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This article is part of the supplement: 23rd International Symposium on Intensive Care and Emergency Medicine

Meeting abstract

Cortisol reserve in head trauma victims: evaluation with the low-dose (1 μg) corticotropin (ACTH) stimulation test

I Dimopoulou, A Kouyialis, S Tsagarakis, M Theodorakopoulou, G Assithianakis, M Christoforaki, N Thalassinos and C Roussos

Department of Critical Care Medicine and Department of Endocrinology, Evangelismos Hospital, Athens, Greece

from 23rd International Symposium on Intensive Care and Emergency Medicine
Brussels, Belgium. 18–21 March 2003

Critical Care 2003, 7(Suppl 2):P002doi:10.1186/cc1891

Published: 3 March 2003

Meeting abstract

To investigate cortisol reserve in head trauma, 35 consecutive patients (30 men) with a mean age of 36 ± 16 years were studied 5–60 days after physical injury. Patients were enrolled in the study within a few days before ICU discharge. First, a morning blood sample was obtained to measure baseline cortisol, and ACTH plasma levels. Subsequently, 1 μg synthetic ACTH was injected intravenously and, 30 min later, a second blood sample was drawn to determine stimulated plasma cortisol. Patients having stimulated cortisol levels below 18 μg/dl were defined as nonresponders to the low-dose stimulation test (LDST). Mean (± SD) values for ACTH, baseline, and stimulated cortisol concentrations were 49 ± 27 pg/ml, 19.7 ± 5.5 μg/dl and 23.6 ± 6.7 μg/dl, respectively. Six of the 35 patients (17%) failed the LDST. Nonresponders were similar to responders with regard to age, gender, and severity of head injury. However, nonresponders more frequently required vasopressors (6/6 vs 14/29, P = 0.02) and for a longer time interval (median, 293 hours vs 24 hours, P = 0.01) to maintain haemodynamic stability compared with responders to the LDST.

In conclusion, adrenal cortisol secretion following dynamic stimulation is deficient in a subset of head injury patients; this condition is associated with vasopressor dependency.

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