Approximately 50% of depressed patients are resistant to the cortisol-suppressing effect of dexamethasone. To determine if glucocorticoid resistance could be a more generalized phenomenon in depressed patients, mitogen stimulation tests were performed on lymphocytes from 12 depressed patients and 12 control subjects before and after dexamethasone administration. Suppression of serum cortisol following administration of 1 mg of dexamethasone in four depressed patients and 11 control subjects was associated with a decreased lymphoproliferative response, but no such change occurred in the eight depressed patients and the single control subject who did not suppress cortisol. The dexamethasone-induced changes in the mitogen responses were positively correlated with the highest postdexamethasone serum cortisol values.
To determine if the enhanced cortisol response to oral administration of the serotonin (5-HT) precursor 5-hydroxytryptophan (5-HTP) that has been reported in unmedicated depressed and manic patients might be related to brain monoaminergic metabolism, the authors assessed correlations between 5-HTP-induced cortisol response and CSF in nine depressed patients. They found a significant negative correlation with CSF levels of 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid, a 5-HT metabolite, but not with CSF levels of other monoamine metabolites. This finding is consistent with the hypothesis that low presynaptic brain serotonergic activity may be related to enhanced cortisol response to 5-HTP in depressed patients.
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