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Query: UMLS:C0243026 (
sepsis
)
52,417
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
An experimental model that produces adrenal cortical hemorrhage with endotoxin has been described. When stimulated by thorotrast, endotoxin, or its tropic hormone (
ACTH
), the adrenal cortex is susceptible to the development of a hemorrhagic reaction during endotoxemia. The hemorrhagic reaction resembles that described in the Waterhouse-Friderichsen syndrome. A pathophysiologic mechanism for the occurrence of adrenal hemorrhage occurring during acute
sepsis
is presented. Increased metabolic activity associated with the production of corticosteroids seems to make the adrenal cortex susceptible to endotoxin-induced hemorrhage. Adrenal hemorrhage observed during
sepsis
, as in the Waterhouse-Friderichsen syndrome, may be attributable to endotoxemia occurring during or shortly after stimulation of the adrenal cortex by infection. Significant differences between adrenal cortical hemorrhage and the Shwartzman phenomenon are described.
...
PMID:ENDOTOXEMIA AND ADRENAL HEMORRHAGE. A MECHANISM FOR THE WATERHOUSE-FRIDERICHSEN SYNDROME. 1426 70
Recent studies have shown that administration of hydrocortisone may lead to a reduction of catecholamines and to an improved outcome in septic patients. However, there are no data on the use of hydrocortisone in burn patients although in these patients reduction of vasopressors might be even more crucial for outcome due to improvement of skin perfusion. This study presents the first results on the impact of hydrocortisone administration in norepinephrine dependent severely burned patients. In a prospective cohort study fourteen consecutive severely burned patients received, 12h after norepinephrine dependency, a hydrocortisone bolus of 100mg followed by 0.18mg/(kgh) hydrocortisone. The course of the necessary norepinephrine dose, as well as the fluid balance was documented 12h prior and after the first dosage of hydrocortisone. Statistical analysis showed an unexpected increase of the required norepinephrine dosage. A statistical post hoc evaluation of surviving and non-surviving patients revealed a significant increase of norepinephrine in non-survivors whereas in survivors it was possible to reduce norepinephrine significantly. Furthermore, the median fluid requirement of surviving patients could be significantly reduced whereas in the group of non-survivors there was no change of volume needed. Our data suggests that hydrocortisone might be useful in selected patients with severe burn injuries. However, patients not responding to hydrocortisone administrations seem to have a poor prognosis. Our findings are in contrast to previously published data on septic patients, in whom hydrocortisone administration resulted in a reduction of norepinephrine. In burned patients the severity of trauma seems to have more profound influence on the pathophysiological mechanism of
sepsis
. Due to the high number of non-responders, the potential immune suppression and impaired wound healing caused by the side effects of hydrocortisone, further selection criteria seem to be necessary. A short
ACTH
-test might be considered prior to hydrocortisone administration to select patients who might benefit from this therapy. In summary, further prospective controlled studies will be necessary to establish hydrocortisone in the routine therapy of severely burned patients.
...
PMID:Hydrocortisone improved haemodynamics and fluid requirement in surviving but not non-surviving of severely burned patients. 1455 32
A 69-year-old female having a large left adrenal mass and a nodular lesion in thyroid gland was admitted to the hospital. Endocrinologically she showed high levels of plasma
ACTH
and cortisol, which were not suppressed by high dose dexamethasone, elevated serum parathyroid hormone and markedly increased daily urinary excretion of catecholamines. She died of
sepsis
, and postmortem examination was performed. A left adrenal pheochromocytoma, which was immunohistochemically proven to be
ACTH
producing, a papillary thyroid carcinoma and parathyroid adenomas were found. To our knowledge this is the first report of coexistence of these three endocrine tumors in a single patient.
...
PMID:[Multiple endocrine neoplasia]. 1514 27
The postresuscitation phase after out-of-hospital circulatory arrest shares similarities with severe
sepsis
. Corticosteroid replacement is beneficial in patients with septic shock and adrenal dysfunction. The goal of this study was to assess baseline cortisol and adrenal reserve of out-of-hospital circulatory arrest patients after recovery of spontaneous circulation. Thirty-three consecutive patients successfully resuscitated after cardiac arrest were prospectively included between March 2002 and June 2003. A serum cortisol assay and a corticotropin test (250 microg i.v.) were done 6 to 36 h after circulatory arrest. A cortisol increase smaller than 9 microg/dL after corticotropin (nonresponders) defined adrenal reserve insufficiency. Response status was compared in the three outcome groups: survival with full neurologic recovery (n = 4), early death from refractory shock (n = 10), or later death from neurologic dysfunction (n = 19). Patients who died of early refractory shock had lower baseline cortisol levels than patients who died of neurologic dysfunction (27 microg/dL [15-47] vs. 52 microg/dL [28-73], respectively; P < 0.01), suggesting an inadequate adrenal response to severe systemic inflammation.
Corticotropin
response status was not associated with standard severity markers and seemed uninfluenced by therapeutic hypothermia. In conclusion, patients who die of early refractory shock after cardiopulmonary resuscitation may have an inadequate adrenal response to the stress associated with this condition. Thresholds for cortisol levels at baseline and after corticotropin need to be determined in this clinical setting.
...
PMID:Cortisol levels and adrenal reserve after successful cardiac arrest resuscitation. 1525 83
Dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA) and its sulfate (DHEAS) are the main adrenal androgens (AAs) produced in humans. Production of these steroids, like that of cortisol, is under the control of hypothalamic corticotropin-releasing hormone (CRH) and pituitary
ACTH
. Other factors, however, appear to be involved in AA secretion because there are many instances in which their circulating levels do not change in parallel to those of cortisol. Apart from physiological alterations associated with fetal adrenal regression, adrenarche and aging, the main instances of divergence in AA production compared with those of corticosteroids occur when immune function is activated or is aberrant. Relative reductions in DHEA and DHEAS have been noted in subjects with rheumatoid arthritis (RA), systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and autoimmune deficiency syndrome (AIDS),
sepsis
, and trauma. In some instances, differences in the AA responses have been linked to a clinical course. The mechanisms for impairments in AA production in the absence of suppressed corticoid secretion are unclear but may involve circulating cytokines or locally released mediators from immune system cells in the adrenal gland. There also is evidence that DHEA and DHEAS play a role in immune competence, displaying biological effects opposite to those of corticosteroids.
...
PMID:Adrenal androgens and the immune system. 1563 95
We report a newborn girl (36th week of gestation, birth weight 1,054 g) with Cushing's syndrome secondary to nodular adrenocortical hyperplasia with normal plasma
ACTH
levels. From birth she was hypertensive, hyperglycaemic and slightly hirsuit. Hypercortisolaemia (>1,380 nmol/l) was accompanied by normal plasma
ACTH
levels (8.64-23.9 pg/ml). A 48-h dexamethasone suppression test decreased plasma cortisol by 35%, indicating some degree of
ACTH
dependency. However, there was no
ACTH
rise on CRF test. MRI showed enlarged adrenal glands with a possible cyst on the right; the pituitary gland was normal. At the age of 6 weeks she underwent bilateral adrenalectomy. Histology showed enlarged adrenals with multiple non-pigmented nodules (up to 5 mm) in both glands. However, over the next few weeks she developed liver failure and
sepsis
. She died at the age of 3 months. Post mortem examination confirmed the diagnosis. Nodular adrenocortical hyperplasia may present at birth with severe Cushing's syndrome and unsuppressed
ACTH
levels, indicating some degree of
ACTH
dependency in this condition.
...
PMID:Prenatal Cushing's syndrome secondary to nodular adrenocortical hyperplasia with unsuppressed plasma ACTH levels. 1645 60
Although brain pathways activated by
sepsis
may respond acutely to endotoxin administration, the long-term central response to
sepsis
is not known. We prepared male rats for hormonal sampling at the circadian nadir (AM) and peak (PM) after cecal ligation and puncture (CLP) or sham surgery. Diurnal variation of corticosterone was present on postoperative day (D) 3 and D4 after sham surgery but not after CLP. CLP increased Fos immunostaining in the nucleus of tractus solitarius (NTS), ventrolateral medulla, medullary raphe, parabrachial nucleus, hypothalamus, amygdala, bed nucleus of stria terminalis, and preoptic region. Fos responses were generally greatest on D1 but persisted to the AM of D4. The number of Fos-positive cell nuclei in the NTS on D3 and D4 did not differ but had greater variance on D3 than on D4 (P<0.01) with a divergent response in the PM of D3 that was correlated with plasma
ACTH
(r=0.927, P<0.01) but not with corticosterone. CLP increased CRH-staining intensity in the hypothalamic paraventricular neurons uniformly from D1 through D4 (P<0.01). Similar to Fos in NTS, this response was correlated with plasma
ACTH
(r=0.738, P<0.05) and adrenal size (r=0.730, P<0.05) in the PM of D3. Neuronal CRH became detectable after CLP in specific medullary areas on D1 and in the preoptic region on D3 and D4. Thus, the suppression of circadian variation by CLP was associated with central neural responses that increased in relation to plasma
ACTH
without apparent influence on the release of corticosterone.
...
PMID:Central neural distribution of immunoreactive Fos and CRH in relation to plasma ACTH and corticosterone during sepsis in the rat. 1746 30
Adrenalectomy continues to play an important role in the management of Cushing's syndrome (CS). Untreated CS causes considerable physical and mental morbidity and mortality. However, little information is available on the effect of adrenalectomy in ameliorating functional disabilities in CS patients. Our study assesses the long-term outcome of adrenalectomy in patients with CS. This is a retrospective analysis of CS patients managed during 1990-2005 at a tertiary care center. We analyzed the clinical presentation, endocrine evaluation, and surgical management preoperatively and following adrenalectomy. The subjects were 37 patients with CS (age 24.5 +/- 15 years, range 1-60 years; male:female 1.0:1.2). There were various etiologies--unilateral adrenocortical adenoma (n = 11), adrenocortical carcinoma (n = 13), pituitary
ACTH
-secreting adenoma with failed transsphenoidal surgery (n = 4), ectopic unidentified
ACTH
source (n = 7), bilateral adrenal macronodular hyperplasia (n = 1), primary pigmented nodular adrenal hyperplasia (n = 1) --for which the patients underwent adrenalectomy: unilateral (n = 22), bilateral (n = 13), or adrenonephrectomy (n = 2). Two patients died during the perioperative period owing to chest infection and
sepsis
. At the median follow-up of 60 months (range 6-144 months), the patients exhibit significant persistence of obesity (41%), proximal muscle weakness (44%), menstrual irregularity (8%), hypertension (31%), and insulin-dependent diabetes (29%). Hirsutism and psychological abnormalities persisted to a lesser extent. All patients had biochemical cure of CS following surgery evidenced by the 8 a.m. basal cortisol < or = 5 microg/dl. The hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis recovered as shown by normalization of the short synacthen-stimulated cortisol level (peak level > or = 20 microg/dl) after a median follow-up of 9 months (range 6-18 months). Incomplete clinical recovery following adrenalectomy emphasizes the need of early recognition and prompt treatment of CS. Surgery for adrenocortical adenoma is safe and effective; however, survival of patients with CS due to adrenocortical carcinoma remains poor. Bilateral adrenalectomy provides early control of hypercortisolism in selected cases of unlocalized ectopic
ACTH
syndrome or failed transsphenoidal surgery. Even though functional recovery is incomplete after adrenalectomy, quality of life improves considerably.
...
PMID:Outcome of adrenalectomy for Cushing's syndrome: experience from a tertiary care center. 1753 56
Systemic infection
induces an increase in plasma cortisol which accords approximately with illness severity. However, both basal and synthetic
ACTH
stimulated cortisol levels are not strong predictors of mortality. Moreover, plasma cortisol levels do not readily define those patients who have been clinically observed to respond, with respect to blood pressure elevation, to exogenous hydrocortisone. It is likely that free cortisol, accounting for 6-20% of circulating total (bound plus free) cortisol has most of the life-saving effects on circulation and metabolism in severe
sepsis
, as corticosteroid-binding globulin bound and albumin-bound cortisol have reduced access to tissues. In addition,
sepsis
reduces CBG and albumin levels, hence blunting the effect of increasing illness severity on total cortisol. Our recent studies suggest that free cortisol correlates more closely to
sepsis
severity than total cortisol and that free cortisol levels can be estimated using the plasma CBG and total cortisol, obviating the need for direct free cortisol measurement. Studies directed at determining if free cortisol is a better guide than total cortisol to the need for hydrocortisone supplementation may be of value.
...
PMID:Value of free cortisol measurement in systemic infection. 1757 61
Lighting and other environmental cues in the intensive care unit rarely adhere to a consistent daily pattern. To determine the influence of the daily light/dark (LD) cycle on recovery from
sepsis
, male Sprague Dawley rats were acclimated to lights-on condition at 6 AM and lights-off condition at 6 PM for 6 to 14 days. Catheter placement and cecal ligation and puncture (CLP) were performed under ketamine and xylazine. Rats were returned to the established LD cycle, to constant light (LL), or to constant dark (DD) at 6 PM. One-week survival was 83.33% during LD (n = 24), 62.5% during LL (n = 16), and 31.25% during DD (n = 16; P < 0.01 for difference from the LD group). Both plasma adrenocorticotropin (
ACTH
) and corticosterone levels in the morning of the first day after CLP were greater during DD than during LD (P < 0.05 in each case). The early elevation in
ACTH
was independent of survival. However, the greater frequency of nonsurviving DD rats accounted for the elevation of corticosterone in the DD group. Overall, most nonsurvivors had a unique response pattern composed of an early elevation of corticosterone in relation to plasma
ACTH
that then declined to a value above the normal circadian peak despite a late increase in endogenous
ACTH
when death was imminent. We conclude that the circadian cues provided by the LD cycle improve survival after CLP. Removal of these cues by DD increases the early appearance and incidence of a hormonal response pattern that is associated with a lethal outcome.
...
PMID:The absence of circadian cues during recovery from sepsis modifies pituitary-adrenocortical function and impairs survival. 1769 47
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