Literature DB >> 11254236

Suppressed levels of serum cortisol following high-dose oral dexamethasone administration differ between healthy postmenopausal females and patients with established primary vertebral osteoporosis.

P Kann1, M Laudes, B Piepkorn, A Heintz, J Beyer.   

Abstract

Hypercortisolism and glucocorticoid treatment, even in a low dose or administered topically, may influence bone metabolism. It was the aim of this study to investigate whether there might be differences in the regulation of endogenous cortisol secretion between patients with established primary vertebral osteoporosis and healthy controls. Suppressed morning serum cortisol concentrations in a 3 mg dexamethasone overnight suppression test were compared in well-defined healthy postmenopausal women (n = 149) and osteoporotic patients classified as having established primary vertebral osteoporosis with no clinical features of hypercortisolism (n = 78). Suppressed cortisol in the healthy controls was 1.08 +/- 0.44 microg/dl and in the primary osteoporotics 1.58 +/- 1.42 microg/dl (p < 0.0001). Of the investigated primary osteoporotics 15.4% (n = 12) had suppressed cortisol levels above the 97.5th percentile (1.96 microg/dl) of the healthy controls. Subgroup analysis regarding the influence of gonadal steroid hormone replacement in both groups and gender in the osteoporotic group did not change the results. Four of the 12 patients with incomplete suppressive cortisol underwent adrenal endosonography, unilateral adrenal nodular hyperplasia being detected in three cases. In two patients the diagnosis was confirmed by histology and normalisation of a dexamethasone suppression test following endoscopic adrenalectomy. These data yield evidence for a difference in the regulation of cortisol secretion following high-dose dexamethasone administration between healthy subjects and a subgroup of patients with primary osteoporosis. This might be due to a relevant amount of autonomous cortisol secretion in some of these patients; however, even cortisol resistance has to be taken into account.

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Year:  2001        PMID: 11254236     DOI: 10.1007/s100670170099

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Clin Rheumatol        ISSN: 0770-3198            Impact factor:   2.980


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