Abstract

To evaluate whether or not patients with Cushing's disease can be differentiated from those with obesity by the determination of 24-hour integrated serum concentrations of cortisol we studied healthy, nonobese males (n = 5), as well as patients with marked obesity (n = 5) and with Cushing's disease (n = 7) in whom diagnosis was established biochemically and subsequently confirmed by surgery. Serum cortisol concentrations in samples collected continuously by a portable blood withdrawal pump during 24 hours (08:00-08:00h) were 6.6 +/- 1.7 micrograms/dl and 8.4 +/- 1.5 micrograms/dl in nonobese and obese individuals, respectively. Patients with Cushing's disease presented a mean cortisol concentration of 21.4 +/- 6.4 micrograms/dl (p vs normal: less than 0.005; vs obesity: less than 0.005). Collecting consecutive samples in 4-h periods the decline of serum cortisol from peak to nadir values was 73 +/- 10% and 57 +/- 23% in normal males and obese subjects, respectively, while a decline of only 22 +/- 8% was seen in patients with Cushing's disease. Three of the patients with Cushing's disease exhibited a circadian rhythm of cortisol albeit on an elevated level. These results may reflect variable stages of autonomy in pituitary ACTH-production and hence a possible criteria for differentation of hypothalamic and pituitary forms of Cushing's disease. In regard to differential diagnosis between Cushing's disease and obesity the 24-hour cortisol profile obtained by multiple sampling did not provide additional information to that obtained by a single sample pooled for 24 hours, which was diagnostic in each case.

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