Title: Pharmacology of Adrenocorticosteroids
1Pharmacology of Adrenocorticosteroids
- 2009 DCOM Pharmacology Lecture Series
- J. Richard Brown, Pharm.D., BCPS, FASHP
- Professor
- Colleges of Pharmacy and Medicine
- University of Tennessee
- Memphis, TN
2Learning Objectives
- Discuss the physiology of adrenal gland function
as it relates to corticosteroid synthesis - Provide insight into use of select diagnostic
drugs in adrenal pathological disorders - Review feedback mechanisms in the HPA axis as it
relates to drug induced adrenal suppression - Offer an overview of pharmacology and review
therapeutic application of available steroid
preparations - Provide potency comparisons of systemic steroids
available for use - Offer insight into regimens for steroid
withdrawal and the complications associated with
withdrawal - Discuss Addisonian symptoms and provide insight
into stress dosing of steroids to avoid this
complication - Review side effects associated with steroid use
- Provide usage pearls of wisdom for safe and
effective prescribing of steroids
3Adrenal glands
- Adrenal medulla
- Epinepherine
- Norepinephrine
- Adrenal cortex
- Salt
- Sugar (stress hormones)
- Sex
4Adrenal Cortex
- SALT (mineralcorticoids)
- SUGAR (glucocorticoids)..aka Steroids
- SEX (gonadocorticoids)
5Adrenal Cortex Anatomy
- The adrenal cortex is composed of three zones
histologically. - Outer zona glomerulosa, site for aldosterone
synthesis. - Central zona fasciculata and inner zona
reticularis produce both cortisol and androgens.
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7Zona Glomerulosa
- Outermost zone just below the adrenal surface
capsule - Secretes mineralocorticoids.
- Mineralocorticoids are aptly termed as they are
involved in regulation of electrolytes in ECF. - The naturally synthesized mineralocorticoid of
most importance is aldosterone.
8Zona Fasciculata
- Middle zone between the glomerulosa and
reticularis - Primary secretion is glucocorticoids.
- Glucocorticoids, as the term implies, are
involved the increasing of blood glucose levels.
However they have additional effects in protein
and fat metabolism. - The naturally synthesized glucocorticoid of most
importance is cortisol.
9Zona Reticularis
- Innermost zone between the fasciculata and
medulla - Primarily responsible for secretion is androgens.
- Androgenic hormones exhibit approximately the
same effects as the male sex hormone
testosterone. - Overlap in the secretions of androgens and
glucocorticoids exist between the fasciculata and
reticularis.
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11POMCThe Origin of ACTH
- Pro-OpioMelanoCortin Precursor Protein
- Produces biologicals that act on 5 melanocortin
receptor subtypes (MCR1-5) - Large precursor protein to ACTH
- ACTH is MCR2 specific at adrenal level but may
overide to MCR1 in excess - Source of other biological peptides
- Endorphins
- Liptropins
- Melanocyte stimulating hormones (MCR1 specific)
- Mutationally impaired process in synthesis may
lead to adrenal insufficiency
12Adrenocorticotrophic Hormone (ACTH or
Corticotrophin)
- Synthesized as part of a larger precursor
protein, pro-opiomelanocortin (POMC) - Acting via MCR2, ACTH stimulates the adrenal
cortex to secrete glucocorticoids,
mineralocorticoids, and the androgen precursor
dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA) - ACTH is a melanocortin similar to MSH
- In excess, ACTH can signal through the MCR1 and
cause hyperpigmentation - Synthesis follows 24 hour diurnal pattern..high
in the AM and low in late PM with some production
following food ingestion
13ACTH as a Drug
- Used mainly for diagnostic purposes
- Limited therapeutic value in conditions
responsive to corticosteroids - Current and past products
- Cosyntropin (Cortrosyn), a synthetic ACTH
- Corticotropin Injection (Acthar Gel)
- Repository corticotropin injection (H.P. Acthar
Gel)
14A synthetic ACTH pharmaceutical
15Site specific enzymatic inhibiton by metyrapone
to decrease cortisol level
16Glucocorticoid Release Follows ACTH Release
- Cortisol, like ACTH, is secreted in a pulsitile
manner and plasma levels closely parallel those
of ACTH. Superimposed on this is a circadian
rhythm that results in peak cortisol levels in
the early morning and a nadir in the late
evening. - Physical and emotional stress (trauma, surgery,
and hypoglycemia) can dramatically increase
cortisol secretion by stimulating release of CRH
and ACTH from hypothalamus and pituitary
respectively.
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19Regulators of the HPA axis
- Hypothalamic Corticotrophin Releasing Factor or
Hormone (CRH) acting on CRF1 receptor in
pituitary increases ACTH synthesis - Cytokines (leukemia-inhibitory factor (LIF),
interleukin-6 (IL-6) - Stimulatory on POMC gene expression and ACTH
expression - Arginine vasopressin (AVP)
- Secretagogue for pituitary corticotropes
- Potentates the effects of CRH on ACTH release
- In contrast to CRH, does not increase ACTH
synthesis - Negative feedback by cortisol can down regulate
HPA - Stress can up regulate HPA significantly
20Corticotrophin Releasing Hormones (CRH) Use as a
Drug
- CRH Stimulation Test for diagnosis only
- In US, ovine CRH with flushing as a side effect
- Corticorelin (ACTHREL)
- Differentiates between pituitary source and
ectopic source in ACTH dependent hypercorticism - In Cushings..ACTH increases with a 5-10 failure
rate, so test is not perfect - In ectopic..ACTH does NOT increase in the
majority of patients
21HPA Axis and Stress Response
- Acute stress
- Systemic and neurogenic
- Injury, cold, pain, fear, infection, hemorrhage,
surgery - Short term, enhanced secretion of ACTH and
glucocorticoids over riding negative feedback - Maximum production of cortisol is 200mg/24hours
- Immunological stress
- Stimulation by inflammatory cytokines (IL-1,
IL-6, TNF-? - Repeated stress
- Chronic stress
Endocr. Rev 2155-88, 2000.
22Negative Feed-Back
- Is achieved with endogenous and exogenous
systemically active steroids at
supraphysiological doses - Mediated by glucocorticoids at the level of the
pituitary and hypothalamus to reduce ACTH - Occurs in two phases
- Rapid feedback occurs within seconds (inhibition
of CRH and ACTH release) - Delayed occurs within hours (down regulation of
CRH and POMC gene expression) - Occurs through both MR and GR but predominantly
GR
23Negative feedback sites in HPA axis
24Receptors Response in Feedback
- Glucocorticoids act on two receptors
- Mineralocorticoid receptors (MR)
- MR has a higher affinity for glucocorticoids than
GR - At lower concentrations in hippocampus and
sensory and motor nuclei outside the hypothalamus - Regulation of basal expression of CRH and AVP
- Glucocorticoid receptors (GR)
- At higher concentrations MR capacity exceeded
(wash over) - Hypothamic pituitary action to decrease ACTH
- Termination of the HPA axis response to stress
25Major Functions of Adrenal Steroids
- Glucocorticoids
- increases gluconeogenesis
- increases glycogenesis
- increases protein catabolism
- decreases antibody response
- antiinflammatory response
- antineoplastic response
- Mineralocorticoids
- increase sodium and water retention
- promote potassium loss
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27Site specific enzymatic inhibiton by metyrapone
to decrease cortisol level
28Endogenous Cortisol
- Normal daily production of cortisol is 10mg to
30mg in non stressed patients - The liver is the main site of metabolism.
- Two major metabolites are 17-hydroxycorticosteroid
s and 17-ketosteroids that are excreted in the
urine. - Metabolism may be induced by CYP inducing drugs
(rifampin, phenobarb, etc)
29Steroid Metabolism
30Normal Daily Production Rates and Circulating Levels of the Predominant Corticosteroids Normal Daily Production Rates and Circulating Levels of the Predominant Corticosteroids Normal Daily Production Rates and Circulating Levels of the Predominant Corticosteroids
CORTISOL ALDOSTERONE
Rate of secretion under optimal conditions 20 mg/day 0.125 mg/day
Concentration in peripheral plasma
8 A.M. 16 ug/100 ml 0.01 ug/100 ml
4 P.M. 4 ug/100 ml 0.01 ug/100 ml
31Anti-inflammatory Effects of Steroids with a
Broad Application in Medicine
- Reduces phagocytic action of WBCs
- Decrease extravasation of leukocytes into areas
of injury and thus decrease fibrosis - Reduce fever
- Suppress transplant rejection
- Suppresses allergic reactions
- Decrease COX-II and NOS
- Reduce cytokine production
- inhibit the release of IL-1, IL-2 and IL-6 and
TNF-alpha - Decrease proteolytic and lipolytic enzymes
- Impairment of delayed-type hypersensitivity
32Major Corticosteroid Products in Use Today
- Prednisone (a pro drug that requires hepatic
activation via cortisone reductase) - Prednisolone (preferred in severe liver disease?)
- Dexamethasone (Decadron)
- Methylprednisolone (Medrol, SoluMedrol for IV)
- Hydrocortisone (SoluCortef)
- Triamcinolone (Aristocort)
- Fludrocortisone (Florinef for mineralocorticoid
replacement)
33COMMONLY USED GLUCOCORTICOIDS
Hydrocortisone is the most active natural
glucocorticoid Prednisolone is a delta-1
derivative with greater potency (made
synthetically). It is the active form of
prednisone.
34Potency Comparisons
Comparisons of natural and synthetic corticosteroids Comparisons of natural and synthetic corticosteroids Comparisons of natural and synthetic corticosteroids Comparisons of natural and synthetic corticosteroids Comparisons of natural and synthetic corticosteroids Comparisons of natural and synthetic corticosteroids Comparisons of natural and synthetic corticosteroids
Agent Anti-Inflammatory Topical Salt-Retaining Equivalent Oral Dose (mg) Forms Available
Short- to medium-acting glucocorticoids Short- to medium-acting glucocorticoids Short- to medium-acting glucocorticoids Short- to medium-acting glucocorticoids
Hydrocortisone (closest to cortisol) 1 1 1 20 Oral, injectable, topical
Cortisone 0.8 0 0.8 25 Oral
Prednisone 4 0 0.3 5 Oral
Prednisolone 5 4 0.3 5 Oral, injectable
Methylprednisolone 5 5 0 4 Oral, injectable
Potency is relative to hydrocortisone Potency is relative to hydrocortisone Potency is relative to hydrocortisone Potency is relative to hydrocortisone
35Potency Comparisons Continued
Agent Anti-Inflammatory Topical Salt-Retaining Equivalent Oral Dose (mg) Forms Available
Intermediate-acting glucocorticoids Intermediate-acting glucocorticoids Intermediate-acting glucocorticoids Intermediate-acting glucocorticoids
Triamcinolone 5 5 0 4 Oral, injectable, topical
Long-acting glucocorticoids Long-acting glucocorticoids Long-acting glucocorticoids Long-acting glucocorticoids
Betamethasone 25-40 10 0 0.6 Oral, injectable, topical
Dexamethasone 30 10 0 0.75 Oral, injectable, topical
Mineralocorticoids Mineralocorticoids Mineralocorticoids Mineralocorticoids
Fludrocortisone 10 0 250 2 Oral
Note Potency is relative to hydrocortisone Note Potency is relative to hydrocortisone Note Potency is relative to hydrocortisone Note Potency is relative to hydrocortisone
36Converting Steroids
- Establish the total daily of physiological
equivalent doses of the corticosteroid drug being
administered - Multiply this by the physiologically equivalent
dosage of the drug you are converting to - Dose the converted drug at the appropriate
interval for that drug
37Potency Comparisons
Comparisons of natural and synthetic corticosteroids Comparisons of natural and synthetic corticosteroids Comparisons of natural and synthetic corticosteroids Comparisons of natural and synthetic corticosteroids Comparisons of natural and synthetic corticosteroids Comparisons of natural and synthetic corticosteroids Comparisons of natural and synthetic corticosteroids
Agent Anti-Inflammatory Topical Salt-Retaining Equivalent Oral Dose (mg) Forms Available
Short- to medium-acting glucocorticoids Short- to medium-acting glucocorticoids Short- to medium-acting glucocorticoids Short- to medium-acting glucocorticoids
Hydrocortisone (cortisol) 1 1 1 20 Oral, injectable, topical
Cortisone 0.8 0 0.8 25 Oral
Prednisone 4 0 0.3 5 Oral
Prednisolone 5 4 0.3 5 Oral, injectable
Methylprednisolone 5 5 0 4 Oral, injectable
Note Potency is relative to hydrocortisone Note Potency is relative to hydrocortisone Note Potency is relative to hydrocortisone Note Potency is relative to hydrocortisone
38ChallengeConvert 80mg of methylprednisolone q6h
to an equivalent daily oral prednisone dose??
- 80mg times 4 doses equals 320mg
- 320mg divided by 4mg (1 equiv methylprednisolone
dose) - for a total of 80 equiv doses times
- 5mg (1 equiv prednisone dose)
- equals a total of 400mg oral daily prednisone
- Which, as you can see, is an industrial sized
dose of prednisone to take once daily!!
39Glucocorticoids Place in Therapy
40Some therapeutic indications for the use of glucocorticoids in nonadrenal disorders Some therapeutic indications for the use of glucocorticoids in nonadrenal disorders
Disorder Examples
Allergic reactions Angioneurotic edema, asthma, bee stings, contact dermatitis, drug reactions, allergic rhinitis, serum sickness, urticaria
Collagen-vascular disorders Giant cell arteritis, lupus erythematosus, mixed connective tissue syndromes, polymyositis, polymyalgia rheumatica, rheumatoid arthritis, temporal arteritis
Eye diseases Acute uveitis, allergic conjunctivitis, choroiditis, optic neuritis
Gastrointestinal diseases Inflammatory bowel disease, nontropical sprue, subacute hepatic necrosis
Hematologic disorders Acquired hemolytic anemia, acute allergic purpura, leukemia, autoimmune hemolytic anemia, idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura, multiple myeloma
Systemic inflammation Acute respiratory distress syndrome (sustained therapy with moderate dosage accelerates recovery and decreases mortality)
Infections Acute respiratory distress syndrome, sepsis, systemic inflammatory syndrome
Inflammatory conditions of bones and joints Arthritis, bursitis, tenosynovitis
Neurologic disorders Cerebral edema (large doses of dexamethasone are given to patients following brain surgery to minimize cerebral edema in the postoperative period), multiple sclerosis
Organ transplants Prevention and treatment of rejection (immunosuppression)
Pulmonary diseases Aspiration pneumonia, bronchial asthma, prevention of infant respiratory distress syndrome, sarcoidosis
Renal disorders Nephrotic syndrome
Skin diseases Atopic dermatitis, dermatoses, lichen simplex chronicus (localized neurodermatitis), mycosis fungoides, pemphigus, seborrheic dermatitis, xerosis
Thyroid diseases Malignant exophthalmos, subacute thyroiditis
Miscellaneous Hypercalcemia, mountain sickness
41Indications for Systemic Glucocorticoids
- Endocrine disorders
- primary or secondary adrenocortical
insufficiency - congenital adrenal hyperplasia
- thyroiditis
- hypercalcemia associated with cancer
- shock unresponsive to conventional therapy
- pan-hypopituitarism
42Ophthalmic Application both Topical and Systemic
- Ophthalmic diseases
- allergic conjunctivitis
- keratitis
- allergic corneal marginal ulcers
- ophthalmic herpes zoster
- iritis and iridocyclitis
- optic neuritis
- retrobulbar neuritis
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44Indications for Systemic or Intra-articular
Glucocorticoids
- Spinal Trauma
- Rheumatological disorders
- rheumatoid arthritis
- ankylosing spondylitis
- acute and subacute arthritis
- acute nonspecific tenosynovitis
- osteoarthritis and bursitis
- acute gout
- Collagen diseases
- systemic lupus erythematosus
- acute rheumatic carditis
- systemic dermatomyositis
45Intra articular methylprednisolone (Depo Medrol)
offers a duration of 1-5 weeks
46Indications for Systemic Glucocorticoids
- Respiratory diseases
- symptomatic sarcoidosis
- berylliosis
- disseminated pulmonary tuberculosis
- pulmonary emphysema
- aspiration pneumonitis
- diffuse interstitial pulmonary fibrosis
- pneumocystis carinii pneumonia with hypoxia
- H.flu type b meningitis in children
- septic shock
- acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome (ARDS)
- asthma and COPD exacerbations
47Indications for Systemic or Topical
Glucocorticoids
- Dermatological diseases
- pemphigus
- bullous dermatitis herpetiformis
- severe erythema multiforme (Stevens-Johnson)
- exfoliative dermatitis
- mycosis fungoides
- severe psoriasis
- reduction of hypertrophic scar (keloid) formation
- contact dermatitis
48Topical formulations for dermatological uses are
numerous (OTC and RX)
49Indications for Systemic or Topical
Glucocorticoids
- Allergic states
- seasonal or perennial allergic rhinitis
- bronchial asthma
- contact dermatitis
- atopic dermatitis
- serum sickness
- drug hypersensitivity reactions
50Effect of Glucocorticosteroids in Asthma
Structural Cells
Inflammatory Cells
Epithelial cell
Eosinophil
Numbers (apoptosis)
Cytokines mediators
T-lymphocyte
Endothelial cell
Cytokines
Leak
Glucocorticoids
Mast cell
Numbers
Airway Smooth Muscle
Macrophage
b2-receptors
Cytokines
Mucus Gland
Dendritic cell
Mucus secretion
Numbers
51ICS in Dry Powder and MDI Formulations for Asthma
and COPD
52The TORCH Trial
- 6112 pts in a 3 yr multi-institutional double
blind, placebo controlled, randomized,
parallel-group study to evaluated mortality
impact of treatment in COPD patients - Compared fluticasone (500 bid) vs salmeterol (50
bid) vs both FS(500/50 bid) vs placebo - All cause mortality reduction Primary endpoint
(875 deaths) - 15.2 with placebo
- Reduced to 13.5 with salmeterol (NS)
- Increased to 16.0 with fluticasone (NS)
- Reduced to 12.6 with combination (NS _at_ p0.052)
- FS Combination achieved a 2.6 percentage point
mortality reduction vs placebo (15.2-12.6) for a
17.5 reduction in risk of death (NS)
NEJM 356775-789, 2007.
53 TORCH Trial
- Cause of deaths Cardiac 27, Cancer 21,
Respiratory 35 - Admission rates lowered in FSC and Salm groups vs
placebo by 17 (NNT 32 to prevent 1 admission in
1yr) - AEs reduced by 25 with FSC (NNT 4 to prevent 1
AE) - Adverse events (pneumonia)
- Significant increase in pneumonias in F and FSC
arms vs placebo - F 77 increase FSC 81 increase (plt0.001)
- No increase in ocular or bone adverse events
NEJM 356775-789, 2007.
54ICS Linked to Pneumonia in COPD
- Cohort of 175,906 COPD pts treated from 1988 thru
2003 including 23,942 hospitalized for pneumonia
and 95,768 serving as controls - COPD pts who used inhaled steroids had a 70
increase in risk of pneumonia hospitalization
over those not given ICS. Odds ratio of 1.70
(1.63-1.77), confidence interval of 95. - 48.2 of those admitted used ICS in the previous
year vs 30.1 of controls
Am J Respir Crit Care 2007176162-166.
55Distribution of Inhaled Corticosteroids
Lung
Mouth andpharynx
Lung deposition(10 to 30)
Swallowedfraction(70 to 90)
Absorption from the lung (A)
Liver
Systemic circulation
Absorptionfrom the gut
Active drug from the gut (B)
GI tract
Inactivation inthe liver first pass
Systemic concentration A B
Expert Panel Report 2 Guidelines for the
Diagnosis and Management of Asthma. National
Institutes of Health, National Heart, Lung, and
Blood Institute. 1997. NIH Publication No.
97-4051.
56The TORCH Trial
- 6112 pts in a 3 yr multi-institutional double
blind, placebo controlled, randomized,
parallel-group study to evaluated mortality
impact of treatment in COPD patients - Compared fluticasone (500 bid) vs salmeterol (50
bid) vs both FS(500/50 bid) vs placebo - All cause mortality reduction Primary endpoint
(875 deaths) - 15.2 with placebo
- Reduced to 13.5 with salmeterol (NS)
- Increased to 16.0 with fluticasone (NS)
- Reduced to 12.6 with combination (NS _at_ p0.052)
- FS Combination achieved a 2.6 percentage point
mortality reduction vs placebo (15.2-12.6) for a
17.5 reduction in risk of death (NS)
NEJM 356775-789, 2007.
57Indications for Systemic Glucocorticoids
- Neoplastic diseases
- leukemias and lymphomas in adults
- acute leukemia of childhood
- cerebral edema with brain mets
- chemotherapy induced nausea
- Hematological disorders
- idiopathic and secondary thrombocytopenia in
adults - acquired (autoimmune) hemolytic anemia
58Adrenocortical Insufficiency
- Drug induced from supraphysiological dosing
- Chronic adrenocortical insufficiency
- Addisons disease
- weakness and anorexia
- nausea, vomiting and diarrhea
- hypotension
- sparce axillary hair
- increased skin pigmentation of creases, nipples
and pressure areas (due to ACTH production) - eosinophilia and lymphocytosis
59Addisonian Symptoms Associated with Steroid
Withdrawal
- Weight loss, anorexia 90
- Nausea, vomiting 66
- Weakness, tiredness, fatigue 94
- GI complaints 61
- abdominal pain 28
- Diarrhea 18
- Muscle pain 16
- Salt craving 14
- Hypotension, dizziness, syncope 14
- Lethargy, disorientation 12
60Stress Dosing of Steroids to Avoid Addisonian
Crisis
- Critical for patients on steroids chronically who
are presumed to be suppressed - For Minor stress
- requires doubling of base dose
- For Major Stress
- Standard dose for major stress including surgery
is 100mg hydrocortisone q8h - This approximates or exceeds the maximal cortisol
24 hour secretory rate of 200mg the HPA can
achieve
Endo Metab Clin North Amer 32367-383,2004
61Effects of Aldosterone
- Renal and circulatory effects
- Promotes reabsorption of sodium from the ducts of
sweat and salivary glands during excessive
sweat/saliva loss. - Enhances absorption of sodium from the intestine
esp. colon absence leads to diarrhea. - Responsible for regulating Na reabsorption in
the distal tubule and the cortical collecting
duct - Maintains extracellular fluid (ECF) volume and
regulation of sodium and potassium. - Excess seen in CHF causes myocardial fibrosis
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63Regulation of Aldosterone Release Involves the
RAAS
- Indirect stimulators of release
- decreased blood pressure
- decreased macula densa blood flow
- Direct stimulators of release
- increased extracellular K (primary)
- decreased osmolarity
- ACTH
- water deprivation
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65Aldosterone and Renin
- Renin is also stimulated by hyperkalemia and
inhibited by potassium depletion. - Angiotensin II, a potent vasoconstrictor, also
stimulates zona glomerulosa to secrete
aldosterone. - Aldosterone then stimulates reabsorption of
sodium in exchange for potassium and hydrogen ion
secretion. - End result is Na and water retention with
intravascular volume expansion and potassium loss
in urine
66Indications for Systemic Mineralocorticoids
- As replacement therapy for primary and secondary
Adrenal insufficiency - For salt wasting nephropathy
- For orthostatic hypotension /- midodrine (an
alpha agonist) - In US, treatment is limited to one oral
medication, fludrocortisone (Florinef), with
125x MR activity relative to cortisol
67FLUDROCORTISONE
A potent steroid with both glucocorticoid
and mineralocorticoid activity. Used mainly
for its mineralocorticoid activity in
Addisons disease along with hydrocorisone
replacement.
dose 0.1 mg 2- 7 X weekly
68Physical signs seen in Cushings Syndrome
moon face
buffalo hump
striae
69Steroid Side Effects are Frequent and Serious
- Alopecia
- Hirsutism
- Acne
- Oral Candidiasis
- Cataracts (esp in children)
- Glaucoma
- Pseudo-tumor cerebri
- Diabetes
- Hypertension
- Ulcerogenic
- Osteoporosis (30-40 incid)
- Proximal limb muscle weakness
- Memory impairment
- Atrial fibrillation
- Immunosuppressive
- Striae
- Femoral head necrosis
- Poor wound healing
- Thinning of skin
- Purpura
- Menstrual Irregularity
- Demargination of WBCs
- Psychosis
- Euphoria
- Depression
- Weight gain
- Increased appetite
- Cushings symptoms
- Hypokalemic alkalosis
- Myocardial fibrosis (aldosterone)
- HPA suppression
- Growth retardation
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71Steroid Use Pearls
- Dexamethasone uniquely does not cross react with
cortisol assay - Single large doses and short courses of steroids
(up to 1 week) are unlikely harmful - Prolonged exposure requires tapering dose
- Stress may induce Addisonian symptoms for up to
one year after stopping chronic use - Single daily dosing should be done in AM
- Dexamethasone is most commonly used for CNS
penetration (ie brain mets) - Tapered doses are to reduce Addisonian risk AND
reflaring of disease (ie COPD) -
72Steroid Use Pearls
- Chronic adrenal insufficiency replacement is
usually done with hydrocortisone (20mg AM and
10mg PM) /- fludrocortisone. - Licorice may increase cortisols washover
action on MR and increase BP (inhibits 11
beta-hydoxysteroid dehydrogenase) - Some chewing tobacco brands are flavored with
licorice and can cause hypokalemia (MR action) - Dose of steroids may need upward adjustment when
given with hepatic inducing drugs such as
rifampin, phenobarbital and phenytoin
73Steroid Use Pearls
- Most common oral steroid is prednisone and most
common parenteral drug is methylprednisolone
(SoluMedrol) - Steroid dosing is largely empiric
- The 125mg dose of methylprednisolone often seen
is based on an attempt to use largest size
bottle - Topical and inhalational routes may cause
systemic effects - Steroids have a delayed onset of action
- Suggest a Med Alert Bracelet for steroid users