Adrenal Gland Overview - Hormone Factory Tour
- Paired glands, superior to kidneys; retroperitoneal.
- Two main parts:
- Outer Adrenal Cortex: Produces corticosteroids.
- Inner Adrenal Medulla: Produces catecholamines.

- Adrenal Cortex Layers (Outer to Inner): 📌 Mnemonic: GFR → Salt, Sugar, Sex.
- Zona Glomerulosa: Mineralocorticoids.
- Zona Fasciculata: Glucocorticoids.
- Zona Reticularis: Androgens.
⭐ The adrenal cortex has three zones: Zona Glomerulosa (Mineralocorticoids - Aldosterone), Zona Fasciculata (Glucocorticoids - Cortisol), and Zona Reticularis (Androgens - DHEA).
- Adrenal Medulla:
- Key hormones: Epinephrine, Norepinephrine.
- Role: Mediates "fight or flight" stress response.
CAH - Enzyme Glitch Mayhem
Autosomal recessive disorders of adrenal steroidogenesis.
- 21-Hydroxylase Deficiency (90-95%): Most common.
- ↓Cortisol, ↓Aldosterone, ↑Androgens.
- Salt-Wasting (SW): Neonatal: vomiting, dehydration, ↓Na, ↑K. Ambiguous genitalia (XX). Most severe.
- Simple Virilizing (SV): Ambiguous genitalia (XX); precocious puberty (XY). Normal electrolytes.
- Non-Classical (NC): Late: hirsutism, acne, oligo/amenorrhea.
- Dx: ↑17-OHP (17-hydroxyprogesterone).
- 11β-Hydroxylase Deficiency (5-8%):
- ↓Cortisol, ↑Androgens, ↑11-deoxycorticosterone (DOC) → Hypertension.
- Virilization.
- 17α-Hydroxylase Deficiency (Rare):
- ↓Cortisol, ↓Androgens, ↑DOC → Hypertension.
- XX: Sexual infantilism. XY: Pseudohermaphroditism.
⭐ Salt-wasting 21-hydroxylase deficiency CAH presents in neonates with vomiting, dehydration, hyponatremia, and hyperkalemia; females show ambiguous genitalia.

Treatment: Glucocorticoids (hydrocortisone), Mineralocorticoids (fludrocortisone if SW).
Adrenal Insufficiency - Power Down Protocol
- Types: Primary (adrenal failure, e.g., CAH, Addison's), Secondary (↓ACTH), Tertiary (↓CRH).
- Adrenal Crisis: Life-threatening! Hypotension, shock, hypoglycemia, ↓Na, ↑K.
⭐ In suspected adrenal crisis, do NOT wait for diagnostic tests; administer IV/IM hydrocortisone immediately. Dose: Neonates 25mg, Infants 25-50mg, Children 50-100mg.
- Chronic AI Features: Weakness, fatigue, weight loss. Primary: hyperpigmentation, salt craving.
- Diagnosis: ↓AM cortisol. ACTH stimulation test (cortisol fails to rise in primary). Plasma ACTH (↑ primary, ↓ secondary/tertiary).
- Management:
- Crisis: IV Hydrocortisone, IV fluids (NS/D5NS), correct hypoglycemia.
- Chronic: Hydrocortisone; Fludrocortisone (if primary AI). Stress doses for illness.
Adrenal Hormone Overload - Surplus States Saga
- Cushing's Syndrome (Hypercortisolism):
- Causes: Iatrogenic (steroids), Pituitary (Cushing's disease), Adrenal (adenoma/carcinoma), Ectopic ACTH.
- Features: Central obesity, moon facies, purple striae, HTN, ↑glucose, proximal myopathy.
- Dx: Dexamethasone Suppression Test (DST), 24hr Urine Free Cortisol (UFC), late-night salivary cortisol.
-
⭐ The dexamethasone suppression test is key in diagnosing Cushing's syndrome; failure to suppress cortisol suggests autonomous cortisol production.
- Conn's Syndrome (Primary Hyperaldosteronism):
- Cause: Adrenal adenoma or bilateral hyperplasia → ↑Aldosterone, ↓Renin.
- Features: HTN (often resistant), hypokalemia (muscle weakness, polyuria), metabolic alkalosis.
- Dx: Aldosterone-Renin Ratio (ARR) > 20; saline/fludrocortisone suppression test.
- Pheochromocytoma (Catecholamine Excess):
- Tumor of adrenal medulla chromaffin cells.
- Features: "PHE" - Palpitations, Headache, Episodic sweating; paroxysmal HTN.
- 📌 Rule of 10s: 10% bilateral, 10% extra-adrenal, 10% malignant, 10% pediatric, 10% familial (some overlap).
- Dx: 24hr urine/plasma metanephrines & normetanephrines; VMA less sensitive.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- CAH: Most common is 21-hydroxylase deficiency; causes ambiguous genitalia (girls), salt-wasting. Newborn screening (elevated 17-OHP) is essential.
- Adrenal Insufficiency: Presents with hypoglycemia, hypotension, hyperpigmentation. Stress dose steroids are critical during illness.
- Cushing's Syndrome: Often iatrogenic or due to adrenal tumor; features moon facies, central obesity, and growth failure.
- Pheochromocytoma: Rare tumor causing paroxysmal hypertension, headache, sweating. Diagnose with urinary metanephrines.
- Primary Hyperaldosteronism: Characterized by hypertension and hypokalemia.
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