We identified non-metabolized, non-conjugated 20 alpha- and 20 beta-dihydrocortisol (20 alpha- and 20 beta-DHF) in urine from a patient with Cushing's disease, by use of three different liquid-chromatographic systems and by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry. We document that these 20-isomers of dihydrocortisol may strongly contribute to unspecific interferences with the immunological assessment of urinary free cortisol (F). The urinary excretion rates of 20 alpha- and 20 beta-DHF were quantified radioimmunologically with use of a cross-reacting cortisol antiserum after effective purification by liquid chromatography. The patient with Cushing's disease had mean peripheral cortisol concentrations of 1018 nmol/L. The urinary excretion rates (nmol/24 h) were 1455 for 20 alpha-DHF, 330 for 20 beta-DHF, and 18 for F. The corresponding reference values (median in nmol/24 h) were 174 for 20 alpha-DHF, 111 for 20 beta-DHF, and 68 for F (n = 22). We conclude that (a) specific estimation of urinary free F is not as highly sensitive for diagnosis of chronic hypercortisolemic states as is generally assumed; and (b) measurement of urinary free 20 alpha- and 20 beta-DHF or of the corresponding 20-DHF:F ratios may be more sensitive.
To evaluate their potential usefulness in the differential diagnosis of Cushing's syndrome, we estimated the urinary excretion rates of the following non-metabolized, unbound steroid hormones: pregnenolone, progesterone, 17-OH-pregnenolone, 17-OH-progesterone, dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA), androstenedione, testosterone, dihydrotestosterone, 11-deoxycorticosterone, 11-deoxycortisol, corticosterone, cortisol, 18-OH-11-deoxycorticosterone, 18-OH-corticosterone, and aldosterone. These were measured in normal subjects and in patients with Cushing's disease, adrenal adenoma, or ectopic corticotropin syndrome. We used "high-performance" liquid chromatography and subsequent radioimmunoassay. Our results indicate that simultaneous estimation of urinary free cortisol and DHEA may be useful in differential diagnosis of hypercorticoid states due to adrenal adenoma and Cushing's disease.
The influence of exogenous insulin and estrogen substitution on serum leptin-like immunoreactivity was studied longitudinally in patients with type-I diabetes and Turner syndrome using a specific radioimmunoassay. Prepubertal, pubertal and postpubertal samples of 17 patients (9 girls, 8 boys) with type-I diabetes mellitus developing obesity were compared to those of 17 normal-weight controls matched for gender, age and diabetes duration. Six obese and six normal-weight girls with Turner syndrome were studied without hormone substitution, with ethinylestradiol alone, and with cyclic estradiol/gestagen substitution. The mean leptin levels of the girls with diabetes were two times higher than boys at all times, while insulin doses and glycemic control had no influence. In Turner syndrome estrogen substitution led to increased leptin levels only in the obese group. This study revealed that both body weight above normal and female sex steroids seem to be necessary to elevate leptin concentrations, while exogenous insulin has no effect.
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