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Query: UMLS:C0432222 (
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Isolated adrenal cells of rabbits aged from 0 h to day 40 after birth were incubated for 2 h in the presence of ACTH. Thin-layer chromatography and the fluorimetric method were used to evaluate the products of these adrenal cells separately for cortisol and corticosterone.
Cortisol
production by adrenal cells in response to ACTH (0.1 mU) was found to be highest between 0 and 8 h after birth (0.522 +/- 0.049 mug/105 cells; mean +/-
SEM
). A decrease was observed at 9-20 h and this was further followed by a steady decrease up to day 35-40. Corticosterone production was 0.206 +/- 0.042 mug/105 cells between 0 and 8 h after birth. Subsequently, this level was evenly maintained up to 12-14, but it tended to increase on day 35-40. The level of cortisol production was significantly higher than that of corticosterone production at 0-20 h after birth, while the former was significantly lower than the latter from day 12-14 onwards. The ratio of corticosterone to total corticosteroids (cortisol + corticosterone) was very low (0.28 +/- 0.04) at 0-8 h after birth, but showed a progressive rise up to day 35-40, when it was 0.95 +/- 0.01. The results of the present study show that cortisol is the pre-dominant product of the adrenal cells in rabbits during early post-natal life.
...
PMID:Cortisol and corticosterone productions of isolated adrenal cells in neonatal rabbits. 18 50
To provide clinical guidelines for the use of high-dose short-term glucocorticoid therapy, we studied recovery of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis in 10 normal men following the administration of suppressive doses of prednisone (25 mg twice daily for five days).
Cortisol
responses to insulin-induced hypoglycemia and synthetic ACTH before treatment were compared with responses two and five days after concluding the prednisone course when adrenal function was not influenced by the presence of exogenous steroid. Two days after prednisone therapy, peak cortisol responses to both hypoglycemia (11.0 +/- 0.9 microgram/dl mean +/-
SEM
) and synthetic ACTH (13.3 +/- 1.4 microgram/dl) were significantly reduced compared to pretreatment (20.6 +/- 1.6 and 27.3 +/- 2.5 microgram/dl, respectively, p less than 0.001). Five days after concluding the prednisone therapy, peak cortisol response to hypoglycemia had returned to near pretreatment levels although peak cortisol response in the adrenal gland to synthetic ACTH (22.3 +/- 1.1 microgram/dl) remained reduced (p less than 0.05). These data suggest that brief courses of high-dose prednisone therapy may limit the adrenal component of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal response to stress for up to five days.
...
PMID:Pituitary adrenal recovery following short-term suppression with corticosteroids. 22 43
To characterize the recovery of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis from suppression by short-term glucocorticoid treatment, we examined the responses to ovine CRH (oCRH) before and after prednisolone administration. Eight normal male volunteers were studied before (control) and after administration of 25 mg prednisolone twice daily orally for 14 days. Data are mean +/-
SEM
. The ACTH basal level was suppressed 24 h after prednisolone withdrawal (1.7 +/- 0.4 pmol/L vs. control, 3.5 +/- 0.6, P less than 0.02), but the ACTH response to oCRH was not significantly different from control (peak 12.8 +/- 2.0 pmol/L vs. 13.5 +/- 12.1, respectively). Seventy-two h post prednisolone basal ACTH levels had recovered to pretreatment values.
Cortisol
levels, both basal and in response to oCRH, were significantly suppressed 24 h post prednisolone (P less than 0.001). By 72 h post prednisolone, both basal and oCRH-stimulated cortisol had recovered to pretreatment levels. Dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA), both basal and stimulated, was significantly suppressed 24 h post prednisolone (P less than 0.001). In contrast to cortisol, basal and peak DHEA remained suppressed 72 h post prednisolone (basal DHEA 9.1 +/- 1.1 nmol/L, P less than 0.05 vs. control; peak DHEA 20.0 +/- 3.3 nmol/L, P less than 0.01 vs. control). When expressed as percent rise, however, the DHEA response to oCRH was not significantly different from control. DHEA sulfate (DHEAS) was significantly lower than control at both 24 and 72 h post prednisolone (1.8 +/- 0.3 and 3.3 +/- 0.4 mumol/L respectively; control 7.2 +/- 0.7 mumol/L; P less than 0.001). The ratio of basal DHEA to DHEAS was significantly higher than control 72 h post prednisolone, indicating that DHEAS was more profoundly suppressed than DHEA. We conclude that after a short course of prednisolone pituitary ACTH secretion is the first parameter of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis to recover. Hypothalamic secretion of CRH recovers next, followed by recovery of cortisol secretion. Secretion of DHEA and DHEAS remain suppressed after recovery of cortisol. This suppression may be caused by inhibition of sulfokinase activity by glucocorticoid.
...
PMID:Recovery of responses to ovine corticotropin-releasing hormone after withdrawal of a short course of glucocorticoid. 131 44
The hormonal response of the anterior pituitary to various epileptic and nonepileptic events in children was studied. Postictal serum prolactin and cortisol levels were measured in 17 children with epilepsy, 23 with febrile seizures, and 10 with syncope or breath-holding spells. The levels were compared with those of 30 children with nonspecific fever, and 23 afebrile children served as control subjects. Significantly higher (P less than .01) prolactin levels (26.5 +/- 3.3 ng/mL, mean +/-
SEM
) were found in the epileptic group, compared with levels in children with febrile seizures (13.2 +/- 1.0 ng/mL), fever (11.2 +/- 0.9 ng/mL), syncope (7.3 +/- 0.9 ng/mL), and the control group (7.9 +/- 0.6 ng/mL). In contrast, serum cortisol levels were nonspecifically elevated in the epileptics and patients with febrile seizures or fever only. These findings suggest that elevated prolactin levels may be found after epileptic seizures and much less after febrile seizures, but not after breath-holding spells or syncopal events.
Cortisol
secretion appears to be nonselectively triggered by all stressful events, such as epileptic and febrile seizures, and fever. Elevated prolactin levels (greater than 15 ng/mL) associated with seizures may help in differentiating epileptic from febrile seizures or syncope.
...
PMID:Prolactin and cortisol levels in various paroxysmal disorders in childhood. 188 27
To investigate the adrenostatic potential of a nonhypnotic low dose etomidate infusion, we administered 0.03 mg/kg etomidate in a bolus injection, followed by constant infusion of 0.3 mg/kg.h for 24 h to 6 patients with severe Cushing's syndrome. The dose-response relationship also was determined in 15 normal subjects. Three groups of 5 received, respectively, doses of 0.03, 0.1, and 0.3 mg/kg.h etomidate for 5 h after an initial bolus dose of 0.03 mg/kg. The response to exogenously administered ACTH [0.25 mg ACTH-(1-24)], injected after the etomidate or control infusion, was determined in all normal subjects. In the six hypercortisolemic patients, serum cortisol concentrations decreased from 1374 +/- 436 nmol/L (mean +/-
SEM
) to 188 +/- 91 nmol/L after 11 h of etomidate infusion and remained low until the end of the infusion.
Cortisol
levels returned to pretreatment concentrations by 24 h. Excretion of urinary free cortisol decreased from 1180 +/- 196 to 185 +/- 66 nmol/day. In the normal subjects, administration of etomidate led to a dose-dependent decrease in serum cortisol from about 550 to 83 nmol/L, while 11-deoxycortisol rose from low or undetectable levels up to 346 nmol/L. In response to ACTH, cortisol levels rose in inverse proportion to the etomidate dose. It was, however, significantly reduced compared to normal saline infusion even after the lowest dose. Changes in aldosterone and corticosterone concentrations were similar to those in cortisol, and 11-deoxycorticosterone changed in a pattern similar to that of 11-deoxycortisol. Two of five normal subjects reported tiredness during the highest etomidate infusion. No other side-effects were noted. We conclude that iv administered etomidate in a low nonhypnotic dose reduces serum cortisol concentrations in a dose-dependent manner in both hyper- and eucortisolemic subjects. This study suggests that etomidate at a dose of 0.1 mg/kg.h or lower may be an effective strategy for the control of severe hypercortisolemia.
...
PMID:Infusion of low dose etomidate: correction of hypercortisolemia in patients with Cushing's syndrome and dose-response relationship in normal subjects. 215 85
1. Blood samples were taken from 30 chronically catheterized pig fetuses in utero. Levels of growth hormone, insulin, cortisol, thyroxine and somatomedin-C/IGF-1 were measured in the plasma of intact fetuses and the plasma of thyroidectomized fetuses at various gestational ages during the latter part of pregnancy. 2. Growth hormone levels were high (mean +/-
SEM
: 83 +/- 9 ng/ml and remained constant throughout this period. 3. Insulin levels were also constant and ranged between 4 and 14 mU/l. 4.
Cortisol
levels showed a general increase from 400 nmol/l at 97 days to 1200 nmol/l at term and this increase was not affected by thyroidectomy. 5. IGF-1 levels were lower than in the sows (48.0 +/- 3.0 ng/ml) and did not change throughout this period. 6. Thyroxine levels were also unchanged at about 92 +/- 4 nmol/l. 7. Thyroidectomy resulted in lower (P less than 0.001) thyroxine levels (28 +/- 3 nmol/l) but had no effect on the levels of any other hormone.
...
PMID:Changes in the levels of growth hormones, insulin, cortisol, thyroxine and somatomedin-C/IGF-1, with increasing gestational age in the fetal pig, and the effect of thyroidectomy in utero. 257 61
Pulsatile and circadian patterns of cortisol secretion during acute (3 to 16 days) and chronic (29 to 39 days) abstinence were examined in alcoholic men with no clinical or laboratory evidence of hepatic dysfunction or nutritional deficiencies. Mean and integrated 24-hour serum concentrations of cortisol determined by sampling the blood every 20 minutes over a 24-hour period were increased in six out of 10 alcoholic subjects during acute abstinence when compared with normal controls. Sustained abstinence in seven subjects with follow-up studies caused significant decreases in the mean maximal cortisol peak amplitude (13 +/- 1.0
SEM
acutely vs. 10.3 +/- 0.52 micrograms/dl follow-up; P = 0.01), mean 24-hour serum cortisol concentrations (10.9 micrograms/dl +/- 1.2 vs. 8.5 micrograms/dl +/- 0.26; P = 0.047), interpulse valley mean (9.3 micrograms/dl +/- 0.88 vs. 6.5 micrograms/dl +/- 0.34; P = 0.007), and valley nadir (7.9 micrograms/dl +/- 0.69 vs. 5.4 micrograms/dl +/- 0.30; P = 0.0036) concentrations.
Cortisol
pulse frequency was normal. Although circadian cortisol rhythmicity was maintained in alcoholics, the timing of the circadian acrophase was delayed significantly (P = 0.006) during acute abstinence (1022 [clocktime] +/- 34 min) as compared with normal controls (0743 [clocktime] +/- 34 min), and the amplitude of circadian cortisol rhythms exceeded normal in five of 10 alcoholics. Analysis of data in one alcoholic subject by a new multiparameter deconvolution method demonstrated increases in secretory burst amplitude (0.64 microgram/dl +/- 0.08 SD), mass of cortisol released per burst (9.8 micrograms/dl +/- 1.2 SD), and daily endogenous cortisol production rate (22 mg +/- 2.4 SD) during acute abstinence. These values were statistically different when compared with seven normal controls and the subjects' values during sustained abstinence (P less than 0.02). In conclusion, the results of the present study suggest increased daily production of cortisol as a possible mechanism underlying the elevated serum cortisol concentrations in chronic alcoholics during acute abstinence. This abnormality is shown to be reversible with sustained abstinence from alcohol.
...
PMID:24-hour pulsatile and circadian patterns of cortisol secretion in alcoholic men. 270 24
The content and biosynthesis of aldosterone and cortisol were examined and compared in the aldosterone-producing adenomas and adjacent adrenal glands from patients with primary aldosteronism that resulted from solitary, benign adrenocortical tumors (0.8 to 32.3 gm). Histologic examination of the six aldosterone-producing adenomas studied confirmed a predominance of cells resembling zona fasciculata rather than zona glomerulosa, as reported in previous studies. Measurement by radioimmunoassay of the tissue content of steroids preformed in vivo demonstrated that aldosterone was present in concentrations 8 times higher in aldosterone-producing adenomas (1.5 +/- 0.5 micrograms/gm tissue; mean +/-
SEM
) than in adrenal glands (0.2 +/- 0.06 micrograms/gm tissue).
Cortisol
concentration in aldosterone-producing adenomas (5.4 +/- 1.4 micrograms/gm tissue) was approximately one third that in adrenal glands (15.8 +/- 6.3 micrograms/gm tissue), but cortisol was by far the major steroid in both types of tissue. In vitro, the most important metabolic product quantitatively from 4-carbon 14-labeled cholesterol incubated with mitochondria plus microsomes and from 4-14C-labeled pregnenolone incubated with tissue slices was cortisol, formed in a time-dependent manner in both types of preparations; cortisol synthesis greatly exceed that of aldosterone in adrenal glands, but even in aldosterone-producing adenomas the formation of cortisol was at least 5 times greater than that of aldosterone. The fasciculata structure and dual biosynthetic capacity of aldosterone producing adenomas for cortisol and aldosterone are interpreted in the light of developing concepts of the roles of adrenocorticotropic hormone and of alterations in the microenvironment of the cell in the zonal differentiation of the normal adrenal cortex.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Content and biosynthesis of cortisol in aldosterone-producing adenomas. 275 1
Omeprazole, a substituted benzimidazole, is a potent inhibitor of gastric acid secretion which is currently being evaluated in patients with peptic ulcer and Zollinger-Ellison syndrome. Drugs which possess an imidazole nucleus have previously been shown to inhibit cortisol release from the adrenal cortex, secondary to inhibition of mitochondrial cytochrome P-450 dependent hydroxylation reactions. In a double-blind placebo-controlled crossover study in healthy male volunteers, omeprazole (60 mg daily for 7 days) did not alter basal cortisol levels. The peak cortisol response to ACTH stimulation was significantly reduced.
Cortisol
levels 60 min after ACTH were 824 +/- 27 nmol/l on omeprazole (mean +/-
SEM
), and 929 +/- 35 on placebo (P less than 0.005). In vitro, omeprazole caused a concentration-dependent inhibition of ACTH-stimulated cortisol release from isolated bovine adrenal cells (ED50 = 20 micrograms/ml). This was associated with a decrease in deoxycortisol synthesis. Therefore, unlike some other imidazole-containing drugs, the inhibitory effects of omeprazole are not entirely due to steroid 11 beta-hydroxylase inhibition. Substantial inhibition occurred at omeprazole concentrations which are higher than plasma levels normally achieved in clinical use. However, impairment of adrenocortical function may occur in patients on long-term high dose omeprazole treatment for Zollinger-Ellison syndrome.
...
PMID:Inhibition by omeprazole of adrenocortical response to ACTH: clinical studies and experiments on bovine adrenal cortex in vitro. 300 7
Because we previously found increased basal serum cortisol levels in women runners, we examined adrenocortical function in amenorrheic running women (AR), eumenorrheic running women (R), and normal nonexercising women (NC) in further detail. Mean 24-h urinary cortisol levels were significantly elevated (P less than 0.001) in six AR [45.1 +/- 7.2 (+/-
SEM
) micrograms/24 h] and eight R (38.5 +/- 6.9 micrograms/24 h) compared to four NC (13.9 +/- 2.8 micrograms/24 h). After adrenal suppression with 2 mg dexamethasone, integrated responses and absolute maximal elevations in serum cortisol levels in response to 10 micrograms/m2 exogenous ACTH (1-24) administered as an iv bolus dose, were not significantly different among six AR, six R, and six NC. This dose of ACTH results in maximal steroid release. The disappearance rates of cortisol (5 mg, iv) after dexamethasone suppression were similar in four AR, five R, and four NC and corresponded to a two-compartment model with mean half-lives of 4.9 and 93.8 min, respectively.
Cortisol
-binding globulin levels were also similar among the groups. These data document higher cortisol secretion and suggest increased ACTH secretion in running women.
...
PMID:Increased cortisol production in women runners. 301 36
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