Adrenal insufficiency in acute spinal cord injury |
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Authors: | Garcia-Zozaya Inigo A |
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Affiliation: | James A. Haley VA Hospital, Spinal Cord Injury Service (128), 13000 Bruce B. Downs Boulevard, Tampa, FL 33612, USA. Inigo.Garcia-Zozaya@med.va.gov |
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Abstract: | BACKGROUND/OBJECTIVE: A 21-year-old man with a C6 American Spinal Injury Association A spinal cord injury (SCI) developed symptomatic hypotension resistant to vasopressors and volume replacement 2 weeks after injury and was diagnosed with adrenal insufficiency by cosyntropin test. Adrenal insufficiency has been documented in chronic SCI; this case shows documented adrenal insufficiency in acute SCI. DESIGN: Case report. RESULTS: Secondary adrenal insufficiency complicated the medical and rehabilitative course of this patient with SCI. During 2 infectious episodes, this patient's dosage of hydrocortisone had to be doubled to control symptomatic hypotension, lethargy, diffuse weakness, and anorexia. CONCLUSIONS: The nonspecific symptomatology of adrenal insufficiency can be easily overlooked in patients with SCI. Low basal cortisol levels may be an important clue to this disorder. Low-dose adrenocorticotropic hormone stimulation may be more sensitive than high doses for detecting subclinical adrenal insufficiency. A high index of clinical suspicion is needed for the correct diagnosis of acute and chronic adrenal insufficiency. |
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