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Cushing's Syndrome

Webpages concerning "Cushing's Syndrome"

Welcome to Cushing's Help and Support. This site provides information and support for people with Cushing's or other endocrine problems, their friends and families. Cushing's syndrome is a hormonal disorder caused by prolonged exposure of the body's tissues to high levels of cortisol.
http://www.cushings-help.com/
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http://www.cushings-help.com/

A non-profit organization dedicated to supporting patients with Cushing’s and their families by providing medical information, and contact with other Cushing’s patients.
http://www.csrf.net/
Keywords:
CSRF, The, Cushing's, Support, and, Research, Foundation, Cushing's Syndrome, Cushing Disease, endocrine, hormonal disorder, cortisol, pituitary tumor, adrenal gland, Buffalo Hump, Moon Face, Vertigo, Hirsutism, Salivary Cortisol, 24, hour, Urine, Free, Cortisol, Dexamethasone Suppression, glucocorticoid hormones, prednisone, Pituitary Adenomas, Ectopic ACTH Syndrome, Adrenal Tumors, ...

http://www.csrf.net/

Cushing's Syndrome/Disease Information for Patients - The Neuroendocrine Clinical Center offers detailed outpatient evaluation of all disorders affecting the endocrine function of the hypothalamus and pituitary gland, achieved through comprehensive office visits, complete basal and dynamic hormone testing, and coordination of radiologic studies and visual field evaluations. All new patients are p...
http://pituitary.mgh.harvard.edu/cushings.htm
Keywords:
skull base, acoustic neuroma, cranial nerve schwannoma, meningioma, vestibular schwannoma, cranial nerves, microsurgery, normal pressure hydrocephalus, carotid endarterectomy, positron, emission, tomography, (PET), tethered spinal cord, spina bifida, syringomyelia (syrinx), myelomeningocele, hydrocephalus, craniosynostosis, lipoma, dermal sinus, encephalocele, aqueductal stenosis, myeloschisis, ...

http://pituitary.mgh.harvard.edu/cushings.htm

Cushing Syndrome - Cushing syndrome is caused by prolonged exposure to elevated levels of either endogenous or exogenous glucocorticoids.Individuals with Cushing syndrome can develop moon facies, facial plethora, supraclavicular fat pads, buffalo hump, truncal obesity, and purple striae.Individuals often complain of proximal muscle weakness, easy bruising, weight gain, hirsutism, and, in children,...
http://www.emedicine.com/med/topic485.htm
Keywords:
cushing syndrome, cushing's syndrome, hypercortisolism, acth-independent hypercortisolism, acth-dependent hypercortisolism

http://www.emedicine.com/med/topic485.htm

Health guide on cushing's syndrome, a condition that results from adrenal glands producing excess hormones
http://www.umm.edu/endocrin/cushing.htm
Keywords:
endocrine system, pituitary gland, hypothalamus, pancrea, endocrinology, overactive adrenal glands, cushing's syndrome, androgenic steroids, corticosteroids, aldosterone, treating cushing's syndrome, symptoms, of, cushing's, syndrome

http://www.umm.edu/endocrin/cushing.htm

http://www.ohsupituitary.com/patients/cushing.asp
Keywords:
cushing's disease, cushing's, cushing's syndrome, pituitary gland, pituitary tumor, pituitary disease, pituitary, ATCH excess, endocrinology

http://www.ohsupituitary.com/patients/cushing.asp

UCLA Neurosurgery
http://www.neurosurgery.medsch.ucla.edu/Diagnoses/Pituitary/PituitaryDis_8.html
Keywords:
Cushing's Syndrome, Cushing's Disease, Pituitary, Neuroendocrine, Neurosurgery, Neurosurgeon, UCLA, UCLA Neurosurgery, Surgery, Brain Disorders, Brain Injury, Injury, Head Injury, Spine Injury, Neurological Disorders, Surgeons, Trauma

http://www.neurosurgery.medsch.ucla.edu/Diagnoses/Pituitary/PituitaryDis_8.html

Cushing's Syndrome
http://www.niddk.nih.gov/health/endo/pubs/cushings/cushings.htm

http://www.niddk.nih.gov/health/endo/pubs/cushings/cushings.htm

A review of Osteoporosis a frequent osteometabolic disease, with a high morbidity, frequently associated with hip and vertebral fractures.
http://www.medstudents.com.br/endoc/endoc7.htm
Keywords:
osteoporosis, disease, osteometabolic, hip, vertebral, fractures, Colles fracture, risk factors, diagnosis, classification

http://www.medstudents.com.br/endoc/endoc7.htm

http://patients.uptodate.com/topic.asp?file=endo_hor/6172

http://patients.uptodate.com/topic.asp?file=endo_hor/6172

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Wikipedia-Article "Cushing's Syndrome"

Cushing's syndrome
ICD-10 code: E24
ICD-9 code: 255.0

Cushing's syndrome or hypercortisolism is an endocrine disorder caused by excessive levels of the endogenous corticosteroid hormone cortisol. It may also be induced iatrogenically by treatment with exogenous corticosteroids for other medical conditions. It was discovered by American physician, surgeon and endocrinologist Harvey Cushing (1869-1939) and reported by him in 1932.

Contents

Signs and symptoms

Symptoms include rapid weight gain, particularly of the trunk and face with sparing of the limbs (central obesity), "moon face", excess sweating, telangiectasia (dilation of capillaries), atrophy of the skin (which gets thin and bruises easily) and other mucous membranes, purple or red striae on the trunk, buttocks, arms, legs or breasts, proximal muscle weakness (hips, shoulders), and hirsutism (facial male-pattern hair growth). A common sign is the growth of fat pads along the collar bone and on the back of the neck (known as a buffalo hump). The excess cortisol may also affect other endocrine systems and cause, for example, reduced libido, impotence, amenorrhoea and infertility. Patients frequently suffer various psychological disturbances, ranging from euphoria to frank psychosis. Depression and anxiety, including panic attacks, are common.

Other signs include persistent hypertension (due to the aldosterone-like effects) and insulin resistance, leading to hyperglycemia (high blood sugars); many develop frank diabetes. Untreated Cushing's syndrome can lead to heart disease and increased mortality.

Diagnosis

When Cushing's is suspected, a dexamethasone suppression test (administration of dexamethasone and frequent determination of cortisol and ACTH levels) and 24-hour urinary measurement for cortisol have equal detection rates (Raff & Findling 2003). A novel approach is sampling cortisol in saliva over 24 hours, which may be equally sensitive. Other pituitary hormones may need to be determined, and performing physical examination directed for any visual field defect may be necessary if a pituitary lesion is suspected (which may compress the optic chiasm causing typical bitemporal hemianopia).

When these tests are positive, CT scanning of the adrenal gland and MRI of the pituitary gland are performed. These should be performed when other tests are positive, to decrease likelihood of incidentalomas (incidental discovery of harmless lesions in both organs). Scintigraphy of the adrenal gland with iodocholesterol scan is occasionally necessary. Very rarely, determining the cortisol levels in various veins in the body by venous catheterisation working towards the pituitary (petrosal sinus sampling) is necessary.

Pathophysiology

Cortisol is secreted by the adrenal glands under regulation by the pituitary gland and hypothalamus. Strictly, Cushing's syndrome refers to excess cortisol of any etiology. Cushing's disease refers only to hypercortisolism secondary to excess production of adrenocorticotropin (ACTH) from a pituitary gland adenoma.

Therapy

If an adrenal adenoma is identified it may be removed by surgery. Pituitary ACTH producing adenoma should be removed after diagnosis. Regardless of the adenoma's location, most patients will require steroid replacement postoperatively at least in the interim as long-term suppression of pituitary ACTH and normal adrenal tissue does not recover immediately. Clearly, if both adrenals are removed replacement with hydrocortisone or prednisolone is imperative.

In those patients not suitable for or unwilling to undergo surgery, several drugs have been found to inhibit cortisol sythesis (e.g. ketoconazole, metyrapone) but they are of limited efficacy.

Removal of the adrenals in the absence of a known tumor is occasionally performed to eliminate the production of excess cortisol. In some occasions, this removes negative feedback from a previously occult pituitary adenoma, which starts growing rapidly and produces extreme levels of ACTH, leading to hyperpigmentation. This clinical situation is known as Nelson's syndrome (Nelson et al 1960).

In iatrogenic Cushing's, dose adjustment may be sufficient or it may be necessary to change to another type of immunosuppresive medication.

Epidemiology

Iatrogenic Cushing's syndrome (caused by treatment with corticosteroids) is the most common form of Cushing's syndrome. Endogenous (i.e. non-iatrogenic) Cushing's syndrome is relatively rare.

Incidence of causes of Cushing's syndrome per million person-years:

  • Cushing's disease: 10
  • Primary adrenal: 3
  • Ectopic ACTH: 1.4

See also


Reference

  • Cushing HW. The basophil adenomas of the pituitary body and their clinical manifestations (pituitary basophilism). Bull Johns Hopkins Hosp 1932;50:137-195.
  • Nelson DH, Meakin JW, Thorn GW. ACTH-producing tumors following adrenalectomy for Cushing's syndrome. Ann Intern Med 1960;52:560–569. PMID 14426442.
  • Raff H, Findling JW. A physiologic approach to diagnosis of the Cushing syndrome. Ann Intern Med 2003;138:980-91. PMID 12809455.

External links

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