Types of Addison's Disease
Addison's Disease: Types list
The list of types of Addison's Disease mentioned in various sources includes:
- Primary Adrenal Insufficiency - 70%, autoimmune destruction of the adrenal cortex
- Secondary Adrenal Insufficiency - caused by a tumor or another underlying cause.
- Tuberculosis-caused Addison's
Types discussion:
Failure to produce adequate levels of cortisol,
or adrenal insufficiency, can occur for different reasons. The problem may
be due to a disorder of the adrenal glands themselves (primary adrenal
insufficiency) or to inadequate secretion of ACTH by the pituitary gland
(secondary adrenal insufficiency).
Primary Adrenal Insufficiency
Most cases of Addison's disease are caused by the gradual destruction
of the adrenal cortex, the outer layer of the adrenal glands, by the
body's own immune system. About 70 percent of reported cases of Addison's
disease are due to autoimmune disorders, in which the immune system makes
antibodies that attack the body's own tissues or organs and slowly destroy
them. Adrenal insufficiency occurs when at least 90 percent of the adrenal
cortex has been destroyed. As a result, often both glucocorticoid and
mineralocorticoid hormones are lacking. Sometimes only the adrenal gland
is affected, as in idiopathic adrenal insufficiency; sometimes other
glands also are affected, as in the polyendocrine deficiency syndrome.
The polyendocrine deficiency syndrome is classified into two separate
forms, referred to as type I and type II. Type I occurs in children, and
adrenal insufficiency may be accompanied by underactive parathyroid
glands, slow sexual development, pernicious anemia, chronic candida
infections, chronic active hepatitis, and, in very rare cases, hair loss.
Type II, often called Schmidt's syndrome, usually afflicts young adults.
Features of type II may include an underactive thyroid gland, slow sexual
development, and diabetes mellitus. About 10 percent of patients with type
II have vitiligo, or loss of pigment, on areas of the skin. Scientists
think that the polyendocrine deficiency syndrome is inherited because
frequently more than one family member tends to have one or more endocrine
deficiencies.
Tuberculosis (TB) accounts for about 20 percent of cases of primary
adrenal insufficiency in developed countries. When adrenal insufficiency
was first identified by Dr. Thomas Addison in 1849, TB was found at
autopsy in 70 to 90 percent of cases. As the treatment for TB improved,
however, the incidence of adrenal insufficiency due to TB of the adrenal
glands has greatly decreased.
Less common causes of primary adrenal insufficiency are chronic
infections, mainly fungal infections; cancer cells spreading from other
parts of the body to the adrenal glands; amyloidosis; and surgical removal
of the adrenal glands. Each of these causes is discussed in more detail
below.
Secondary Adrenal Insufficiency
This form of Addison's disease can be traced to a lack of ACTH, which
causes a drop in the adrenal glands' production of cortisol but not
aldosterone. A temporary form of secondary adrenal insufficiency may occur
when a person who has been receiving a glucocorticoid hormone such as
prednisone for a long time abruptly stops or interrupts taking the
medication. Glucocorticoid hormones, which are often used to treat
inflammatory illnesses like rheumatoid arthritis, asthma, or ulcerative
colitis, block the release of both corticotropin-releasing hormone (CRH)
and ACTH. Normally, CRH instructs the pituitary gland to release ACTH. If
CRH levels drop, the pituitary is not stimulated to release ACTH, and the
adrenals then fail to secrete sufficient levels of cortisol.
Another cause of secondary adrenal insufficiency is the surgical
removal of benign, or noncancerous, ACTH-producing tumors of the pituitary
gland (Cushing's disease). In this case, the source of ACTH is suddenly
removed, and replacement hormone must be taken until normal ACTH and
cortisol production resumes. Less commonly, adrenal insufficiency occurs
when the pituitary gland either decreases in size or stops producing ACTH.
This can result from tumors or infections of the area, loss of blood flow
to the pituitary, radiation for the treatment of pituitary tumors, or
surgical removal of parts of the hypothalamus or the pituitary gland
during neurosurgery of these areas.
(Source: excerpt from Addison's Disease: NIDDK)
Addison's Disease: Rare Types
Rare types of medical conditions and diseases in related medical categories:
Addison's Disease: Related Disease Topics
More general medical disease topics related to Addison's Disease include:
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