Possible steroid withdrawal syndrome following short Synacthen test--a personal report |
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Authors: | V Rippere |
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Affiliation: | Department of Psychology, Institute of Psychiatry, Denmark Hill, London, U.K. |
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Abstract: | Symptoms not attributable either to disease rebound or to adrenal suppression have been reported both in patients receiving steroids when long-term therapy has been stopped and in normal volunteers after single oral doses of prednisolone or intravenous equivalents. This so-called steroid withdrawal syndrome remains poorly understood. It has not previously been reported following exposure to increased levels of endogenous steroids after diagnostic administration of synthetic adrenocorticotrophic hormone (ACTH). The author's personal experience of an apparent steroid withdrawal reaction following a short Synacthen test is described. It is suggested that as yet unidentified individual factors must play a role in determining whether steroid withdrawal symptoms occur. Closer observation of other subjects after the Synacthen test might reveal other instances of steroid withdrawal symptomatology following this common diagnostic procedure. |
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