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Investigation of endocrine disease Endocrinology is Easy Diseases are due to – TOO MUCH – TOO LITTLE hormone hormone Hormone levels vary physiologically Testing needs to be dynamic – If the hormone is too high SUPPRESS IT – If the hormone is too low STIMULATE IT Pituitary Gland Anterior: hormone secretion of thyroid, adrenal cortex, gonads Posterior: water balance, salt balance Two Major Divisions of Pituitary Anterior “Adenohypophysis” Posterior “Neurohypophysis” Each has a distinct role to play in hormone regulation Diagnosis of PD by PH stimulation test Hormone GH Prl TSH Test agent I H test 0.1 uint L-dopa 250-500 Arginine 0.5 gm Clonidine test Glucagon test TRH 100-500 metoclopramide TRH 500 ng N response Serum GH > 10ng/ml at any time Doubling of baseline Peak value >5 mu/ml Pituitary stimulation test 2 hormone Test agent LH @FSH GnRH 100mmg Doubling of the IV base line LH@FSH I H TEST Peak serum cortisol >20 (short ACTH stimulation test ng/dl cosyntropin test) Metyrapone test Serum 112-3 gm po deoxycortisol level >8 ng/dl ACTH N response Laboratory finding in acromegaly Plasma glucose may be elevated Increase serum insulin Elevated serum phosphate Hypercalciuria Elevated GH Diagnosis of acromegaly Glucose suppression test IGF-1 Tumor localization MRI Posterior pituitary hormone (ADH vasopressin) ADH acts through tow receptors V1 @ V2 V1 receptors mediate vascular smooth muscle contraction @stimulate prostaglandin synthesis V2 receptors produce renal action by increase the water permeability of the luminal membrane of collecting duct epithelium In the absence of ADH permeability of the epithelium is decrease leading to polyuria Laboratory finding A large urinary volume >3 l /per day Urine osmolality less than 200 mosm/kg Slightly elevated plasma osmolality Low serum ADH in CDI High or normal ADH in NDI Diagnosis of DI Water deprivation test (method) Deprivation from water for 4-18 hr Hourly measurements of urine osmolality Continues until urine osmolality of 3 consecutive sample varies by less than 30 mosml/kg 5 unite of AVP or 1 mg of desmopression injected @ urine and plasma osml measure 30,60,120 m later Interpretation of WDT CDI NDI psychogenic Urine osmol after wdt No change No change Increase <300 <300 >750 Urine osmol after vasopressin Plasma ADH increase No change increase low Normal or low high Thyroid gland Thyroid Growth, development Metabolic rate Thyroid Function Tests Free serum thyroxine (T4) Free serum T3 TSH Scans/Ultrasound Radioiodine uptake (RAIU) Thyroid Scan Ultrasound Fine needle Aspiration Radioiodine Uptake Useful in differentiating non-pituitary thyrotoxic states (i.e., low TSH, high free thyroxine) No use in hypothyroidism A set dose of radioactive iodine (usually I123) is given and 24hrs later a radiation detector is placed over the thyroid to determine % of dose taken up by thyroid RAIU RAIU is increased in – Graves Disease – Hot nodules Multi-nodular goiters Toxic Solitary Nodule hCG secreting tumors RAIU RAIU is decreased in – Amiodarone – Factitious Thyroiditis – Self limited thyroiditis-induced thyrotoxic state Painless chronic thyroiditis Postpartum thyroiditis Subacute thyroiditis Thyroid Scan Also called scintiscan or radionuclide scan A dose of radioiodine or Tc99m is given Scintillation scanner produces a rough picture indicating how these isotopes localize in the thyroid Thyroid scan is only used for nodular disease--useful for determining whether a nodule is hot or cold Again---RAIU produces a number, scan produces a picture Ultrasound U/S can provide information about its size and texture Used for determining whether a nodule is cystic or solid Follow the size of a nodule or goiter over time. Parathyroid gland And calcium metabolisms CALCIUM HOMEOSTASIS DIETARY CALCIUM THE ONLY “IN” BONE DIETARY HABITS, SUPPLEMENTS ORGAN, ENDOCRINE BLOOD CALCIUM INTESTINAL ABSORPTION ORGAN PHYSIOLOGY KIDNEYS ENDOCRINE PHYSIOLOGY ORGAN PHYS. ENDOCRINE PHYS. URINE THE PRINCIPLE “OUT” VITAMIN D SYNTHESIS SKIN LIVER 7-DEHYDROCHOLESTEROL h VITAMIN D3 VITAMIN D3 KIDNEY 25(OH)VITAMIN D 25-HYDROXYLASE 25(OH)VITAMIN D 1a-HYDROXYLASE 1,25(OH)2 VITAMIN D (ACTIVE METABOLITE) TISSUE-SPECIFIC VITAMIN D RESPONSES CALCIUM, PTH, AND VITAMIN D FEEDBACK LOOPS BONE RESORPTION URINARY LOSS SUPPRESS PTH 1,25(OH)2 D PRODUCTION RISING BLOOD Ca NORMAL BLOOD Ca FALLING BLOOD Ca BONE RESORPTION URINARY LOSS 1,25(OH)2 D PRODUCTION STIMULATE PTH Adrenal gland Synthesis of Adrenocortical Hormones Zona glomerulosa: aldosterone Zona fasciculata: glucocorticoids (cortisol) Zona reticularis: androgens (DHEA and androstenedione) Regulation of Adrenocortical Hormones Hypothalamus – CRH-containing neurons are stimulated – CRH delivered to anterior pituitary – CRH binds to receptors on corticotrophs, causing synthesis and secretion of ACTH Pathways of Steroid Biosynthesis Cushing’s Syndrome Diagnosis of Cushing’s syndrome – History Weight gain, fatigue Infertility, impotence, changes in menstruation Diabetes, polyuria, polydypsia Depression, headache Signs of underlying tumor (weight loss, appetite) – Physical exam Obesity, fat distribution Proximal muscle weakness/wasting Palpation of abdominal mass Cushing’s Syndrome Diagnosis of Cushing’s syndrome – Labs 24 hour urinary cortisol – 2-3 consecutive days – Verify with creatinine values Spot AM/PM serum cortisol – Circadian variation – AM ACTH surge causes increased cortisol – PM should see at least 50% drop in cortisol level Low-dose dexamethasone suppression test Cushing’s Syndrome Diagnose cause of Cushing’s syndrome – History (steroid use?) – Serum ACTH Elevated : Cushing’s disease, ectopic ACTH Suppressed: primary adrenal source Correlate with cortisol levels – High-dose dexamethasone suppression test – Metyrapone test Cushing’s Syndrome Dexmethasone suppression test – Synthetic glucocorticoid (30x more potent as inhibitor) – Low dose 0.5mg po q6 hours x48 hours Measure cortisol, 17-hydroxycorticosteroid, creatinine Fall in all steroid levels in pseudo-Cushing and normals Differentiates presence/absence of Cushing’s syndrome – Alternative dosing 1mg po at midnight and measure 8am cortisol Much less sensitive Cushing’s Syndrome Dexmethasone suppression test – High Dose 2mg po q6 hours x48 hours Measure cortisol and urinary free cortisol Ectopic ACTH and adrenal tumors- no suppression Cushing’s disease- suppress to <50% of baseline Usually only used if ACTH/Cortisol assays unavailable or equivocal Cushing’s Syndrome Metyrapone test – Inhibits 11-B-hydroxylase – Blocks conversion of 11-deoxycortisol to cortisol – Plasma cortisol levels fall and ACTH increases – Marked increase in 17-hydroxycorticosteroid levels and 11-deoxycortisol levels Cushing’s Disease- normal or supernormal increase in levels Ectopic ACTH or adrenal sources- no response – Risks adrenal insufficiency Cushing’s Syndrome Petrosal vein sampling – Measure petrosal venous sinus ACTH level and correlate to plasma levels – Invasive with morbidity – Usually not used Adrenal venous sampling – Measure cortisol and aldosterone – Not used anymore Cushing’s Syndrome Radiographic Localization – CT of sella turcica Unenhanced and gadolinium enhanced MRI Radionuclide imaging for somatostatin receptors >60% sensitive 1st study if diagnosed with Cushing’s syndrome – CT of chest/abdomen with 3mm cuts through adrenal Adrenal hyperplasia – Thickening and elongation of adrenal rami bilaterally – Multinodularity of cortex bilaterally Cushing’s Syndrome Radiographic Localization – CT of adrenal glands Adenomas- usually >2cm but <5cm – Low attenuation (lipid content) – Atrophy of opposite gland Carcinoma- indistinguishable from adenomas – >5cm – Necrosis, calcifications, irregularity, invasion – MRI of adrenal- usually not needed Signal intensity much higher than in spleen = carcinoma Adjacent organ and/or vascular involvement Cushing’s Syndrome Radiographic Localization – CT of adrenal glands Adenomas- usually >2cm but <5cm – Low attenuation (lipid content) – Atrophy of opposite gland Carcinoma- indistinguishable from adenomas – >5cm – Necrosis, calcifications, irregularity, invasion – MRI of adrenal- usually not needed Signal intensity much higher than in spleen = carcinoma Adjacent organ and/or vascular involvement DIAGNOSIS Basal Cortisol Level – Avoid random level: low sensitivity – Check morning cortisol Greater than 18 µg/dL indicates an intact axis Less than 3 µg/dL strongly suggests insufficiency – Intermediate values: perform cosyntropin stimulation test DIAGNOSIS Low-Dose Cosyntropin Test – Cosyntropin doses as low as 0.5 to 1 ug will give a maximal response within 15 to 30 mins – Possibly superior to high-dose test for diagnosing secondary insufficiency because ACTH level closer to physiologic level – Normal response: peak plasma cortisol level > 18 µg/dL – Like high-dose test, low sensitivity when ruling out mild or recent secondary insufficiency; confirm with more sensitive tests (insulin tolerance, metyrapone) DIAGNOSIS Insulin Tolerance Test – Hypoglycemia induced by the IV injection of reg insulin stimulates the entire HPA axis. – Plasma glucose and cortisol are measured after injection of insulin. Normal response: cortisol increases to at least 18ug per dL – Expensive and contraindicated in patients with coronary heart disease or seizures DIAGNOSIS Metyrapone Test – Metyrapone inhibits conversion of 11-deoxycortisol to cortisol – Give at midnight and measure the concentration of 11- deoxycortisol and cortisol at 8am – In normal subjects, the plasma 11-deoxycortisol concentration increases to at least 7ug per dL. In patients with adrenal insufficiency, the increase is smaller and is related to the severity of the corticotropin deficiency Hyperaldosteronism Causes – Adenoma (most common) F>M 4th-5th decades of life – Bilateral adrenal hyperplasia – Adrenocortical carcinoma (rare) – Glucocorticoid remedial aldosteronism Aldosterone producing adenoma Responsive to renin Hyperaldosteronism Diagnosis – History, HTN, symptoms – Laboratory Serum K+ (<3.0) Serum aldosterone – Salt load patients (suppresses aldosterone) – Level >14 micrograms/d diagnostic of primary hyperaldosteronism Serum renin – If >1.0 then unlikely primary hyperaldosteronism Pheochromocytoma, Diagnosis 24hr urinary catecholamines (NE, Epi, Dop) and metabolites (metanephrine, normetanephrine, VMA) Plasma catecholamine or metabolites during episode Elevated serum epinephrine suggests pheo in medulla or Organ of Zukerkandl NO FNA! (can precipitate hypertensive crisis) Pheochromocytoma, Diagnosis Localizing studies: CT, MRI, MIBG scan – Thin cut CT detects most lesions: 97% intraabdominal – MRI: 90% pheos bright on T2 weighted scan – MIBG: used for extraadrenal, recurrent, multifocal, malignant disease Malignant disease – Local invasion, disease outside of adrenal/paraganglionic tissue – No histological or clinical criteria can differentiate malignant disease