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Addison’s Disease

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OVERVIEW

What is Addison’s disease?

Addison’s disease is a condition that affects your body’s adrenal glands. These glands are located on top of your kidneys. They make hormones that affect your mood, growth, metabolism, tissue function, and how your body responds to stress.

Addison’s disease damages those glands. It causes your body to shut down production of the hormones. The disease commonly affects people 30 to 50 years of age. However, it can occur at any age and affects both men and women.

SYMPTOMS

What are the symptoms of Addison’s disease?

Symptoms appear over a period of several months. They are difficult to diagnose because they are vague. Symptoms include:

  • Fatigue
  • Muscle weakness
  • Joint or muscle pain
  • Fever
  • Weight loss
  • Nausea, vomiting and/or diarrhea (leading to dehydration)
  • Headache
  • Sweating
  • Changes in mood or personality, such as irritability, anxiety, or depression
  • Loss of appetite
  • Darkening of the skin (called hyperpigmentation)
  • Lightheadedness or fainting upon standing, due to low blood pressure
  • Cravings for salty foods
  • Sudden, severe pain in the abdomen (lower stomach), lower back, or legs
  • Confusion or slurred speech
  • Sluggish movements
  • Seizures
  • High fever

When symptoms appear suddenly, or quickly get worse, it is called acute adrenal failure. Sometimes it’s called Addisonian crisis. This can lead to death if not treated. If you have any of the following symptoms, contact your healthcare provider or go to an emergency room immediately.

  • Sudden, intense pain in your lower back, abdomen, or legs.
  • Severe vomiting and diarrhea (which will lead to dehydration).
  • Lower than normal blood pressure.
  • High levels of potassium and low levels of sodium

CAUSES & RISK FACTORS

What causes Addison’s disease?

Addison’s disease is caused by injury to your adrenal glands or when your glands are affected by another medical condition.  Addison’s disease is also called “adrenal insufficiency.” There are 2 types of adrenal insufficiency:

Primary adrenal insufficiency

This occurs through damage to your adrenal glands by an autoimmune disease (when your body attacks its own immune system). Other causes of primary adrenal insufficiency include:

  • Tuberculosis (or other infections) of the adrenal glands
  • Cancer of the adrenal glands
  • Bleeding into the adrenal glands

Secondary adrenal insufficiency

This occurs when another condition causes the adrenal glands to stop producing hormones. For example, a problem with your pituitary gland can cause secondary Addison’s disease. Or, you may develop Addison’s disease if you suddenly stop taking a corticosteroid medicine (such as prednisone). Corticosteroids are sometimes prescribed to treat conditions such as asthma, allergies, arthritis, cancer, and immune system problems.

DIAGNOSIS & TESTS

How is Addison’s disease diagnosed?

Your healthcare provider will ask you about your medical history and your symptoms. He or she may also perform laboratory tests to determine whether you have Addison’s disease. Those lab tests include:

  • Blood tests to measure your body’s hormone and mineral levels. Your doctor may check your blood before and after an injection to see if your body is responding normally to increased levels of certain hormones.
  • Computerized tomography (CT) scan or magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to look at the size of your adrenal glands or pituitary gland. These scans are similar to an X-ray

Can Addison’s disease be prevented or avoided?

Addison’s disease cannot be prevented or avoided

TREATMENT

Addison’s disease treatment

Treating Addison’s disease usually involves taking prescription hormones. This can include hydrocortisone, prednisone, or cortisone acetate. If your body is not making enough of the hormone aldosterone, your healthcare provider may prescribe fludrocortisone. These medicines are taken every day by mouth (in pill form).

If you are experiencing an Addisonian crisis, you need immediate medical care. The treatment typically consists of intravenous (IV) injections of hydrocortisone, saline (salt water), and dextrose (sugar). These injections help restore blood pressure, blood sugar, and potassium levels to normal.

Living with Addison’s disease

Living with Addison’s disease involves learning to live with the unpleasant symptoms. In addition, you need to prepare for the possibility of Addisonian crisis. This is a medical emergency that requires you to:

  • Carry a medical alert card and bracelet at all times. This gives emergency medical workers information about your condition.
  • Keep extra medicine with you in case you forget to take your medicine. Ask your healthcare provider for an injectable form of corticosteroids for use in an emergency.
  • Tell your healthcare provider if your symptoms change or if your medicines stop working the way they used to.

FOR MORE INFORMATION

The Canadian Addison Society
http://www.addisonsociety.ca/what-is-addisons-disease.html

This information provides a general overview and may not apply to everyone. Talk to your healthcare provider to find out if this information applies to you and to get more information on this subject.

Contributed by familydoctor.org editorial staff.

Copyright (c) by the American Academy of Family Physicians

Nova Scotia Telecare, Reviewed by Clinical Services Working Group, June 2021

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