Question Bank Study Notes Dashboard Flashcards
Start Free Trial
Adrenocortical Insufficiency & Addisonian Crisis

💊 Adrenocortical Insufficiency

The Addisonian Crisis in surgical patients — why long-term steroid users need perioperative cover, and how to manage a crisis when it hits.

The Core Concept

An Addisonian crisis is acute adrenal insufficiency — a life-threatening failure of the adrenal cortex to produce adequate cortisol and aldosterone in response to physiological stress. In a surgical context, the most common cause is long-term exogenous steroid use suppressing the HPA axis, such that the patient cannot mount the normal cortisol surge needed to survive the operative stress.

The Single Most Important Concept

Surgical stress normally triggers a 5–10× increase in cortisol output from the adrenal cortex. In a patient on long-term steroids, the HPA axis is suppressed — the hypothalamus, pituitary, and adrenal cortex have all down-regulated. When the stress of surgery hits, the adrenal glands simply cannot respond. If exogenous cover is not provided, the patient crashes into a vasodilatory, hypoglycaemic crisis that is difficult to reverse.

At a Glance
🧠

The Mechanism

Long-term steroids → HPA axis suppression → adrenal atrophy → insufficient cortisol and aldosterone at time of surgical stress → crisis.

📉

Aldosterone Loss

Hyponatraemia (sodium follows water out), profound hypotension (loss of vascular tone), and hyperkalaemia (K⁺ retention).

🩸

Cortisol Loss

Hypoglycaemia — cortisol is the key counter-regulatory hormone for gluconeogenesis; without it, glucose plummets under the fasting/starvation of the perioperative period.

💉

Management Principle

Aggressive IV saline to restore sodium and circulating volume, plus IV hydrocortisone to replace both cortisol and (at high doses) mineralocorticoid activity.

Addisonian Crisis — Surgical Trigger Pathway Long-term Steroid Use e.g. prednisolone >5mg/day HPA Axis Suppressed ↓ CRH, ↓ ACTH, ↓ Cortisol Surgical Stress (uncovered) Demand for cortisol ↑↑↑ CRISIS ↓ Cortisol + ↓ Aldosterone Life-threatening collapse CONSEQUENCES OF CRISIS ALDOSTERONE LOSS Mineralocorticoid deficiency 📉 Hyponatraemia Na⁺ lost in urine → dilutional hyponatraemia 💧 Profound Hypotension Volume depletion + loss of vascular tone 📈 Hyperkalaemia K⁺ retention (aldosterone drives K⁺ excretion) CORTISOL LOSS Glucocorticoid deficiency 🩸 Hypoglycaemia Loss of gluconeogenesis; perioperative fasting makes it worse 🔥 Failure to modulate inflammation Cortisol normally suppresses cytokine storm in surgical stress 😵 Haemodynamic instability Cortisol sensitises vasculature to catecholamines
You're reading the free preview.More detailed sections, comparisons, mnemonics and exam pearls continue below — for subscribers.