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- Diamantino Ribeiro Salgado, Juan Carlos Rosso Verdeal, and José Rodolfo Rocco.
- Intensive Care Unit, Barra Dor Hospital, Avenida Ayrton Senna 2541, Barra da Tijuca, Rio de Janeiro CEP 22775-001, Brazil. d.salgado@globo.com
- Crit Care. 2006 Jan 1; 10 (5): R149.
IntroductionAdrenal failure (AF) is associated with increased mortality in septic patients. Nonetheless, there is no agreement regarding the best diagnostic criteria for AF. We compared the diagnosis of AF considering different baseline total cortisol cutoff values and Deltamax values after low (1 microg) and high (249 microg) doses of corticotropin, we analyzed the impact of serum albumin on AF identification and we correlated laboratorial AF with norepinephrine removal.MethodsA prospective noninterventional study was performed in an intensive care unit from May 2002 to May 2005, including septic shock patients over 18 years old without previous steroid usage. After measurement of serum albumin and baseline total cortisol, the patients were sequentially submitted to 1 microg and 249 microg corticotropin tests with a 60-minute interval between doses. Post-stimuli cortisol levels were drawn 60 minutes after each test (cortisol 60 and cortisol 120). The cortisol 60 and cortisol 120 values minus baseline were called Deltamax1 and Deltamax249, respectively. Adrenal failure was defined as Deltamax249 < or = 9 microg/dl or baseline cortisol < or = 10 microg/dl. Other baseline cortisol cutoff values referred to as AF in other studies (< or =15, < or =20, < or =25 and < or =34 mug/dl) were compared with Deltamax249 < or = 9 microg/dl and serum albumin influence. Norepinephrine removal was compared with the baseline cortisol values and Deltamax249 values.ResultsWe enrolled 102 patients (43 male). AF was diagnosed in 22.5% (23/102). Patients with albumin < or =2.5 g/dl presented a lower baseline total cortisol level (15.5 microg/dl vs 22.4 microg/dl, P = 0.04) and a higher frequency of baseline cortisol < or =25 microg/dl (84% vs 58.3%, P = 0.05) than those with albumin > 2.5 g/dl. The Deltamax249 levels and Deltamax249 < or = 9, however, were not affected by serum albumin (14.5 microg/dl vs 18.8 microg/dl, P = 0.48 and 24% vs 25%, P = 1.0). Baseline cortisol < or = 23.6 microg/dl was the most accurate diagnostic threshold to determine norepinephrine removal according to the receiver operating characteristic curve.ConclusionAF was identified in 22.5% of the studied population. Since Deltamax249 < or = 9 microg/dl results were not affected by serum albumin and since the baseline serum total cortisol varied directly with albumin levels, we propose that Deltamax249 < or = 9 microg/dl, which means Deltamax after high corticotropin dose may be a better option for AF diagnosis whenever measurement of free cortisol is not available. Baseline cortisol < or =23.6 microg/dl was the best value for predicting norepinephrine removal in patients without corticosteroid treatment.
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