User Tools

Site Tools


endocrine:drugs:fluticasone

This is an old revision of the document!


Corticosteroids

Corticosteroids are synthetic analogs of adrenal cortex hormones used for potent anti-inflammatory and immunosuppressive effects.

They mimic:

  • Cortisol (glucocorticoid activity)
  • Aldosterone (mineralocorticoid activity — varies by agent)

This page focuses on pharmacology. For disease-specific management, see linked clinical pages below.


Classification

Systemic Glucocorticoids

Inhaled / Intranasal

Topical

  • Multiple potency classes (dermatologic use)

Mechanism of Action

Corticosteroids act via intracellular glucocorticoid receptors.

Stepwise:

1) Drug diffuses across cell membrane
2) Binds cytoplasmic glucocorticoid receptor
3) Complex translocates to nucleus
4) Alters gene transcription

Primary effects:

  • ↓ IL-1, IL-2, IL-4, IL-5, IL-6, TNF-α
  • ↓ Eosinophil survival
  • ↓ T-cell activation
  • ↓ Mast cell mediator release
  • ↓ Phospholipase A2 → ↓ prostaglandins & leukotrienes

Result:

Broad suppression of inflammatory pathways.

Onset:

  • Hours to days (genomic effect)

Glucocorticoid vs Mineralocorticoid Activity

Drug Glucocorticoid Potency Mineralocorticoid Activity
Hydrocortisone Low Moderate
Prednisone Moderate Low
Methylprednisolone Moderate Minimal
Dexamethasone High None

Clinical implications:

  • Mineralocorticoid activity → fluid retention, edema, hypertension
  • Dexamethasone preferred when fluid retention undesirable

Pharmacologic Roles Across Systems

Corticosteroids are used in many disease states:

This reflects their broad anti-inflammatory and immunosuppressive activity.


Adverse Effects

Short-term:

  • Hyperglycemia
  • Mood changes
  • Fluid retention
  • Insomnia
  • Increased appetite

Long-term:

  • Adrenal suppression
  • Osteoporosis
  • Cushingoid features
  • Muscle wasting
  • Increased infection risk
  • Peptic ulcer disease
  • Skin thinning

Mechanism:

Systemic metabolic and immune suppression.

HPA Axis Suppression

Chronic systemic corticosteroid use suppresses endogenous cortisol production.

Abrupt discontinuation may cause:

  • Adrenal insufficiency
  • Hypotension
  • Fatigue
  • Adrenal crisis (severe cases)

Taper required when:

  • Therapy > 2–3 weeks
  • Moderate to high doses
  • Cushingoid features present

Clinical Pearls

  • Intranasal corticosteroids are first-line for nasal congestion in allergic rhinitis.
  • Inhaled corticosteroids are foundational in asthma management.
  • Steroids suppress late-phase allergic inflammation.
  • Epinephrine, not steroids, is first-line in anaphylaxis.
  • Always consider HPA suppression in prolonged systemic therapy.

endocrine/drugs/fluticasone.1770925229.txt.gz · Last modified: by andrew2393cns