Title: Endocrine Emergencies
1Endocrine Emergencies
2Adrenal Insufficiency
3Adrenal physiology
- Cortisol functions at target tissues to maintain
vascular resistance, cardiac output, hepatic
glucose production and free water excretion - Cortisol concentration normally demonstrates
diurnal variation and increases during times of
medical stress
4Adrenal physiology
- The hypothalamus secretes CRH which in turn
stimulates ACTH production from the pituitary - ACTH stimlates cortisol production from the
adrenal glands - The hypothalamus and pituitary are influenced by
negative feedback from cortisol
5Adrenal physiology
- Aldosterone is controlled primarily by
angiotensin II and circulating potassium levels
ACTH stimulates aldosterone secretion only
transiently - Aldosterone stimulates sodium exchange for
potassium in the distal nephron
6Autoimmune Adrenal Insufficiency
- The most common cause of adrenal insufficiency in
industrialized countries - May occur alone or associated with other
autoimmune disorders - Schmidts syndrome or type II autoimmune
polyglandular syndrome. Type I diabetes and
autoimmune thyroid disease - Type I autoimmune polyglandular syndrome or
APECED (autoimmune polyendocrinopathy-candidiasis-
ectomdermal dystrophy) with chronic mucocutaneous
candidiasis and hypoparathyroidism.
7Adrenal Hemorrhage
- Increasingly recognized as a cause of adrenal
insufficiency - Meningococcemia (Waterhouse-Friderichsen
syndrome) and other forms of sepsis - Anticoagulation therapy and coagulation disorders
including antiphospholipid antibody syndrome - Severe illness and stress ACTH-induced increases
in adrenal blood flow that exceeds the capacity
for venous drainage
8Infections
- Tuberculosis
- Histoplasmosis
- Cryptococcus
- Blastomycosis
- Paracocciciomycosis
- Cytomegalovirus associated with HIV
9Adrenoleukodystrophy and Adrenomyeloneuropathy
- X-linked peroxisomal disorders of imparied very
long chain fatty acid oxidation - In adrenoleukodystropy the neurological features
begin in childhood and progress to coma and death - Adrenomyeloneuropathy neurological features
(central demyelination, cortical blindness,
neuropathies) begin in adolescence or young
adulthood, progress more slowly and involve
peripheral nerves - Diagnosis made by measuring high concentrations
of VLCFA - Young men with adrenal insufficiency should be
screened for this disorder
10Congenital Adrenal Hyperplasia
- A family of autosomal recessive disorders caused
by deficiency of one of the multiple enzymes in
the cortisol synthesis pathway - The enzyme deficiency causes inadequate cortisol
production and a compensatory increase in ACTH - ACTH stimulates adrenal hyperplasia and increased
production of precursors proximal to the block in
cortisol synthesis
11Bilateral Adrenal Metastases
- Metastases to the adrenal are common
- Breast 54
- Bronchogenic 44
- Renal 31
- Adrenal insufficiency from metastases is very rare
12Medications
- Accelerate metabolism of cortisol
- Thyroid hormone
- Rifampin
- Phenytoin
- Phenobarbital
- Mitotane
- Inhibit cortisol synthesis
- Ketoconazole (but not fluconazole or
itraconazole) - Etomidate
- Metyrapone
- Mitotane
- Aminoglutethimide
13Secondary Adrenal Insufficiency
- Pituitary tumors due to mass or treatment of
tumor - Metastases to pituitary
- Craniopharyngioma
- Meningioma
- Infiltrative disorders (histiocytosis X,
lymphocytic hypophysitis,sarcoidosis,
hemochromatosis) - Postpartum pituitary necrosis (Sheehans
syndrome) - Iatrogenic from exogenous steroids
- High doses of megestrol acetate
14Clinical Presentation
Finding Primary Secondary
Anorexia and weight loss Yes (100) Yes (100)
Fatigue and weakness Yes (100) Yes (100)
Nausea/diarrhea Yes (50) Yes (50)
Muscle,joint,abdominal pain Yes (10) Yes (10)
Orthostatic hypotension Yes Yes
Hyponatremia Yes (80) Yes (60)
Hyperkalemia Yes (60) No
Hyperpigmentation yes No
Secondary deficiencies of testosterone, GH, thyroid, ADH No Yes
Associated autoimmune diseases Yes No
15Adrenal Crisis
- Dehydration, hypotenstion, shock out of
proportion to severity of current illness,
nausea, vomiting with anorexia, weight loss,
unexplained fever, hyponatremia, hyperkalemia,
azotemia, hypercalcemia, eosinophilia, and
hypoglycemia - Often precipitated by intercurrent illness in
patient with unrecognized adrenal insufficiency
or in a patient with known disease who did not
increase cortisol replacement appropriately or
patient who recently had glucocorticoid therapy
withdrawn, or in patient with bilateral adrenal
hemorrhage
16Laboratory Testing
- In acute emergencies treat first, test later
- In the acutely ill patient draw serum cortisol
and ACTH then treat with dexamethasone 2-4 mg IV
q12 hours or hydrocortisone 100 mg q6 hours then
switch to dexamethasone for testing
17Laboratory Testing
- Static testing not very useful
- If cortisol between 8-9 am if less than or equal
to 3 ug/dl adrenal insufficiency likely - If cortisol greater than 19 adrenal insufficiency
ruled out
18Dynamic Testing Cortrosyn
- A serum cortisol of 20 ug/dl or more 1 hour
following 250 ug of cortrosyn IM or IV excludes
primary adrenal insufficiency - Some have suggested a value of 18 is an adequate
respone - Difference between baseline and stimulated
cortisol no longer used - Does not exclude the presence of secondary
adrenal insufficiency
19Dynamic Testing Cortrosyn
- Low dose cortrosyn 1 ug IV followed by cortisol
measurement in one half hour. - There is evidence for and against the utility of
this test
20ACTH Measurements
- In untreated primary adrenal insufficiency ACTH
is greater than 100 pg/ml - Not useful for judging adequacy of therapy
21Insulin Tolerance Test
- Performed fasting in morning
- IV administration of 0.1-0.15 units regular
insulin/kg - Cortisol gt18 to 20 during hypoglycemia is normal
- Contraindicated in patients with severe illness,
coronary artery disease, seizures, psychiatric
disease - In patients with pituitary disease growth hormone
is measured simultaneously
22Metyrapone Test
- Metyrapone activates the HPA axis by blocking
cortiosl production at the 11-hydroxylase step,
the last step in cortisol synthesis - This leads to cortisol deficiency which should
activate ACTH production and production of
precursors proximal to the block - Metyrapone is given at midnight with a light
snack - Cortisol and 11-deoxycortisol are measured at 8
am. The test is considered normal if cortisol is
less than 5 and 11-deoxycortisol is at least 7
ung/dl.
23Once the diagnosis is made a search for the
underlying cause is indicated if not immediately
obviousFor primary adrenal insufficiency
adrenal imaging is indicatedFor secondary
disease MRI imaging of pituitary/hypothalamus may
be needed.
24Treatment
- For primary adrenal crisis hydrocortisone 100
mg q6 hours if diagnosis established or
dexamethasone 2-4 mg q12 hours if diagnostic
testing needed - For secondary adrenal crisis dexamethasone may
be preferred to avoid fluid retention and
hypokalemia - Intravenous saline to support volume and treat
hyperkalemia - Specific mineralocorticoid is usually not
necessary while using high dose hydrocortisone
25Maintenance Therapy
- Hydrocortisone 10-20 mg in am, 5-10 mg in early
pm - Prednisone 5 mg in am, 0-2.5 mg in pm
- Florinef 0-0.1 mg per day
- Adequacy of glucocorticoid judged by patient
well-being, decrease in pigmentation,
electrolytes, blood pressure - Adequacy of mineralocorticoid judged by blood
pressure, edema, potassium and plasma renin
activity - All patients with adrenal insufficiency should
have MedicAlert bracelet or carry documentation
of this disorder
26Acute Illness Coverage
- Mild to moderate illness double or triple usual
glucocorticoid dosage - Severe illness or vomiting dexamethasone or
solucortef IM self-administered by patient then
seek prompt medical help - Moderately stressful procedures such as
endoscopy hydrocortisone 100 mg one hour before
procedure - Major surgery hydrocortisone 100 mg IV before
induction of anesthesia and repeated q6 hours.
Dose then tapered depending on patients rate of
recovery, usually 50 decrease per day until
maintenance dose achieved
27Thyroid Storm
28Thyroid Storm
- Severe and life-threatening thyrotoxicosis
- Exaggeration of the typical symptoms of
hyperthyroidism - Tachycardia with rate oftengt140
- CHF
- Fever
- Change in mental status delirium, psychosis,
stupor, coma - Nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, abdominal pain
- Hepatic failure, jaundice, abnormal liver
function tests
29Precipitants
- Usually precipitated by an acute event in a
patient with untreated hyperthyroidism - Thyroid or nonthyroidal surgery
- Trauma
- Infection
- Acute iodine load or radioactive iodine
- Poor compliance with specific therapy
- Low socioeconomic status
- Preoperative preparation of patients undergoing
thyroidectomy for hyperthyroidism has led to
dramatic reduction in prevalence of
surgically-induced thyroid storm
30Treatment
- IV Fluid
- Acetominophen
- Beta blockade to control adrenergic symptoms
- Thionamide - methimazole or PTU
- Iodine solution to block release of thyroid
hormone - Iodinated contrast agent to inhibit the
peripheral conversion of T4 to T3 - Glucocorticoids to reduce T4 to T3 conversion and
to treat potential coexistent adrenal
insufficiency
31Beta Blockers
- Use with caution in patients with CHF or other
contraindication - Propranolol is frequently selected as it can be
given intravenously and reduces the conversion of
T4 to T3 - Esmolol - loading dose of 250-500 ug/kg IV
followed by infusion of 50-100 ug/kg/min. This
permits rapid titration of drug and minimizes
adverse reactions
32Thionamides
- Block de novo thyroid hormone synthesis within
1-2 hours of administration but have no effect on
preformed thyroid hormone stored in the gland - PTU blocks conversion of T4 to T3 but since other
drugs given in storm are usually coadministered
it is okay to use methimazole which has a longer
duration of action - High doses needed Methimazole 30 mg q6 or PTU
200 mg q4 hours - Both drugs can be suspected in liquid for rectal
administration
33Iodine
- Iodine blocks release of T4 and T3 from the gland
- SSKI 5 drops every 6 hours or Lugols solution 10
drops tid - Delay administration of at least one hour after
thionamide administration to prevent iodine being
used as a substrate for new hormone synthesis - If iodine allergic, lithium has been used for the
same purpose
34Iodinated Radiocontrast Agents
- Iopanoic acid used for oral cholecystography
- Potent inhibitors of T4 to T3 conversion
- Dose 0.5 to 1 gm qd
- Give at least one hour after thionamide to
prevent iodine from being used as a substrate for
new hormone synthesis
35Glucocorticoids
- Reduce T4 to T3 conversion
- May have a direct effect on underlying autoimmune
process if storm is due to Graves disease - Use of glucocorticoids has improved outcome in
one series - Hydrocortisone 100 mg IV q8 hours
36Myxedema Coma
37Myxedema Coma
- Severe hypothyroidism due to severe long-standing
untreated hypothyroidism - Precipitating acute event almost always present
infection, myocardial infarction, cold exposure,
sedative drugs - Older women affected most frequently
- May result from any of the usual causes of
hypothyroidism - Important clues in a poorly responsive patient
include presence of thyroidectomy scar or history
of radioiodine treatment or known hypothyroidism - Mortality rate is high 30-40
38Clinical Presentation
- Hypothermia
- Decreased mental status
- Hypotension
- Bradycardia
- Hyponatremia
- Hypoglycemia
- Hypoventilation
39Diagnosis
- History, physical exam, and exclusion of other
causes of coma - Treat before waiting for lab confirmation but
draw TSH, free T4, cortisol before treatment - Most patients will have primary hypothyroidism
with high TSH and low free T4 rare patients have
low free T4 and low TSH consistent with secondary
hypothyroidism due to hypothalamic or pituitary
disease - Cortisol measurement will help exclude coexistent
adrenal insufficiency
40Treatment Thyroid Hormone
- Optimal mode of thyroid hormone therapy is
controversial - Increasing serum thyroid hormones rapidly carries
some risk of precipitating MI or atrial
arrhythmia but this risk must be accepted given
high mortality rate of myxedema coma - Levothyroxine 0.2-0.4 mg IV initial dose
- .05 to 0.1 mg IV qd thereafter
- Switch to oral when feasible
- T3 can be given 5-20 ug initially, then 2.5-10 ug
q8 hours - Stop T3 when clinical improvement occurs
41Supportive Measures
- Avoid dilute fluids
- Severe hypotension that does not respond to
fluids should be treated with vasopressors until
T4 has had time to act - Passive rewarming with heating blanket (active
rewarming carries risk of vasodilatation) - Empiric antibiotics until appropriate cultures
are proven negative
42Pheochromocytoma
43Catecholamine -Secreting Tumors
Pheochromocytoma and Paragangliomas
- Arise from chromaffin cells of adrenal medulla
and sympathetic ganglia - Rare incidence 2-8 cases per million
prevalence estimates 0.01 to 0.1 of
hypertensive population - Occurs equally in men and women, primarily in 3rd
through 5th decades - Curable with surgical removal of tumor
- Potential for lethal paroxysm
44Symptoms
- Usually present and are due to pharmacologic
effects of excess circulating catecholamines - The five Ps
- Pressure- sudden major increase in BP
- Pain- abrupt onset of throbbing headache, chest
and/or abdominal pain - Perspiration- profuse generalized diaphoresis
- Palpitations
- Pallor
45Spells
- Extremely variable in presentation
- Spontaneous
- Precipitated by diagnostic procedures, postural
changes, anxiety, exercise, or maneuvers that
increase intra-abdominal pressure - Duration 10-60 minutes and may occur daily to
monthly - Additional symptoms constipation, attacks of
hypotension and shock, tremor, anxiety,
epigastric and chest pain
46Clinical Signs
- Hypertension - paroxysmal in half, may be severe
and resistant to conventional therapy - Orthostatic hypotension
- Pallor
- Grade II-IV retinopathy
- Tremor
- Weight loss
- Fever
- Café au lait spots in neurofibromatosis
- Painless hematuria and paroxysmal attacks induced
by micturition in pheo of bladder - Hyperglycemia
- Hypercalcemia
- Erythrocytosis
47Rule of 10
- 10 are extradrenal
- 10 occur in children
- 10 are multiple or bilateral
- 10 recur after surgical removal
- 10 are malignant
- 10 are familial
48Differential Diagnosis
- Endocrine
- Thyrotoxicosis
- Menopausal syndrome
- Hypoglycemia
- Mastocytosis
- Cardiac
- Essential hypertension
- Cardiovascular deconditioning
- Paroxysmal arrhythmia
- Withdrawal of adrenergic inhibiting medications
(clonidine) - MAO-inhibitor treatment and ingestion of tyramine
or decongestant - Angina
49Differential Diagnosis
- Psychoneurologic
- Anxiety and panic attacks
- Hyperventilation
- Migraine headaches
- Amphetamine, phenylpropanolamine, or cocaine use
- Diencephalic epilepsy
- Factitious
- Sympathomimetic ingestion
50Familial Syndromes
- Familial pheochromocytoma
- MENII a
- Pheochromocytoma
- Medullary thyroid carcinoma
- Hyperparathyroidism
- MENII b
- Pheochromocytoma (bilateral in gt70)
- Medullary thyroid carcinoma
- Mucosal neuromas
- Thickened corneal nerves
- Intestinal ganglioneuromatosis
- Marfanoid body habitus
51Familial Syndromes
- Neurofibromatosis (von Recklinghausens disease)
- 1 develop pheochromocytoma
- Von Hippel-Lindau (retinal angiomatosis and
cerebellar hemangioblastoma) - Additional pheochromocytoma-related
neurocutaneous syndromes - Ataxia telangiectasia
- Tuberous sclerosis
- Sturge-Weber
- Other known associations without familial basis
- Carneys triad
- Gastric leiomyosarcoma
- Pulmonary chondroma
- Extra-adrenal pheochromocytoma
- Cholelithiasis
- Renal artery stenosis
52Paragangliomas
- Para-aortic sympathetic chain
- Organs of Zuckerkandl at origin of inferior
mesenteric artery - Wall of urinary bladder
- Sympathetic chain in the neck or mediastinum
53Other Endocrine Manifestations of
Pheochromocytoma
- GHRH- acromegaly
- ACTH/CRH - Cushings syndrome
- VIP- watery diarrhea
- PTH-RP- hypercalcemia
54Diagnostic Evaluation
- Biochemical documentation should precede any
imaging studies - 24 hour urine collection for catecholamines,
metanephrine and VMA - 24 hour urine collection should start with the
onset of a spell in pateints with episodic
hypertension - Usually more than 2 fold increase above the upper
normal limit - No role for provocative testing with histamine or
glucagon
55Medications Interfering with Assessment
- Increase values
- Tricyclic antidepressants
- Labetolol
- Levodopa
- Decongestants
- Amphetamines, busipirone and most psychoactive
medications - Sotalol
- Methyldopa
- Ethanol
- Benzodiazepines
- Decrease values
- Metyrosine
- Methylglucamine
56Plasma Catecholamines
- Plasma catecholamines
- must be obtained from fasting supine patient with
indwelling catheter in place for 20 minutes - affected by diuretics, smoking, renal
insufficiency - Plasma metanephrines
- Recent report shows accuracy for diagnosis
- Chromogranin A
- Costored and secreted with catecholamines and
increased in 80-90 of patients with
catecholamine secreting tumors - Neuropeptide Y increased in 87
- Measurements of urinary catecholamines and
metabolites, chromogranin A, plasma norepi and
dopamine are invalid In advanced renal
insufficiency. Plasma epi levels more reliable
57Localization Studies
- 90 of tumors are found in the adrenal and 98
are in the abdomen - Pheos have a characteristic T2-weighted
appearance on MRI - Common locations of extradrenal paragangliomas
are superior para-aortic region in 46, inferior
para-aortic in 29, urinary bladder in 10,
thorax in 10, head and neck 3, pelvis 2 - If results of imaging studies are negative an
MIBG scan can be performed. Sensitivity 88,
specificity 99
58Treatment of Pheochromocytoma
- Surgical resection after careful pre-op alpha and
beta adrenergic blockade - Controls blood pressure and prevents
intraoperative hypertensive crisis - Alpha blockade started at least 10 days preop to
allow for contracted blood volume - Encourage high salt intake during this time
59Alpha blockade
- Phenoxybenzamine 10 mg bid and increased 10-20 mg
every 2 days until BP and spells controlled - Average dosage 0.5-1.0 mg/kg daily
- Orthostatic hypotension increased, tachycardia,
miosis, nasal congestion, diarrhea, fatigue
60Beta blockade
- Administer only after alpha inhibition is
effective because beta blockade alone may result
in more severe hypertension due to unopposed
alpha adrenergic stimulation - Indicated to control tachycardia associated with
high circulating catecholamines and alpha
blockade - Use cautiously and at low dose as chronic
circulating catecholamines may cause a
cardiomyopathy and beta blockers can result in
pulmonary edema - Labetolol is a combined beta blocker and alpha
blocker but instances of paradoxic hypertensive
crisis (due to incomplete alpha blockade) have
been reported safety as primary agent is
controversial
61Catecholamine Synthesis Inhibitor Metyrosine
- Useful in patients with persistent catecholamine
producing tumors that cannot be treated with
combined alpha and beta blockade - Inhibits tyrosine hydroxylase
- Side effects diarrhea, sedation, anxiety,
nightmares, urolithiasis, galactorrhea,
extrapyramidal manifestations
62Acute Hypertensive Crises
- Phentolamine test dose of 1 mg followed by repeat
5 mg IV boluses - Response maximal in 2-3 minutes and lasts 10-15
minutes - 100mg/500 cc 5 dextrose can be infused IV and
titrated to BP control
63Postoperative Course
- Hypotension may occur after surgery treat with
fluids and colloid - Less frequent in patients who have had adequate
alpha blockade preoperatively - Hypoglycemia
- BP usually normal prior to discharge
- Some patients remain hypertensive for up to 4-8
weeks - 2 weeks after surgery 24 hour urine obtained to
insure cure then every 5 years