Guest guest Posted October 31, 2007 Report Share Posted October 31, 2007 Val et al: (below is email from my endo) Last week my endo said that since my aldosterone is " normal " and so is my " DHEA " that this makes it very doubtful that there is anything wrong with my adrenals themselves. I disagree. Isn't it true that there can be cases of adrenal insufficiency that just involve cortisol. I think I remember reading something about the adrenal cortex being diseased will just involve cortisol. Is that true? He's still focusing on the pituitary. He just ordered LH, FSH, prolactin and estradiol. I had all these tests run repeatedly both last year and just recently by my gyno who wanted to see if I was perimenopausal/ovulating, etc. He's wasting his time and mine. I am going to copy/paste here what he emailed me today. At least now he's changing his tune a bit and saying he's going to explore it.....Val, please read what he says and tell me if he sounds good to you. Thanks. You clearly have a subnormal cortrisyn stimulation test c/w partial adrenal insufficiency. It is well published that small amounts of steroids such as prednisone used in COPD can prevent the full response to the cortrisyn test and most infer that this means one might not respond to stress needs of cortisol. I don't know if the lower dose of hydrocortisone you are taking is equivalent to the doses in other studies, but it is in the realm of possibility that this may cause a less than maximal response on your cortrisyn test. Having said that, there are clearly other possibilities 1.. You may have partial ACTH deficiency from the pituitary unrelated to prior steroids 2.. You may have partial primary adrenal deficiency with a normal pituitary If the other pituitary hormones are fine, it would be unusual to have isolated ACTH deficiency unrelated to steroid use. Usually we see this with sepsis or other life threatening issues. Your aldosterone is intact, making primary adrenal insufficiency less likely, but I do think we need to explore this. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- From: Gikas Sent: Tuesday, October 30, 2007 6:23 PM To: Hotes, Lawrence Subject: follow-up Hi Dr. Hotes, Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 31, 2007 Report Share Posted October 31, 2007 It siounds liek your doctor is being methodical and checking things as they come up, I agree with her assessment! However how they treat " partial " adrenal insufficiency may well be short of what you need, so keep that in mind. Many Endos thing ;s patients with NO cortisol of their own only need 20MG daily, and I just do nto believe this is possible. -- Artistic Grooming- Hurricane WV http://www.stopthethyroidmadness.com/ http://health.groups.yahoo.com/group/NaturalThyroidHormonesADRENALS/ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 31, 2007 Report Share Posted October 31, 2007 He sounds more open than most to me. He is acknowledging some adrenal insufficiency but thinks it might be due to your low dose cortisone supplementation. He is also saying you have abnormal ACTH so he wants to check other pituitary hormones. He seems to want to get to the bottom of it which I think is good. Maybe you can send him some research if he isn't familiar with primary insufficiency without DHEA and aldosterone levels abnormal. The adrenal cortex controls aldosterone, DHEA, and cortisol. You can have normal DHEA and Aldosterone but abnormal cortisol rhythm. If you look at the 7 stages, you should be able to match yours to one of them based on your test results. Cheri re: read endo's email please " You clearly have a subnormal cortrisyn stimulation test c/w partial adrenal insufficiency. It is well published that small amounts of steroids such as prednisone used in COPD can prevent the full response to the cortrisyn test and most infer that this means one might not respond to stress needs of cortisol. I don't know if the lower dose of hydrocortisone you are taking is equivalent to the doses in other studies, but it is in the realm of possibility that this may cause a less than maximal response on your cortrisyn test. Having said that, there are clearly other possibilities 1.. You may have partial ACTH deficiency from the pituitary unrelated to prior steroids 2.. You may have partial primary adrenal deficiency with a normal pituitary If the other pituitary hormones are fine, it would be unusual to have isolated ACTH deficiency unrelated to steroid use. Usually we see this with sepsis or other life threatening issues. Your aldosterone is intact, making primary adrenal insufficiency less likely, but I do think we need to explore this. ---------------------------------------------------------- . Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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