These findings show that the lysine-vasopressin test may be very useful in differentiating between adrenal hyperplasia and adrenal adenoma. This procedure is recommended as a screening test because of its simplicity and high degree of diagnostic accuracy. Results are discussed with regard to the different pathogenesis of the two forms of Cushing's syndrome.
Subject
Endocrinology,General Medicine,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism
Cited by
28 articles.
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