Acute-Onset Panhypopituitarism Nearly Missed by Initial Cosyntropin Testing

Blum, Claudine A. and Schneeberger, Daniel and Lang, Matthias and Rakic, Janko and Michot, Marc Philippe and Müller, Beat (2017) Acute-Onset Panhypopituitarism Nearly Missed by Initial Cosyntropin Testing. Case Reports in Critical Care, 2017. pp. 1-4. ISSN 2090-6420

[thumbnail of 7931438.pdf] Text
7931438.pdf - Published Version

Download (1MB)

Abstract

Introduction. Diagnosis of adrenal crisis and panhypopituitarism in patients with septic shock is difficult but crucial for outcome. Case. A 66-year-old woman with metastasized breast cancer presented to the ED with respiratory insufficiency and septic shock after a 2-day history of the flu. After transfer to the ICU, corticosteroids were started in addition to antibiotics, as the patient was vasopressor-nonresponsive. Diabetes insipidus was diagnosed due to polyuria and treated with 4 mg desmopressin. Thereafter, norepinephrine could be tapered rapidly. On day 2, basal cortisol was 136 nmol/L with an increase to 579 nmol/L in low-dose cosyntropin testing. Polyuria had not developed again. Therefore, corticosteroids were stopped. On day 3, the patient developed again nausea, vomiting, and polyuria. Adrenal crisis and diabetes insipidus were postulated. Corticosteroids and desmopressin were restarted. Further testing confirmed panhypopituitarism. MRI showed a new sellar metastasis. After 2 weeks, stimulated cortisol in cosyntropin testing reached only 219 nmol/l, confirming adrenal insufficiency. Discussion. The time course showed that the adrenal glands took 2 weeks to atrophy after loss of pituitary ACTH secretion. Therefore, a misleading result of the cosyntropin test in the initial phase with low basal cortisol and allegedly normal response to exogenous ACTH may be seen. Cosyntropin testing in the critically ill should be interpreted with caution and in the corresponding clinical setting.

Item Type: Article
Subjects: Opene Prints > Medical Science
Depositing User: Managing Editor
Date Deposited: 23 Jan 2023 06:43
Last Modified: 08 Jun 2024 07:42
URI: http://geographical.go2journals.com/id/eprint/850

Actions (login required)

View Item
View Item