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Download Endocrine Emergencies: Adrenal Crisis
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Kina M. Merwin McDougall Endocrinology PGY4 Western University EMS called for 21 ♀ w/ confusion, fever, SOB and abdominal pain. Cough and malaise for several days prior. PHx: Fetal Alcohol Syndrome (group home) Asthma BMI 34 Meds: Salbutamol prn Febrile: 38.9 Hypotension: 78/50 Tachycardia: 125 Tachypnea: 35 Hypoxic: O2 Sat 87% Disoriented and very anxious Acetaminophen given EMS bolused 2L NS Combivent Nebs & 15L O2 by NRB Vitals: T 38.8, BP 84/52, HR 125, Sat 89%, BG 7 Patient becoming combative & taking O2 off Intubation Midazolam & Fentanyl (large doses required) SBP 60: peripheral dopamine & RL under pressure Central line inserted & norepinephrine added CXR: bilateral lower lobe infiltrates Ceftriaxone, Levofloxacin & Tamiflu started 21 ♀ with pneumonia & septic shock Intubated and on pressors with SBP 90 Fighting ventilator on high-dose midazolam and fentanyl infusions so propofol added Initial labs: ABG 7.24|51|72|20 Lactate 3.7 133 102 7.1 3.2 21 135 14.1 102 248 Acute respiratory acidosis & metabolic acidosis: respiratory fatigue & sepsis Brought to ICU immediately On stretcher-bed transfer, sheets noted to be wet and bloody Rapid physical exam found a tense abdomen and vaginal bleeding Nurse notes that abdomen is alternating between tense and soft “Obstetric 25 to MSICU!” 45 minutes later ~ 24wk boy delivered NICU Our patient: Ongoing hypoxia CXR white-out ARDS PEEP ladder initiated Ongoing hypotension norepi & dopamine infusions Resolving hemorrhage after 2u PRBC & oxytocin Group home collateral: 19 yo boyfriend lives in same group home Pregnancy unknown but boyfriend’s mother offering adoption for the baby Another group home resident known swab +ve for H1N1 Nurse reports: Insulin infusion never initiated D5W up-titrated to 175cc/hr for BG 4 to 6 BG now 3.7 (last ABG: glucose 3.5) Attending says You’re going into endocrinology; what should we do about her blood sugar? ▪ Amp of D50 BG 4.3 ▪ Change maintenance fluid to D10W DDx in ill patient: Medications: ▪ Insulin or oral glycemic medications ▪ Quinolones Critical illness Cortisol deficiency Insulinoma or nonislet cell tumour ✗ ? ✓ ✓ ✗ Severe Sepsis vs Adrenal Crisis +/- Levofloxacin Define adrenal crisis Discuss epidemiology & frequency Review the causes of adrenal crisis Examine the pathophysiology 5. Outline how to make the diagnosis 6. Delineate management 7. Summarize complications 1. 2. 3. 4. What is adrenal crisis? Acute adrenal insufficiency/failure Life-threatening condition due to insufficient adrenal (stress) hormones to mount an appropriate response to stresses like an infection Mineralocorticoids Glucocorticoids Androgens Catecholamines McGraw Hill Zona glomerulosa Zona fasciculata Zona reticularis CHOLESTEROL Pregnenolone 17a-Hydroxypregnenolone Dehydroepiandrosterone DHEA Progesterone 17a- Hydroxyprogesterone Androstenedione Deoxycorticosterone 11-Deoxycortisol Corticosterone Cortisol Aldosterone Zona glomerulosa Zona fasciculata Zona reticularis CHOLESTEROL 17a-Hydroxypregnenolone Pregnenolone Dehydroepiandrosterone DHEA 17α - hydroxylase Progesterone 17a- Hydroxyprogesterone 21 Hydroxylase Deoxycorticosterone 11-Deoxycortisol 11β Hydroxylase Aldo Synthase Corticosterone Cortisol Aldosterone Androstenedione 100-150 mcg/day C: 10-20 mg/day A: > 20 mg/day Hypothalamus Circadian Regulation Stress: physical, emotional, illness CRH + Anterior Pituitary ACTH + _ Adrenal Cortex Systemic Effects _ + Cortisol Rare: episode reported by 42% of chronic Chronic Primary Adrenal Insufficiency: Prevalence: 93-144 cases/million Incidence: 4.4-6 new cases/million/year ♀ > ♂ but near 1:1 Any age: most frequently 30-50years Chronic Central Adrenal Insufficiency: Prevalence: 150-280 cases/million ♀>♂ Any age: most frequently 50’s Steroid withdrawal 1. Exogenous formulations Adrenalectomy Drug-induced: ketoconazole, etomidate, rifampin, anti-epileptics Acute exacerbation of chronic insufficiency 2. Sepsis Surgical stress Pituitary trauma 3. Head injury Surgical intervention or irradiation Hemorrhage or infarct Infection/Infiltration Bilateral adrenal hemorrhage 4. Antiphospholipid Antibody Syndrome Anticoagulants Malignancy Septic Waterhouse-Friderichsen Syndrome (menigiococcemia: Neisseria) Autoimmune 80% of cases in developed countries 60% associated with autoimmune polyendocrinopathy syndromes Tuberculosis Leading cause historically Still top cause in endemic areas Autoimmune Infection: tuberculosis, fungal, viral Iatrogenic predominately via cytochrome P450 mechanisms Hemorrhage Metastatic malignancy: lung, stomach, breast, colon Infiltration: lymphoma, amyloidosis, hemochromatosis Genetic: Congenital adrenal hyperplasia, Adrenoleukodystrophy, Familial glucocorticoid deficiency or ACTH-insensitivity Secondary (Pituitary) Trauma & Space-occupying Lesions ▪ Tumors ▪ Surgery & Irradiation ▪ Infection & Infiltration ▪ Apoplexy & Sheehan’s Syndrome Genetic ▪ Prader-Willi Syndrome ▪ Mutations of transcription factors involved in pituitary development Tertiary (Hypothalmus) Trauma & Space-occupying Lesions ▪ As above Drug-induced Drug-induced: Corticosteroids (secondary AI) ▪ <10mg pred/day for 2wks Ketoconazole (primary AI) Etomidate (primary AI) ▪ only one dose required Megesterol acetate (secondary AI) ▪ progestin w/ mild glucocorticoid activity Rifampin (increased cortisol metabolism) Phenytoin (increased cortisol metabolism) Metyrapone (primary AI) Mitotane (primary AI) Opioids (secondary & tertiary AI) Charmandari et al. Lancet. 2014 Jun 21;383(9935):2152-67 Charmandari et al. Lancet. 2014 Jun 21;383(9935):2152-67 NEVER withhold treatment while making the diagnosis! Suspicious history & physical Initial investigations: Random Cortisol < 400nmol/L very suggestive if critically ill ACTH TSH & fT4 Blood cultures and other labs as indicated Diagnostic: ACTH stimulation test ACTH 250mcg IV Baseline ACTH & cortisol, then cortisol @ 30 & 60min Excludes insufficiency if cortisol doubles & > 550nmol/L Can be normal in ACUTE central insufficiency Primary Central Baseline Cortisol Low Low Baseline ACTH High Low to low Normal Stimulated Cortisol Low Acute: High Chronic: Low ABCs & treat precipitant illness New diagnosis: Dexamethasone 4mg IV while arranging ACTH stim ▪ Unless critically ill Then Hydrocortisone 100 mg IV q6-8h for dual mineralocorticoid and glucocorticoid effect Correct fluid deficit with D5NS to avoid hypoglycemia BP should start responding in 4-6hrs if dx correct After 24hrs, reduce to HC 50mg IV q6h, then start taper Chronic condition: Crisis: Hydrocortisone 100 mg IV q6-8h Stress: Double or triple baseline dose to prevent adrenal crisis After 24hrs, reduce to HC 50mg IV q6h, then start taper Continue stress dosing for minimum of 48-72h Drug Short acting Half life Equivalent antiinflammatory dose mg Relative mineralocorticoid potency 8-12 h Cortisone 25 2 Hydrocortisone 20 2 Methylprednisolone 4 0 Prednisolone 5 1 Prednisone 5 1 0.75 0 10 125 Intermediate acting Long acting 18-36 h 36-54 h dexamethasone Mineralocorticoid fludrocortisone 12-24 h 21 ♀ with ARDS (?H1N1) Preterm delivery @ 26wks w/ hemorrhage requiring 2u PRBCs Intubated with high dose midazolam & fentanyl infusions. Weaning propofol Norepi & dopamine to keep SBP 90 D10W at 100cc/hr to keep BG>6 What are you concerned about? Adrenal Crisis 2° Sheehan’s Critical Illness Adrenal Hemorrhage Cortisol, ACTH, Prolactin, TSH, fT4 pending Hydrocortisone 100mg IV q8h Learned not to use Dexamethasone in ICU 2008 Critical Care Guidelines MRI pituitary arranged for afternoon Endocrinology consulted 2008 Joint Recommendations: Society of Critical Care Medicine European Society of Intensive Care Medicine ICU conditions associated with adrenal failure: Shock Severe CAP Trauma Head injury Burns Liver failure Pancreatitis Post-operatively with cardiac surgery Brain dead organ donors After etomidate use >90% bound to CBG & a little to albumin CBG falls in acute illness by 50% Substantially increases free cortisol Measurement of total cortisol decreased T1/2 of cortisol is 70-120 minutes No cortisol stored in adrenal gland Acute illness should up-regulate HPA system Deficiency anywhere in HPA system results in decreased cortisol Reported prevalence of adrenal insufficiency Critically ill patients: 10-20% Septic shock: up to 60% Mechanisms of dysfunction are poorly understood Decreased production of CRH, ACTH and cortisol Systemic Inflammation-Associated Glucocorticoid Resistance ▪ Dysfunction of CRH, ACTH and cortisol receptors ▪ Multifactorial ▪ Receptors down regulated by inflammatory cytokines ± structural damage to adrenal gland “CIRCI” – Critical Illness-Related Corticosteroid Insufficiency 2. Avoid terms “absolute” and “relative” adrenal insufficiency in context of critical illness 3. Diagnosis of adrenal insufficiency best made by a delta cortisol of <9 μg/dL (248nmol/L) after 250μg cosyntropin or random total cortisol <10μg/dL (276nmol/L) (grade 2B) 4. Free cortisol not recommended (grade 2B) 5. ACTH stimulation test should not be used to identify patients with septic shock or ARDS who should receive glucocorticoids 1. Marik et al. Crit Care Med 2008 Vol 36, No 6. 1937-1949 Delta cortisol <248 nmol/L has been shown to be an important prognostic marker in ICU Studies in septic shock showed rapid shock reversal in patients treated with GC regardless of ACTH stim. test result Stim test Down-falls: Doesn‘t assess adequacy of stress cortisol levels Doesn’t assess HPA axis integrity Currently no way to measure tissue cortisol resistance Poorly reproducible, especially in septic shock 6. Consider hydrocortisone in the management strategy of septic shock, particularly those patients who respond poorly to fluid resuscitation and vasopressor agents (2B) Evidence: ▪ 6 RCT of HC 200-300mg/day in septic shock ▪ Meta-analysis: ▪ Greater shock reversal at day 7 ▪ No mortality benefit ▪ Not statistically significant higher rate of secondary infections 7. Consider moderate dose GC in the management of early severe ARDS (PaO2/FiO2 < 200) and before day 14 in un-resolving ARDS (2B) Role of GC in acute lung injury and less severe ARDS is not yet clear No exact dose recommendation, as studies used doses from 200 to 750mg HC equivalence/day Associated with improved PaO2/FiO2, reduction of days on mechanical vent and days in ICU 8. In septic shock, give IV hydrocortisone in a dose of 200 mg/d in four divided doses or as a bolus of 100 mg followed by a continuous infusion of 10mg/hr (240mg/d) (Grade 1B) Option in ARDS to give 1mg/kg/day of methylprednisolone as a continuous infusion Doses > 300mg/day of HC not recommended Increased myopathy & super infections Continuous infusions give better glycemic control 9. Optimal duration of GC treatment unclear Septic shock should be treated for ≥7 days before taper ▪ assuming no residual signs of sepsis or shock Early ARDS should be treated for ≥14 days before taper (2B) 10. GC treatment should be tapered slowly and not stopped abruptly (2B) 11. Treatment with fludrocortisone (50μg PO OD) is optional (2B) 12. Dexamethasone is not recommended for treatment of septic shock or ARDS (1B) Secondary significant suppression of HPA axis ? Lack of mineralocorticoid effect Cortisol: 170 nmol/L ACTH: 2.3 pmol/L TSH: 0.09 mU/L Free T4: 6 pmol/L Prolactin: 8 mcg/L FSH & LH: suppressed in pregnancy Estrogen: high in pregnancy MRI: Normal (275-550 nmol/L @ 8) (2.2-13 pmol/L @ 8) (0.2-3 mU/L in 2nd T) (10-23 pmol/L) (35-600 mcg/L @ term) CBG is increased in high-estrogen states Pregnancy Oral contraceptive Liver disease Rise in CBG elevates total plasma cortisol Threefold rise in total cortisol by pregnancy week 26 Adrenals hyper-responsive to ACTH ACTH and free cortisol levels also higher in pregnancy No stigmata of high cortisol 2° antiglucocorticoid effect of elevated progesterone in pregnancy Case pt’s cortisol quite low for pregnancy & illness ACTH should also be higher Low cortisol, low ACTH = central insufficiency MRI was normal Fentanyl 50 mcg/hr ▪ Known HPA axis suppression Hypothalamus _ Opiates CRH _ ? + Anterior Pituitary ACTH _ + _ Adrenal Cortex Systemic Effects _ + Cortisol TSH normal ranges by trimester: 1st: 0.1 to 2.5 mU/L 2nd: 0.2 to 3.0 mU/L 3rd: 0.3 to 3.0 mU/L “Sick Euthyroid Syndrome” Prolactin should be rising as pregnancy advances Prolactin should be low in Sheehan’s Our pt’s prolactin was low MRI was normal Dopamine suppresses prolactin Highest infusion rate: 1000 mcg/min Pressor & glucose requirements dropped on hydrocortisone H1N1 positive with severe ARDS CT Abdo ruled out adrenal hemorrhage Transferred to community ICU: final adrenal dx unknown Baby boy survived for two weeks. Respiratory failure Multifactorial Hypoglycemia: Critical Illness vs Adrenal Insufficiency Low cortisol & ACTH: Opiates vs ICU vs AI Thyroid dysfunction: Pregnancy vs ICU vs dopamine ▪ Dopamine can suppress TSH secretion Prolactin: High-dose dopamine suppression ABCs Labs: lytes, glucose, cortisol, ACTH Fluid resuscitation: D5NS bolus 2-3L, then maintenance infusion as appropriate Hydrocortisone 100mg IV q6-8h Dexamethasone closely followed by ACTH stim if not critically ill. Then hydrocortisone. Simultaneous management of inciting illness If Primary AI, start fludrocortisone 0.1mg PO once NS infusion not required Hydrocortisone 10-20mg after waking & 5-10mg in early afternoon Alternate regimens: ▪ Hydrocortisone TID (symptomatic between doses) ▪ Prednisone dose typically 3.5-5 mg daily ▪ Dexamethasone 0.25-0.5 mg once daily Normal liver function required to activate cortisone & prednisone Adjust dose to symptoms Scoring: For each sign or symptom present, add one point if suggestive of over-replacement or subtract one point if suggestive of under replacement. Scores between -2 to +2 reflect good replacement No simple recipe to establish a dose Titrate to symptom improvement: fatigue, nausea, energy, illness, hospitalizations Tailor timing: night shifts, avoidance of sleep disturbance Avoid over-replacement: BMI, central obesity, stretch marks, osteopenia, HTN Prolonged ACTH stimulation Cortisol rapidly peaks in primary Cortisol continues to rise throughout stim in central Insulin tolerance test Gold standard Administer regular insulin until hypoglycemic (2.2) Induces stress response Adequate response is serum cortisol > 500 nmol/L Metyrapone Inhibits 11 beta hydroxylase CRH stimulation test Differentiates primary/secondary/tertiary AI Aldosterone Replace with Fludrocortisone 0.1mg daily 0.025 to 0.2 mg daily - titrate to BP & edema Dose may change with season or exercise Monitor sodium, potassium & plasma renin activity DHEA Insufficient evidence for routine supplementation No evidence in males In females, DHEA therapy suggested only for significantly impaired mood or sense of well-being despite optimal glucocorticoid and mineralocorticoid replacement Minor febrile illness or stress 2-3x GC for 3 days. No change to MC Hospitalization or Surgery Moderate: Hydrocortisone 50mg PO BID. Rapid taper Severe: Hydrocortisone 100mg IV q8h. Taper w/ recovery Severe stress or trauma Emergency kit: dexamethasone 4mg IM Medic Alert and Emergency card in wallet Identify as steroid dependent Educate, educate, educate Patient self-advocacy Calcium & Vit D supplementation Screen for osteoporosis as appropriate Drug interactions anticonvulsants, anti-retrovirals, rifampin dose adjustments likely required Pregnancy May require dose increase of 5-10 mg by 3rd trimester Labor: adequate saline hydration & hydrocortisone 2 mg IV q6h Delivery or prolonged labour: hydrocortisone 100mg IV q6h or infusion After delivery: taper rapidly to maintenance within 3 days References available upon request