Addisonian crisis while taking high-dose glucocorticoids. An unusual presentation of primary adrenal failure in two patients with underlying inflammatory diseases
T. P. Jacobs, R. T. Whitlock, J. Edsall and D. A. Holub
Department of Medicine, College of Physicians and Surgeons of Columbia University, New York, NY.
The diagnosis of acute hypoadrenalism seldom is considered in patients
without known adrenal insufficiency who are taking supraphysiologic amounts
of glucocorticoids. We report two patients who presented in acute
addisonian crisis on more than one occasion while taking high doses of
glucocorticoids (30 to 40 mg of prednisone daily) for underlying
inflammatory disease (recurrent pleuropericarditis and sarcoidosis).
Evidence of severe mineralocorticoid deficiency was present in each
patient, and the conditions of both improved remarkably when
mineralocorticoid was added to their regimens. The cause of primary adrenal
failure and its acute presentation was unclear in both patients but is
presumed to be related to the underlying inflammatory disease.