Abstract

Adrenal effluent concentrations of aldosterone were measured along with testosterone, androstenedione, and cortisol in 17 women with idiopathic hirsutism. In the basal state, aldosterone secretion (higher concentrations vs peripheral blood) was demonstrated in 14 out of 16 of the women, in contrast to 8 out of 16 who demonstrated cortisol gradients. Nine women received 0.25 mgm beta 1-24 ACTH im and serial adrenal venous blood samples were obtained over the next 30 minutes. Parallel 30-40-fold increments were noted in aldosterone, androstenedione, and cortisol; testosterone increased only 8-fold. These marked changes in adrenal effluents were not observed in simultaneously monitored peripheral blood. Minimal changes in these steroid concentrations were noted in adrenal and peripheral blood in 7 women who received 2,000 IU hCG. One woman received a pressor dose of angiotensin II, resulting in a marked increase in adrenal vein aldosterone and a simultaneous decrease in cortisol. Since adrenal androgen secretion parallels cortisol, quantification of adrenal androgen secretion rates can be achieved by sampling the adrenal effluent and relating the androgen gradient to that of cortisol at any given time. In contrast, aldosterone secretion is often independent of cortisol, and thus cannot be estimated by comparison of adrenal gradients. ACTH administration, however, invariably stimulated aldosterone secretion, enabling us to quantify the "ACTH-related aldosterone secretion rate" from a comparison of maximal adrenal gradients of aldosterone vs cortisol. In 6 women, "ACTH-related aldosterone" secretion rate averaged 40 mug/day, roughly 20% of the total daily aldosterone secretion rate.

Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call