Abstract
Our study evaluated skeletal muscle mass, function and quality among mild autonomous cortisol secretion (MACS) patients and non-functioning adrenal incidentaloma (NFAI) patients in comparison with the control group without adrenal mass. 63 NFAI (49 female, 14 male) and 31 MACS (24 female, 7 male) patients were included in the study. As the control group, 44 patients (31 women, 13 men) who were known to have no radiological adrenal pathology on computed tomography or magnetic resonance imaging performed for other reasons were selected. After recording the laboratory parameters of the patients, anthropometric measurements, handgrip strength test with dynamometer, SARC-F survey and bioelectrical impedance analysis (BIA) measurements were performed. There was no statistical difference among the groups in terms of age, gender, and BMI parameters. Handgrip strength (HGS), skeletal muscle mass (SMM) index (SMM/BMI), and skeletal muscle quality (HGS/SMM), values used to evaluate muscle strength and quality, were found to be significantly lower in both the MACS and NFAI groups compared to the control group (p = 0.004, p = 0.012 and p = 0.034 respectively). This significance was also present in women subgroup analyses (p = 0.002, p = 0.037 and p = 0.039 respectively), but these parameters lost their statistical significance in men. In the correlation analysis of the female subgroup, 24-h free urine cortisol value was inversely proportional to skeletal muscle quality (rs = -0.417, p = 0.008). Our study showed that there is a decrease in muscle mass and function in female AI patients, and this decrease is more severe in MACS patients. These results may suggest that mild cortisol excess also has negative effects on skeletal muscle metabolism.
Published Version
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