Abstract

Short-term fluctuations in plasma cortisol were determined overnight in twelve patients with Cushing's syndrome: eight patients with bilateral adrenal hyperplasia of hypothalamic-pituitary orgin, three patients with a cortisol producing adenoma and one patient with a carcinoma of the adrenal cortex. While either secretory episodes in plasma cortisol or a fixed pattern of cortisol secretion were observed both in patients with pituitary dependent and in those with pituitary independent hypercorticism, a typical night-day variation in plasma cortisol was only found in one of the eight patients with Cushing's syndrome of hypothalamic-pituitary origin. The patient with a cortisol producing carcinoma showed only minor fluctuations in plasma cortisol throughout the test period. The results indicate that no discrimination can be made between patients with pituitary dependent or independent Cushing's syndrome by demonstrating an episodic or a fixed secretion of cortisol. It seems, however, that the finding of a typical night-day variation in hormone secretion points to hypercorticism of hypothalamic-pituitary orgin.

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