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endocrine:physiology:hpa_axis

Hypothalamic–Pituitary–Adrenal (HPA) Axis

The HPA axis regulates endogenous cortisol production and maintains physiologic stress response.

It operates through a three-tier hormonal cascade:

Hypothalamus → Pituitary → Adrenal Cortex

Step 1 – Hypothalamus

The hypothalamus secretes:

  • Corticotropin-Releasing Hormone (CRH)

CRH is released in response to:

  • Stress
  • Hypoglycemia
  • Illness
  • Circadian rhythm (early morning peak)

CRH stimulates the anterior pituitary.


Step 2 – Anterior Pituitary

The anterior pituitary secretes:

  • Adrenocorticotropic Hormone (ACTH)

ACTH:

  • Travels via bloodstream
  • Stimulates adrenal cortex (zona fasciculata)
  • Promotes cortisol synthesis and release

Step 3 – Adrenal Cortex

The adrenal cortex produces:

  • Cortisol (glucocorticoid)
  • Aldosterone (mineralocorticoid)
  • Androgens

Cortisol effects:

  • ↑ Gluconeogenesis
  • ↑ Blood glucose
  • Suppresses immune response
  • Maintains vascular tone
  • Supports stress response

Negative Feedback Loop

Cortisol exerts negative feedback at:

  • Hypothalamus → ↓ CRH
  • Pituitary → ↓ ACTH

This maintains hormonal balance.

If cortisol rises:

ACTH decreases.

If cortisol falls:

ACTH increases.

Circadian Rhythm

Cortisol secretion follows a diurnal pattern:

  • Highest in early morning (~6–8 AM)
  • Lowest at midnight

This is why:

  • Morning steroid dosing mimics physiology.
  • Late-night cortisol testing screens for Cushing syndrome.

Response to Stress

During physiologic stress:

  • CRH increases
  • ACTH increases
  • Cortisol increases

This supports:

  • Blood pressure maintenance
  • Glucose availability
  • Anti-inflammatory control

Patients with adrenal insufficiency cannot mount this response.


Exogenous Glucocorticoids

Systemic steroids (e.g., Prednisone, Dexamethasone):

  • Mimic cortisol
  • Suppress ACTH production
  • Lead to adrenal atrophy over time

Abrupt withdrawal after chronic use may cause:

  • Adrenal insufficiency
  • Hypotension
  • Fatigue
  • Crisis in severe cases

See:


Disorders of the HPA Axis

Adrenal Insufficiency

  • Primary (Addison disease)
  • Secondary (low ACTH)
  • Tertiary (chronic steroid suppression)

Symptoms:

  • Fatigue
  • Hypotension
  • Hyponatremia
  • Hyperkalemia (primary)

Cushing Syndrome

  • Excess cortisol
  • Can be ACTH-dependent or independent
  • May be exogenous (chronic steroid therapy)

Symptoms:

  • Central obesity
  • Moon facies
  • Purple striae
  • Hyperglycemia

Dexamethasone Suppression Test

Dexamethasone:

  • Suppresses ACTH in normal physiology
  • Fails to suppress cortisol in Cushing syndrome

See:


High-Yield Pearls

  • CRH → ACTH → Cortisol.
  • Cortisol provides negative feedback at two levels.
  • Chronic steroid therapy suppresses ACTH.
  • Morning dosing reduces HPA disruption.
  • Stress dosing required in adrenal insufficiency.
  • Dexamethasone suppression testing evaluates feedback integrity.
endocrine/physiology/hpa_axis.txt · Last modified: by andrew2393cns