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Dexamethasone therapy and cortisol excretion in severe pediatric head injury

✍ Scribed by Jolanda Klöti; Sergio Fanconi; Milos Zachmann; Hans Zaugg


Publisher
Springer
Year
1987
Tongue
English
Weight
213 KB
Volume
3
Category
Article
ISSN
0256-7040

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✦ Synopsis


Glucocorticoids are used in an attempt to reduce brain edema secondary to head injury. Nevertheless, their usefulness remains uncertain and contradictory. In a randomized study of 24 children with severe head injury, urinary free cortisol was measured by radioimmunoassay. Twelve patients (group 1) received dexamethasone and 12 (group 2) did not. All patients were treated with a standardized regimen. In group 1 there was complete suppression of endogenous cortisol production. In group 2 free cortisol was up to 20-fold higher than under basal conditions and reached maximum values on days 1-3. Since the excretion of cortisol in urine reflects the production rate closely and is not influenced by liver function and barbiturates, the results in group 2 show that the endogenous production of steroids is an adequate reaction to severe head injury. Exogenous glucocorticoids are thus unlikely to have any more beneficial effects than endogenous cortisol.


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Dexamethasone therapy and endogenous cor
✍ S. Fanconi; J. Klöti; M. Meuli; H. Zaugg; M. Zachmann 📂 Article 📅 1988 🏛 Springer 🌐 English ⚖ 369 KB

A prospective randomised study was performed on 25 children aged 1.4 to 15.8 years with severe head injury (Glasgow Coma Scale less than or equal to 7) to determine the clinical effectiveness and the impact on endogenous cortisol production of high-dose steroid therapy. Thirteen patients (group 1) r