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ADRENAL-THYROID-PANCREAS CONNECTION Benjamin S. Gonzàlez, MD Medical Director Atlantis Medical Center Silver Spring, MD Assumptions In The Interest Of Time • You Know the Basics of the Endocrine System • This is Based on Literature and Experience • Physicians have Preconceptions • Linear vs Systems Thought Processes • Modern Medicine is Disease Focused • Dogma vs Truth and the Shades Between • This is NOT a Comprehensive Discussion • 2 hr lecture in 45 minutes • A Few Busy Slides • You Have My Bio Adrenal-Thyroid-Pancreas Connection • Discuss Clinical Effects of Excessive HPA-axis • • • • • activation Understand the link between the Adrenal, Thyroid, and Pancreas (A-T-P) Review how Stress, Metabolism, and Sugar are linked in the approach of patient energy and vitality Discuss a biology systems approach in assessing future health risk (MetS, Sleep, CVD) Review issues with focused organ treatment If Time: Bring in a Little Nutrition Adrenal-Thyroid-Pancreas Connection • What will be missing: • In depth detailed marker/hormone structure discussion • Detailed Testing Discussion • Treatment of A-T-P connection imbalances Adrenal-Thyroid-Pancreas Connection • A-T-P Connection is a Systems of Vitality and Energy • When it’s GOOD • Energy is great, stress in balance, you have a general feeling of well being • When it’s BAD • Fatigued, weight gain, sluggish • This is a fluid model of systems • NOT Linear! Adrenal-Thyroid-Pancreas Connection • Our Systems act together in an Elegant Dance of Physiology Normal Physiology Adrenal-Thyroid-Pancreas Regulation of protein, carb, lipid and nucleic acid metabolism Anti-inflammatory Energy Production Metabolism Regulation Converts Glucose to Glycogen Protein Synthesis Limits Fat and Protein to Glucose Growth and Activity of Nervous System Facilitates cell uptake of Glucose Adrenal-Thyroid-Pancreas Connection • EXERCISE as an example • Moderate vs Intense • Moderate: Improves mood, sugar metabolism, oxygenation of tissues, increases enzymatic fat burning activity • Intense: Increased cortisol, dysglycemia, amino acid deficits, immune stress, create catabolic metabolism, and proneness to injury Clinical Effects of Excessive HPA axis Activation OUTCOMES? Adapted from: Endocrinology and Metabolism Clinics of North America, Elsevier Publishing, ed. Anne R. Cappola. June 2013, vol. 42, no. 2. Clinical Effects of Excessive HPA axis Activation • OUTCOMES? • Stress Response AHHHHHHHH!!!!! • Sarcopenia, osteopenia, sydrome X, immunological compromise, cognitive decline, frailty, CVD, etc. • Chronic Stress • Increased Allostatic Load Hormones and Neurotransmitters Adrenal Thyroid Pancreas Adrenal Glands Adrenal Glands Produce over 50 Hormones: Cortisol and Aldosterone most abundant ADRENAL CORTEX ADRENAL MEDULA Zona Glomerulosa: Aldosterone Epi: 80% Zona Fasiculata: Cortisol Zona Reticularis: Androgens, pregnenolone, progesterone Norepi: 20% CORTISOL • The “Stress Hormone” • Regulated by hypothalamis-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis • Cortisol levels follow a circadian rhythm in metabolic homeostasis Thank You Dr. James LaValle Chronic CORTISOL Elevation •Increased insulin secretion •Increased fat deposition •Alteration in immune function •Muscle wasting •Hypothyroidism (adrenal exhaustion) •Memory loss •Alteration in sex hormones •Loss of REM, mental and emotional instability •Increased blood lipids, plaque formation, CVD •Receptor site activation of tumor cells Thank You Dr. James LaValle Normal Diurnal Hormonal Level Thank You Dr. James LaValle CORTISOL • Mediators of Homeostasis and Stress McEwan BS, et al. Protective and Damaging effects of stress mediators. Dialogues Clin Neuro Sci. 2006 Dec; 8(4): 367-81 CORTISOL • Mediators of Homeostasis and Stress McEwan BS, et al. Protective and Damaging effects of stress mediators. Dialogues Clin Neuro Sci. 2006 Dec; 8(4): 367-81 CORTISOL Allostatic Load • Sleep Deprivation • Metabolic Syndrome Effect(1) • Autoimmune Trigger • CVD(2) • MS Trigger(3) • Cancer Trigger(4) • Osteoporosis and Vit D deficiency(5) 1.)Kazakou P, et al. Activated hypothalamic pituitary adrenal axis in patients with metabolic syndrome. Horm Metab Res. 2012;44(11):839-44. 2.)Lazzarino AI, et al. The association between cortisol response to mental stress and high-sensitivity cardiac troponin T plasma concentration in health adults. J Am coll Cardiol. 2013;62(18):l1694-1701. 3.)Kern et al. Cortisol awakening response is linked to disease course and progression in multiple sclerosis. PLoS One. 2013;8(4):e60647. 4.)Du YJ, et al. Sputum inerleukin-6 tumor necrosis factor-alpha and salivary cortisol as new biomarkers of depression in lung cancer patients. Prog Neuropsychopharmacol Biol Psychiatry. 2013;47:69-76. 5.)Lee P. Vitamin D metabolism and deficiency in critical illness. Best Pract Res Clin Endocrinol Metab. 2011;25(5):769-81. Boling EP. Secondary osteoporosis: underlying disease and the risk for glycocorticoid-induced osteoporosis. Clin Ther. 2004;26(1):1-14. CORTISOL and Metabolic Syndrome • Metabolic Syndrome (MetS) associated with elevated morning SERUM cortisol levels • MetS associated with HPA-axis dysregulation • Central and peripheral level issues • Elevated Long Term Cortisol Levels • • • 2013 Study n=1258 16- 64 y/o Hair study (good for long term studies) Higher prevalence of MetS 1.)Kazakou P, et al. Activated hypothalamic pituitary adrenal axis in patients with metabolic syndrome. Horm Metab Res. 2012;44(11):839-44. 2.)Anagnostis P, et al. Clinical review: the pathogenetic role of cortisol in the metabolic syndrome: a hypothesis. J Clin Endocrinol Metab. 2009;94(8):2692-701. 3.)Stalder T, et al. Cortisol in hair and the metabolic syndrome. J Clin Endocrinol Metab. 2013;98(6):2573-80. CORTISOL and CVD •2013 Clinical Study (n=508, mean age 62.9 + 5.7yr) No prior CVD evidence •Significant association between cortisol response and detectable high-sensitivity cardiac troponin T (hs-cTnT) 1.)Lazzarino AI, et al. The association between cortisol response to mental stress and high-sensitivity cardiac troponin T plasma concentration in health adults. J Am Col Cardiol. 2013;62(18):l1694-1701. CORTISOL and CVD •2012 Clinical Study •n=466 avg. age 62.7 y/o male and female •No h/o CVD •Baseline Salivary Cortisol Levels done •Followed for 3 years •Results: Increased Stress, Increased Cortisol correlated directly with significant increased risk of coronary artery calcification 1.)Hamer M, et al. Cortisol responses to mental stress and the progression of coronary artery calcification in healthy men and women. PLoS One. 2012;7(2):e31356. CORTISOL and CVD ▪2006 CARDIA study ▪n=718 avg. age 40 ▪Results: ▪Flattest diurnal cortisol slope quartile were > 3 times more likely to have coronary calcification ▪Independent of socio-economic status ▪Independent of established CV risk factors 1.)Matthews K, et al. Diurnal cortisol decline is related to coronary calcifications: CARDIA Study. Psychosom Med. 2006;68:657-661. CORTISOL and CVD •2013 Clinical Study n=450 obese children and adolescents, ages 4-18 •ACTH and Cortisol levels positively associated with inc. systolic and diastolic BP, triglycerides, fasting glucose, and insulin resistance •Cortisol (Not ACTH) positively associated with increased LDLcholesterol •SUMMARY: high morning ACTH and cortisol levels are associated with cardiovascular risk factors 1.)Prodam F, et al. High-end normal adrenocorticotropic hormones are associated with specific cardiovascular risk factors in pediatric obesity: a cross-sectional study. BMC Med. 2013;11:44. CORTISOL and CVD •Hair Cortisol predictive of Future Heart Disease Risk •112 adults •295.3ng/g active MI cases •224.9ng/g control •Controlling for all AMI factors Hair Cortisol was the strongest predictor of AMI ~~Gotta Ask: How many Cardiologists measure cortisol? 1.) Pereg et al., Stress: Vol.14 Issue 1 p. 73-81 January 2011 CORTISOL and Sleep • Sleep and Cortisol Release • Controlled in slow-wave sleep • By decreases in corticotropin-releasing hormone (CRH) and increases in GH • Increase Stress • • • • • 1.) HPA-axis dysfunction, disruption of diurnal patter of GH, CRH, ACTH release Results in a paradoxical rise of nocturnal cortisol levels Sleep phase dysfunction Nocturnal hypercortisolism Feeds into itself increasing cortisol even more CORTISOL and Exercise • Hyper/intense exercise without counter- measures drives up cytokine/inflammatory, metabolic “dysbalance” • People don’t appreciate the term “moderate exercise” 1.) CORTISOL • Prime Target in Approach to Healing metabolic Homeostasis?... • The Circadian Rhythm • Elevated serum Cortisol produces an overall net acid effect • Blood pH homeostasis actually become detrimental to overall physiology • Mg and Ca pool is depleted to help buffer blood pH Chrousos, G. P. Organization and integration of the endocrine system: the sleep and wakefulness perspective. Sleep Med. Clin. 2, 125–145 (2007) Adrenal-Thyroid-Pancreas Connection • Adrenal Glands and Chronic Stress: • Elevated Cortisol: • DHEA Levels Decrease • • Now Focused on Stress Sex Drive drops-changes making testosterone, Progesterone, etc. • Seratonin Levels Decrease • Depression, anxiety, cravings for sugar/carbs, “flat” feeling • Melatonin Levels Decrease Melatonin and Insulin Regulation Melatonin influences insulin secretion via the Gprotein-coupled at MT1 and MT2 receptors •Interferes with insulin secretion from beta cells and transmitting circadian timing information to the islets •Circadian insulin secretion is adapted to day/night changes via melatonin-dependent synchronization Melatonin regulates blood sugar and circadian insulin secretion THUS: SLEEP IS OFF, BLOOD SUGAR DISRUPTED, DIABETICS Peschke E, et al. New evidence for a role of melatonin in glucose regulation. Best Pract Res Clin Endocrinol Metab. 2010;24(5):829-41. Adrenal-Thyroid-Pancreas Connection • Adrenal – Thyroid Connection Closely Linked • Both under hypothalamic control/tropic hormones • Thyroid competes with adrenals for tyrosine • Chronic stress……increased cortisol….dec thyroid • Not enough tyrosin for T3/T4 production • Under stress body unable to convert from phenylalanine 1.) Melmed: Williams Textbook of Endocrinology, 13th ed. Philadelphia, PA: Saunders Elsevier; 2015 Adrenal-Thyroid-Pancreas Connection • Adrenal – Thyroid Connection • Increased Cortisol Output • • • • 1.) Inhibits 5’deiodinase limiting T3 production from T4 TRH unregulated to form more T4 Alters metabolism of fats, sugars, and proteins Adrenal-Thyroid-Pancreas Connection • • 1.) rT3 Binds to T3 receptors Blocks T3 from binding! Exercise Intensity and Thyroid Function • 2005 Clinical Study • n=60 male well trained athletes • Compared thyroid hormone levels at 45%, 70% and 90% of max HR • TSH, T4 and fT4 levels increased at 70 and 90% vs. 45% • fT3 and T3 increased at 70%, but fell at 90% • Thought to be due to elevations in cortisol Ciloglu, F., Peker,I. et al. Exercise intensity and its effect on thyroid hormones Neuroendocrinology Letters No.6 December Vol.26, 2005 How Insulin Receptor Should Work Thyroid-Pancreas and PGC-1 α •T3 regulates PGC-1α (1) •PGC-1α co-activates the thyroid receptor • PGC-1α stimulates hepatic gluconeogenesis and fatty acid oxidative metabolism(2) • PGC-1α increases the expression of GLUT 4 in skeletal muscle. •Increases glucose uptake in cells ~PGC-1α expression reduced in obesity/DM-T2/IR(3) 1.)Cell Press :T3 mediated expression of PGC-1αvia a far upstream located thyroid hormone response element 2008 Elsevier 2.)Liang H, et al. PGC-1: a key regulator of energy metabolism. Advan Physiol Edu. 2006;30:145-151. 3.)Handschin C, Spiegelman BM. Peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma coactivator 1 coactivators, energy homeostasis, and metabolism.Endocr Rev. 2006 Dec;27(7):728-35. Epub 2006 Oct 3. Review. Depressed Thyroid Adrenal-Thyroid-Pancreas Cholesterol to pregnenolone Loss of mitocondrial numbers AND output Low ATP production OTHER: Depressed Cognition Reduced Cardiac Function Slowed Gastric Motility Insulin resistance Inc. oxidative stress Inc. lactic acid production Insulin Dominance Adrenal-Thyroid-Pancreas Activated/Stress Wired and Tired Poor Sleep Central Obesity Mind Racing Depressed Cold Intolerance Weight Gain Poor Cognition/Mood Post Parandial Fatigue Sluggish Heavy/Slow Carb Cravings Irritability/Shakiness Recurrent Infections Insulin Dominance Lab Look Adrenal-Thyroid-Pancreas Slightly elevated cortisol NL to Slightly elevated TSH Elevated fasting Insulin or challenge Depressed T4/T3 Elevated Fasting Glucose No TPO or thyroglobulin Abs Elevated Liver Enzymes Insulin Dominance • Insulin • Cortisol mobilizes liver glycogen • Decrease insulin sensitivity • Increases TNF alpha directly • Testosterone Labs Assessing Impact •Avg pH(salivary and urinary) Ideal > 6.8 •Sodium 140 ideal •RBC Mag 5.8 •Potassium > 4.5 •Serum Cortisol 10-15 •Salivary 4 point Cortisol •SIgA varies but should be 3rd quartile •DHEA 105-700 at least 300 •IGF-1 •Blood Glucose/Insulin (Don’t Forget BP and Resting am Pulse < 70 ) Supplement Recommendations Adrenal-Thyroid-Pancreas Selenomethionine, Chromium, Coleus Chromium, Vit D, Forskohli, 7 Keto DHEA Vitamin C, Adrenal Ashwaganda, Rhodiola, Magnesium, Alpha Cortex Extract, N. Lipoic Acid, Fish Schisandra, Ginseng Medulla, Holy Basil M,A&S), Eurycoma oil, Bitter Melon, PharmaGABA, Longifolia, Cinnamon, Magnolia/Phellodendron Neuromedulla glandular, Arginine, Vanadium, L-theanine, Sterols & DHEA sterolins Benfotiamin, Tryptophan/5HTP Selenium Cordyceps sinensis (Iodine, tyrosine, ferritin) Not Even CLOSE • Not a Single Word: • Treatment • Other Endocrine Systems Dance with A-T-P • Diet (i.e. Intermittent Fasting as a powerful tool)(1) • Practical Usefulness of Markers • HINT: Learn/Know PGC-1alpha(1) • Dominance of Each Organ System • Bone Disease, Cancer Risk, Obesity, etc. • How Saliva and Urine pH can be powerful tools 1.)Psilander N, Frank P, Flockhart M, Sahlin K. Exercise with low glycogen increases PGC-1a gene expression in human skeletal muscle. Eur J Appl Physiol. 02 Oct 2012 Quick Clinical Pearls • Think ACTUAL Underlying Issue • Think Diurnal Cortisol Disruption • Look Up-Stream • If treating a system and Tx is not working? • “Adrenal Fatigue?” Not so much • HPA-axis no longer signals adrenals • Centrally Mediated Effect • L-Carnitine 2-4 grams a day regulates T3 and T4 entry into the cell helping to modulate hyperthyroid state Thank You! CORTISOL and Exercise 1.) Adrenal-Thyroid-Pancreas Connection CORTISOL and Multiple Sclerosis •2013 clinical study (n=111); 77 patients with multiple sclerosis (MS), 34 control •Diurnal cortisol release assessed – salivary •Neurological ability rated by Kurtzke's Expanded Disability Status Scale (EDSS) •Circadian cortisol release including cortisol awakening response associated with relapsingremitting MS Kern et al. Cortisol awakening response is linked to disease course and progression in multiple sclerosis. PLoS One. 2013;8(4):e60647.