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HY Endocrineoe
HY Endocrineoe
HY ENDOCRINE
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Hypothalamic-pituitary-gonadal axis
- Gonadotropin-releasing hormone; produced by the hypothalamus.
- Stimulates LH and FSH secretion from anterior pituitary.
- “Gonadotropins” refer to the peptide hormones, LH and FSH.
- Mechanism for amenorrhea in anorexia is ¯ GnRH pulsation. This is because leptin is
required for adequate GnRH pulsation, and in anorexia, leptin levels are low. This is because
leptin makes you feel full, and in anorexia, the patient is hungry. ¯ GnRH pulsation causes
LH and FSH to both be ¯, which leads to reduced ovarian hormone production and follicle
stimulation.
GnRH - In polycystic ovarian syndrome (PCOS), insulin resistance in high-BMI female causes
abnormal GnRH pulsation, which causes LH/FSH ratio. I discuss this in extensive detail in
the HY Repro/Obgyn PDF.
- Leuprolide, goserelin, and nafarelin are all GnRH receptor agonists. When administered
continuously, they cause desensitization of the GnRH receptor at the anterior pituitary,
leading to ¯ LH and FSH secretion (i.e., even though the drugs are pharmacologic agonists,
they function clinically as antagonists).
- GnRH secretion is inhibited by estrogen, androgen, and progesterone. This inhibition is
called negative-feedback.
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- There’s an NBME Q that gives gynecomastia in a male where the answer is Sertoli-Leydig
cell tumor (granulosa cell tumor not listed). SL tumors normally make androgens. The
reason gynecomastia is possible is because of aromatization of androgens into estrogens.
- Physiologic gynecomastia can occur in adolescent males, and virginal breast hypertrophy
in adolescent females, due to androgen production à aromatization à estrogens.
- Closure of growth plates occurs via estrogens, via aromatization from androgens.
- Estradiol is produced mainly by the ovaries (and testes in males).
- Estrone is produced mainly by adipose tissue. In post-menopausal women, adipose tissue
becomes important source of estrogen, where low BMI risk of osteoporosis. Interestingly,
the NBMEs assess BMIs 20s and lower in young females as also risk of osteoporosis, even
though low BMI is <18.5.
- Estriol is produced primarily by the placenta; ¯ in Down syndrome, as mentioned above.
- Adrenal DHEA-S (an adrenal-specific androgen) can be aromatized into estradiol.
- Estradiol stimulates the endometrial lining to grow during the follicular phase of the
menstrual cycle.
- Its levels gradually increase during the follicular phase. Once a critical threshold is reached
(called the estrogen threshold), its effects at the hypothalamus flip from negative-feedback
to positive-feedback, causing the LH surge, which triggers the rupturing of the Graafian
follicle.
- Stimulates secondary sex characteristics in females – i.e., breast development and
changes in body fat distribution.
- Maintains bone density by OPG/RANK ratio. In post-menopausal women, ¯ estrogen à
Estrogens
RANK in comparison to OPG à osteoclast activity à osteoporosis.
- Important for healthy blood lipid profile (estrogen HDL and ¯ LDL).
- Hormone-replacement therapy (HRT) is only approved for severe perimenopausal
vasomotor symptoms (i.e., hot flashes, urge incontinence, atrophic vaginitis). It is not given
to help preserve bone density or for positive role on mood and neurocognition, since
absolute estrogen exposure in women risk of breast cancer, MI, and thromboembolic
events (i.e., DVT, PE, stroke). The latter is because estrogen upregulates fibrinogen and
factors V and VIII.
- Unopposed estrogen is the mechanism for endometrial hyperplasia and adenocarcinoma.
The three groups this refers to on NBME exams, as per my observation, are 1) PCOS, 2) HRT
patients who stop taking the progesterone component, and 3) granulosa cell tumors. The
reason is because estrogen stimulates the growth of endometrium; progesterone inhibits
growth of endometrium; so the balance between these two hormones keeps the
endometrial lining in check. USMLE might give a vignette of vaginal bleeding in a woman
with unopposed estrogen, and the answer will just be “endometrial biopsy.”
- Estrogen-containing OCPs ¯ protein content of breast milk (asked on 2CK Obygn form).
- Produced by the corpus luteum (ruptured ovarian follicle) following ovulation and
maintains the endometrial lining during the luteal phase of the menstrual cycle. As
discussed earlier, if fertilization occurs, hCG will maintain the corpus luteum so that
progesterone production continues + can maintain the pregnancy.
- Also produced in small amounts in the adrenal glands.
- Along with estrogen, facilitates proper mammary gland development. During pregnancy,
progesterone helps maintain the structure of the mammary glands.
- Progesterone inhibits the effects of prolactin at the alveolar cells in the breast (milk-
producing cells), preventing lactation during pregnancy. Once the placenta is expelled at
Progesterone
parturition and progesterone levels fall, prolactin can induce lactation.
- Progesterone-only contraceptives are considered safe while breastfeeding, since the low
amount of progesterone does not inhibit lactation, even though the high progesterone
during pregnancy does. It is the effect of estrogen in combined OCPs that decreases protein
content of breast milk.
- Progesterone plays a role in thermoregulation, where secretion at ovulation body
temperature, which is one way to predict timing of ovulation, albeit dubiously. There is an
NBME question floating around where they show a graph of increased body temperature at
day 14 of menstrual cycle, and answer is just progesterone. Not hard.
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Sheehan syndrome
- Maternal pituitary grows in size during pregnancy due to hormone production.
- Traumatic labor (e.g., C-section with loss of considerable blood) risk of anterior pituitary ischemic
infarction.
- Textbook vignette is ¯ ability to breastfeed due to ¯ milk production following labor where BP was ¯.
- Schools/resources will usually just teach that prolactin is ¯. But USMLE wants you to know that all
hormones coming from the anterior pituitary are low.
- NBME wants a ¯ for prolactin, ACTH, and TSH, as well as an for aldosterone.
- The for aldosterone is weird, I agree. Take it up with NBME, not me. My suspicion is that ¯ cortisol from
¯ ACTH can lead to ¯ basal blood pressure, where aldosterone could go to compensate. The patient is not
going to have overt hyperaldosteronism with Na+, ¯ K+, HCO3-, and pH. It’s more that, in theory, basal
level aldosterone could go slightly to compensate.
- The vignette can mention fatigue, which reflects ¯ TSH (secondary hypothyroidism).
Acromegaly
- Caused by excess growth hormone secretion (usually by a tumor) following closure of the growth plates (
GH secretion prior to growth plate closure causes gigantism).
- As mentioned earlier, GH goes to the liver, which causes it to secrete IGF-1. It is then IGF-1 that induces
growth effects at tissues. An NBME Q gives easy vignette of acromegaly and then asks what you check;
serum GH is wrong; answer is serum IGF-1.
- Acromegaly causes prognathism (lantern jaw), large ears/nose, arthritis and carpal tunnel syndrome (due
to joint and tendon growth), enlargement of hands/feet, hypertension, type II diabetes (GH causes insulin
resistance), and risk of arrhythmia and cardiomyopathy.
- Treatment is somatostatin analogue (octreotide). Somatostatin is aka growth hormone-inhibiting hormone
(GHIH) and shuts off its secretion from the anterior pituitary. It also ¯ secretion of insulin and glucagon from
the pancreas.
Vasopressin conditions
- Vasopressin (aka anti-diuretic hormone; ADH).
- ADH is produced by both the supraoptic nucleus and paraventricular nucleus of the hypothalamus à
stored in posterior pituitary.
- ADH free water reabsorption by the medullary collecting duct (MCD) of the kidney by causing aquaporin
insertion.
- If ADH is , we get free water reabsorption and dilution of our serum à serum sodium and osmolality ¯.
Likewise, our urine becomes more concentrated, meaning urine osmolality and specific gravity .
- If ADH is ¯, we get ¯ free water reabsorption and concentration of our serum à serum sodium and
osmolality . Likewise, our urine becomes more dilute, meaning urine osmolality and specific gravity ¯.
- The primary cells in the brain that recognize serum osmolality and contribute to the secretion of
vasopressin are hypothalamic osmoreceptor cells. These are located in the organum vasculosum of the
lamina terminalis (OVLT) and the subfornical organ, which detect changes in the osmolality of the blood.
serum osmolality causes these osmoreceptors to stimulate the nearby supraoptic and paraventricular
nuclei.
- Syndrome of Inappropriate Anti-Diuretic Hormone secretion à means too much ADH
(vasopressin secretion).
SIADH - Central SIADH à follows head trauma, meningitis, brain cancer, and pain (latter on 2CK Surg).
- Ectopic SIADH à small cell lung cancer secreting ADH.
- Drug-induced ADH à ultra-rare on USMLE, but carbamazepine can do it.
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- As I talk about in detail in my HY Arrows PDF, only the medullary collecting duct osmolality will
change in response to ADH. The USMLE will ask you for the osmolality of the urine at different
nephron locations in comparison to serum, and the combo is: PCT isotonic; juxtaglomerular
apparatus (JGA) hypotonic; MCD hypertonic. à The PCT is always isotonic no matter what; the
JGA (at top of thick ascending limb of loop of Henle) is always hypotonic no matter what; the
MCD is clearly hypertonic in SIADH since we’re pulling free water out of the urine.
- “Fluid restriction” is first answer in diagnosis on 2CK. We want to see how serum/urinary
values change in response.
- Demeclocycline is answer on 2CK offline NBME 8 for treatment of SIADH. Demeclocycine is
technically a tetracycline antibiotic but isn’t used because it can cause insensitivity to ADH at
the kidney (i.e., nephrogenic diabetes insipidus). So we essentially cause a 2nd problem that
cancels out the 1st problem.
- Conivaptan and tolvaptan are ADH receptor antagonists that can be used for SIADH.
- Central diabetes insipidus à means not enough ADH secretion by hypothalamus, or the
posterior pituitary is unable to release it properly.
- Nephrogenic DI à insensitivity to ADH at the kidney (serum ADH is ).
- Similar to central SIADH, central DI can be caused by head trauma, meningitis, and cancer.
- Nephrogenic DI is caused by lithium, demeclocycline, hypercalcemia, and NSAIDs.
- There is an NBME Q that asks about a patient’s response to ADH who is on chronic NSAIDs,
and the answer is “« Response to ADH” and “« urinary osmolality” (meaning no change).
- 2CK Q gives patient with primary hyperparathyroidism and serum calcium + nephrogenic
DI; Q asks cause of the DI à answer = hypercalcemia. High calcium can cause renal insensitivity
to vasopressin.
DI - PCT isotonic; JGA hypotonic; MCD hypotonic. à The PCT is always isotonic no matter what;
the JGA is always hypotonic no matter what; the MCD is clearly hypotonic in DI since we’re not
pulling free water out of the urine.
- When we are trying to first diagnose DI, the first thing we do is fluid restriction, same as with
SIADH. We want to see how serum/urinary values change first.
- After we determine that the urine is staying dilute + the serum is staying concentrated, the
next best step is desmopressin (analogue of vasopressin). If the urine gets more concentrated,
(i.e., if the drug works), we know central DI is the diagnosis and we’re merely deficient in ADH.
- If desmopressin doesn’t work, we know we have nephrogenic DI. I should point out that even
in nephrogenic DI, desmopressin might work but only very little, whereas with central DI,
administration will urinary osmolality robustly. It will be obvious on USMLE. But my point is,
don’t say, “Oh well desmopressin worked like 5% so we can’t have nephrogenic DI here.”
- Treatment for central DI is therefore desmopressin.
- Treatment for nephrogenic DI is NSAID + a thiazide. Sounds weird, but ¯ Na+ reabsorption
induced by thiazides in the early-DCT promote compensatory Na+ reabsorption in the PCT,
where water follows Na+ and our net loss of fluid is less than without the thiazide. In healthy
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individuals, however, they will lose more net fluid with the thiazide. The NSAID presumably ¯
renal blood flow, which will ¯ GFR and ¯ net fluid loss.
- There is difficult 2CK NBME Q where they say patient is on lithium + has urinary output, and
fluid restriction is wrong answer to this question (I say hard because 9/10 times, fluid restriction
is correct when it’s listed); answer = NSAID + thiazide diuretic. The implication is, if it’s obvious
what the patient’s diagnosis is already nephrogenic DI, going straight to Tx is acceptable.
- Psychogenic polydipsia means the patient is simply drinking too much.
- Both the urine and serum will be dilute.
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HY Thyroid diagnoses
- Autoimmune destruction of thyroid gland.
- Lymphocytic infiltrate seen on biopsy (asked on NBME).
- Anti-microsomal (aka anti-thyroperoxidase) + anti-thyroglobulin antibodies.
- ¯ T3, ¯ T4, TSH.
- 131I uptake scan is ¯ or patchy (i.e., the gland is not producing hormone).
- Buzzy findings are weight gain, brittle hair, dry/doughy skin, and cold
intolerance. The USMLE often will omit these findings because they’re too
easy.
Hashimoto thyroiditis
- HY additional findings I’ve seen show up in NBME Qs are: bradycardia (55-
60), menstrual irregularity, dysthymia/depression/apathy, carpal tunnel
syndrome (due to glycosaminoglycan [GAG] deposition), cholesterol,
proximal muscle weakness with creatine kinase (hypothyroid myopathy);
transaminitis (sounds weird, but LFTs can be ).
- Associated with other autoimmune diseases (e.g., type I diabetes, pernicious
anemia, vitiligo) and immunodeficiencies (e.g., IgA deficiency). For USMLE, a
HY big-picture concept is that “Autoimmune diseases go together,” where if
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Thyroid cancers
- All malignant (i.e., have metastatic potential).
- Can all present as solitary cold nodules in the neck, especially if Hx of radiation exposure (e.g., Hodgkin).
- Thyroid cancer will always be a cold nodule (i.e., non-secretory) on USMLE – i.e., the patient will be either
euthyroid or hypothyroid. If a nodule is hot (i.e., demonstrates uptake), it is instead a toxic adenoma, which
is not malignant.
- The answer if they say “branching papillae with fibrovascular cores” – i.e., looks like villi on
light microscopy.
- Has psammoma bodies (rings of calcium).
Papillary
- Orphan Annie nuclei are a garbage histo finding. Highly overrated – i.e., students somehow
remember this detail above all others for USMLE even though its yieldness is nonexistent.
- Spreads lymphatically.
- Nonexistent thyroid cancer on USMLE.
Follicular - Known as the “least exciting” thyroid cancer because it just looks like thyroid follicles.
- Spreads hematogenously.
- Highest yield thyroid cancer on USMLE.
- Has amyloid on light microscopy, which demonstrates apple-green birefringence with
Congo red stain.
- USMLE wants you to know the amyloid is b-pleated sheets (i.e., as opposed to a-helices).
- Associated with RET proto-oncogene mutations.
- Serum calcitonin is due to either direct secretion by the cancer of parafollicular C cell
hyperplasia (the C cells of the thyroid gland make calcitonin). You should also know the
Medullary
MOA of calcitonin is inhibition of osteoclast activity (i.e., it does not put calcium back into
the bone from the blood; it merely caps off the calcium that’s already in the blood by
preventing more from leaching out of the bone).
- RET mutations can cause isolated familial medullary thyroid cancer, or it can cause full-on
MEN-2A/B syndromes (discussed later). The point is, RET mutations need not cause the
other findings in the MEN-2 syndromes; the Q can just give isolated medullary thyroid
cancer in a family, and the answer is RET mutation.
Anaplastic - Rare; occurs in elderly; invades adjacent structures such as the esophagus and trachea.
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- A caveat about the above algorithm for nodule evaluation is that if a patient has hyperthyroidism (i.e., low
TSH) and does not have a nodule, then you will choose ultrasound over uptake scan. I know this sounds
annoying, but USMLE assesses this. There is a new NBME Q where they give low TSH in young patient with
no mention of nodule, and the answer is ultrasound over uptake scan. But in Qs where TSH is low and the
patient has a nodule, the answer is uptake scan first over ultrasound. If you want a high score, then know
the difference.
Thyroid in pregnancy
- For pregnancy on USMLE, choose the combo of no change TSH, no change free T4, total T4 for women
who have no thyroid symptoms.
- Estrogen causes thyroid-binding globulin (TBG) production by the liver. TBG is the protein carrier
molecule for thyroid hormone in the blood. An NBME Q asks for which hormone causes the TBG in
pregnancy à answer = estrogen, not progesterone.
- Free T4 is the physiologically active form of thyroid hormone. T4 protein-bound to TBG (99%) has minimal
effect. Free T4 + TBG-bound T4 = total T4.
- TBG will mop up free T4, causing free T4 to transiently decrease and TSH to rise (less negative feedback).
This rise in TSH will stimulate more production of T4 by the thyroid gland, making total T4 go up. The
absolute amount of free T4 will increase back to normal, thereby suppressing TSH back to normal. But the
total amount of T4 is now increased – i.e., free T4 is normal again, but TBG-bound T4 is higher.
- T3 is normal because free T4 is normal. Free T4 is peripherally converted to T3. I’ve never seen anything
about “free T3” on NBME material and I wouldn’t worry about it.
- A student might say, “Wait, but why are you giving the above bold arrows if you just gave me all sorts of
transient changes in the arrows based on TBG?.” It’s because the bold arrows are what the USMLE wants.
Pregnant women who are euthyroid will have normal free T4 and increased total T4, and their TSH will be
normal. The changes due to TBG rising are likely synchronous and slow enough that the patient’s TSH and
free T4 stay within reference ranges.
- Postpartum (silent) thyroiditis can result in either hypo- or hyperthyroidism following parturition. These
arrows are unrelated to the aforementioned ones. The highest yield point you need to know is that 131I
uptake into the thyroid gland is low, even if the patient is hyperthyroid. This is the same for deQuervain and
drug-induced thyroiditis, where uptake is always low. This is because with thyroiditis conditions, there is
merely increased spacing between the cells of the thyroid gland due to inflammation, allowing thyroid
hormone to leak out into the blood. The gland itself is not excessively producing thyroid hormone. Then we
have negative feedback causing low TSH, and in turn less stimulation of the thyroid gland, which is why
uptake is low.
- If USMLE asks you about levothyroxine dosing during pregnancy, the answer is “increase dose by 50%.”
- Avoid methimazole in first trimester (teratogenic).
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- PTU is the answer for thyroid storm during pregnancy, even though longer-term use in 2nd and 3rd
trimesters isn’t considered ideal because of hepatic toxicity risk.
Thyroid in pediatrics
- Benign, painless, midline neck mass in a school-age kid that arises from a persistent
thyroglossal duct (i.e., the embryologic remnant of the thyroid gland's descent from
the base of the tongue to its final position in the neck).
- 2/3 of Qs will give a painless midline neck lump that moves upwards with
Thyroglossal duct
swallowing or protrusion of the tongue (due to its attachment to the hyoid bone
cyst
and/or the base of the tongue).
- 1/3 of Qs won’t mention the buzzy upward movement with swallowing or
protrusion of the tongue; instead, it will just say a kid has a painless midline neck
mass just inferior to the hyoid bone that demonstrates 99Tc uptake.
- Obscure cause of hypothyroidism that shows up on an offline NBME.
- Refers to presence of ectopic thyroid tissue located at the base of the tongue due to
failure of the thyroid gland to descend from the foramen cecum.
- This ectopic tissue may be the only functioning thyroid tissue in the body, resulting
in hypothyroidism.
Lingual thyroid
- The USMLE Q will say a kid has hypothyroidism + a midline neck lump located high
in the neck. They say nothing about protrusion of the tongue or uptake into the
mass.
- Can sometimes cause dysphagia (trouble swallowing), dysphonia (voice changes), or
dyspnea (difficulty breathing).
- Aka congenital hypothyroidism.
- Most common causes are iodine deficiency in the mother during pregnancy
(worldwide) and fetal thyroid dysgenesis (western countries).
- Leads to mental retardation (poor myelin sheath development), impaired bone
Cretinism
growth, hypotonia, macroglossia, and protuberant abdomen (due to umbilical hernia;
can be confused with kwashiorkor, which is protein-calorie malnutrition causing
ascites).
- Screened for at birth using the heel-prick test to prevent exacerbation.
- The USMLE does not expect you to know about some obscure condition called
thyroid-binding globulin deficiency. The reason they ask about this is because the
role of TBG on thyroid hormones in pregnancy is exceedingly high-yield, so if you
know the reasoning/mechanism behind the latter, you can easily infer what would be
seen in TBG deficiency (i.e., the inverse).
TBG deficiency
- « TSH, « T3, « free T4, ¯ total T4.
- In pregnancy, since TBG is high, this ultimately results in high total T4 despite a
normal free T4. So the student can easily infer, “Well, if our TBG merely is low, rather
than high, then total T4 must be low while free is same. Sort of like pregnancy but
just the opposite direction.”
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Vitamin D pathologies
- - ¯ Serum Ca2+, ¯ serum PO43-, PTH.
- - Rickets = vitamin D deficiency in children.
- - Osteomalacia = vitamin D deficiency in adults.
- - Calcium and phosphate are both low because vitamin D is needed for intestinal
absorption of both.
- - PTH goes up because calcium is low (decreased negative feedback).
- - It should be noted that in vitamin D deficiency caused by renal failure,
phosphate is high, not low, because the effect of the renal failure on phosphate
Rickets/Osteomalacia levels wins over the mere vitamin D deficiency. In renal failure, the kidney cannot
downregulate the PCT phosphate reabsorption channels, thereby increasing
absorption.
- - Never choose low phosphate in renal failure, even though vitamin D3 activation
is low.
- - Renal failure + low vitamin D:
o ¯ serum Ca2+, serum PO43-, PTH.
- - No renal failure + low vitamin D (i.e., rickets/osteomalacia):
¯ serum Ca2+, ¯ serum PO43-, PTH.
- - UV-B radiation is necessary to convert 7-dehydrocholesterol into cholecalciferol
in the basal layer of the skin.
Inadequate sunlight- - The USMLE wants you to know that 7-dehydrocholesterol is made even in those
who don’t get adequate sunlight. It is cholecalciferol that isn’t produced if patient
doesn’t receive any sun exposure.
- - Alcoholism implies hepatic insufficiency.
Alcoholism - - The patient will have decreased synthesis of 25-D3.
- - That means the patient will have ¯ 25-D3 as well as ¯ 1,25-D3.
- Inability for PTH to activate 1a-hydroxylase in the PCT of the kidney.
- ¯ 1,25-D3 synthesis, but 25-D3 is normal.
- 25-D3 doesn’t build up physiologically. If there is “extra” 25-D3 because it is not
Renal failure
being converted to 1,25-D3, then it gets shunted sideways to another inactive
form called 24,25-D3 (asked on NBME).
- Osteomalacia resulting from renal failure is called renal osteodystrophy.
- ¯ Serum Ca2+, PTH, ¯ 25-D3, ¯ 24,25-D3.
- The Step 1 NBME wants you to know the findings for vitamin D receptor
insensitivity.
- Since vitamin D causes intestinal absorption of calcium, serum calcium will be
low. The low calcium causes PTH to go up (due to decreased negative feedback).
- The NBME doesn’t ask about phosphate levels for this condition, possibly
Vitamin D receptor
because whilst vitamin D deficiency will ordinarily cause low phosphate (due to
insensitivity
decreased intestinal absorption), it is possible that in patients with chronically
elevated PTH in the setting of a vitamin D receptor mutation, phosphate might be
variable.
- Recall that inactive 25-OH-D3 can be converted to another inactive storage form
called 24,25-D3. If PTH is high, then 1a-hydroxylase activity is high, so there will
be less 25-D3 available to be shunted to 24,25-D3. The NBME mentions 24,25-D3
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Hyperparathyroidism conditions
- - Ca , ¯ PO4 , PTH.
2+ 3-
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- The calcium and phosphate arrows for secondary hyperPTH are the opposite of primary
hyperPTH.
- Phosphate is high in renal failure, despite the high PTH, because the kidney is not able to
downregulate the PCT phosphate transporters, so there is too much phosphate
reabsorption.
- Ca2+, PO43-, PTH.
- In order to understand tertiary hyperparathyroidism, let’s first review secondary
hyperparathyroidism:
- Patients with renal failure will initially develop secondary hyperparathyroidism, where
calcium is low, phosphate is high, and PTH is high. Calcium is low due to failure of
reabsorption at the late-DCT of the kidney and because of decreased synthesis of
activated vitamin D3 (leading to decreased small bowel absorption). Phosphate is high due
to failure to downregulate PCT reabsorption pumps (i.e., more pumps reabsorb
phosphate). PTH is high because calcium is low (less negative feedback).
- Tertiary hyperparathyroidism results from hyperplasia of the parathyroid glands in
patients with long-standing secondary hyperparathyroidism, such that even if the renal
Tertiary failure is brought under control and serum calcium is brought back into the normal range,
PTH continues being autonomously secreted at higher basal levels than prior to the renal
disease, effectively resetting the body’s setpoint for calcium homeostasis.
- This causes a rise in serum calcium in a patient with renal failure. This should
immediately raise a red flag for tertiary hyperPTH, since renal failure patients will almost
always have low, not high, calcium.
- Even though the parathyroid glands will be hyper-secreting PTH, this is not primary
hyperparathyroidism, since the etiology for the high PTH was not idiopathic adenoma or
hyperplasia.
- Phosphate is high, not low, because the patient has renal failure. Phosphate is always
high in renal failure. Even though PTH is high, remember that the kidney can’t
downregulate the PCT reabsorption pumps the way they’re supposed to.
Hypoparathyroidism conditions
- ¯ Ca2+, PO43-, ¯ PTH, ¯ T cell levels, « B cell levels.
- Mechanism is most frequently 22q11 deletion, resulting in agenesis of the 3rd and
4th pharyngeal pouches.
- The 3rd pouch becomes the thymus + two inferior parathyroids.
- The 4th pouch becomes the two superior parathyroids.
- Tetralogy of Fallot and truncus arteriosus are common heart defects.
- Agenesis of the parathyroid glands à primary hypoparathyroidism à low calcium
DiGeorge
+ high phosphate.
- DiGeorge is characterized by T cell deficiency. Recurrent viral, fungal, and protozoal
infections are characteristic.
- Absent thymic shadow = T cell deficiency à DiGeorge.
- Scanty lymph nodes/tonsils = B cell deficiency à Bruton agammaglobulinemia.
- If Q says kid has both absent thymic shadow and scanty lymph nodes/tonsils à
answer = SCID.
- ¯ Ca2+, PO43-, ¯ PTH.
- Thyroidectomy can result in removal of or damage to the parathyroid glands,
resulting in decreased PTH secretion and, in turn, hypocalcemia. Phosphate goes up
because there is increased renal reabsorption (PTH normally downregulates apical
PCT phosphate transporters, thereby promoting excretion).
Post-thyroidectomy
- Twitching of the masseter with stimulation is called Chvostek sign of hypocalcemia.
- Hypocalcemia causes “up” findings – i.e., muscle tetany and hyperreflexia.
- Trousseau sign of hypocalcemia is carpopedal spasm with blood pressure cuff
inflation (i.e., twitching of the hand/wrist). The USMLE can give you either Chvostek
or Trousseau sign when Ca2+ is low.
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- There is a Family Med Q that gives early-30s African-American woman with dry
cough + they say CXR shows no abnormalities à answer = “activation of mast
cells” (i.e., asthma is the answer); wrong answer is “non-caseating granulomatous
inflammation.” So your HY point here is: if the vignette sounds like it could be
sarcoidosis but they say CXR is normal or shows “mild hyperinflation” (also buzzy
for asthma), choose asthma over sarcoidosis.
- A 2CK IM CMS form gives a sarcoidosis vignette where they mention bihilar
lymphadenopathy on a CT scan + high hepatic AST + ALP + weight loss; they don’t
mention hypercalcemia. Unusual combo of findings, but the answer is inferable
based on the CT.
- Lupus pernio is an enlarged nose due to sarcoidosis (not SLE, despite the name).
- USMLE wants steroids (i.e., oral prednisone) as treatment.
- - Squamous cell carcinoma of the lung and renal cell carcinoma both secrete
parathyroid hormone-related peptide (PTHrp).
- This is not the same as endogenous PTH.
- - USMLE Qs for renal cell carcinoma and squamous cell of the lung will have:
o Serum Ca2+, ¯ serum PO43-, ¯ PTH.
- - PTHrp exerts very similar physiologic effects as PTH, causing high serum calcium
Paraneoplastic PTHrp and low phosphate.
- - PTH secretion by the parathyroid glands will be suppressed in this setting due to
the high serum calcium.
- - NBME will give you lung cancer + high serum calcium + low serum PTH, with the
answer being squamous cell carcinoma of the lung. The low PTH will throw some
people off. But this is not weird. PTH is not the same as PTHrp (which will be up-
arrow).
- - Serum Ca2+, ¯ PTH.
- - Once metastases seed at bony locations, cytokine activity causes lysis of the
Metastases bone and release of calcium into the blood. Hypercalcemia is common in the
setting of metastatic malignancies.
- - PTH is suppressed due to the high calcium.
- « Serum Ca2+, « serum PO43-, « PTH, ALP.
- Idiopathic disorder of increased bone turnover. Bone is described as having
mixed osteoblastic and -clastic phases, appearing heterogenous on x-ray.
- Buzzy vignette is male over 50 who’s hat doesn’t fit him anymore + has tinnitus
(narrowing of acoustic foramina).
Paget disease
- 19/20 questions will give isolated increase in serum ALP. You need to know Ca2+,
PO43-, and PTH are all normal in Paget disease. There is one Q on a 2CK CMS form
where ALP is given as not elevated, but it’s a one-off Q and rare.
- High-output cardiac failure can occur due to intraosseous AV-fistulae, where
patient has an S3 heart sound with high, rather than low, ejection fraction.
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- - What the USMLE vignette will do, however, is not mention the patient’s Hx, but
will simply give you a kidney stone + hypercalcemia + bicarb that is elevated (or
toward the upper limit of normal). Then you eliminate to get there, where you
say, “Even though they don’t mention the textbook presentation, no other
answers explain the high calcium + high bicarb.”
- - Normal bicarb is 22-28 mEq/L, but an NBME Q for milk-alkali syndrome gives a
bicarb of 27, where this throw students off. Acid-base disorders can occasionally
have bicarb in the normal range, albeit in the direction you expect.
- - The USMLE asks a Q where an astronaut goes off into space for X number of
months + eventually comes back to earth. They ask, compared to before going to
space, what would be expected now for the following variables. Answer is:
- - ¯ Urinary cAMP, ¯ PTH, ¯ bone density.
- - In space, bone density ¯ due to ¯ weightbearing from ¯ effects of gravity
Space travel
(similar to osteoporosis mechanism). This will cause calcium leaching out of the
(not a troll)
bone, which could theoretically suppress PTH.
- - Since PTH normally urinary cAMP, if PTH is ¯, urinary cAMP is also ¯.
- - The question doesn’t ask about serum calcium levels, but in theory they are
probably within the normal range (albeit compared to baseline). This is the
same for osteoporosis, where serum calcium levels are normal.
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- Angiotensin II has multiple roles, but one of them is to go to the zona glomerulosa of
the adrenal cortex (most superficial hormone-producing layer) to upregulate
aldosterone synthase, thereby aldosterone.
- In other words, ¯ renal perfusion à AT II + aldosterone.
- If a patient’s aldosterone level is high, we look at renin (i.e., or ¯) to help us ascertain
the cause of the aldosterone.
- If renin and aldosterone are both , we know the cause is ¯ renal perfusion. We call
this renovascular hypertension, where we either have renal artery stenosis (RAS) caused
by atherosclerosis (older patient with CVD risk factors) or fibromuscular dysplasia (FMD;
vascular smooth muscle proliferation disorder in young women). “Reninoma” is possible
but nonexistent on USMLE.
- If aldosterone is but renin ¯, we know the cause of the aldosterone is primary
adrenal, which means Conn syndrome (aldosterone-secreting tumor) or zona
glomerulosa hyperplasia (secreting aldosterone). The aldosterone causes plasma
volume, which renal blood flow, thereby ¯ renin through negative-feedback. So in
short:
- Aldosterone + renin: Renovascular hypertension (RAS or FMD).
- Aldosterone + ¯ renin: Primary adrenal (Conn or hyperplasia).
- - Produced in zona glomerulosa of adrenal cortex.
- - Causes plasma Na+, ¯ K+, HCO3-, pH.
- - In other words, all of the arrows go the same direction as aldosterone except for K+.
- - Aldosterone goes to the basolateral membrane (side of blood) of the cortical collecting
duct in the kidney to Na+/K+ ATPase pumps. For every 1 ATP utilized, we get 2 K+
secreted from the blood into the tubular cell (which ultimately leaves the body) and 3
Na+ reabsorbed from the tubular cell into the blood.
- - When Na+ is pulled out of the tubular cell into the blood, this favors a high-low gradient
from the urine into the cell of sodium, causing ENaC (a sodium channel) on the apical
Aldosterone membrane to indirectly in activity, which pulls Na+ out of the urine.
- - In addition, aldosterone upregulates an H+ ATPase on the apical membrane (side of
urine) of the cortical collecting duct, causing serum HCO3- (i.e., ¯ plasma H+ to mop up
HCO3-, so HCO3- ).
- - The main purpose of aldosterone is to regulate fluid status in the body. Water follows
Na+, so the strong Na+ reabsorptive effect functions to retain water.
- - The interesting point to note is that although ADH (vasopressin) free-water
reabsorption (without pulling Na+ in as well), this effect is more to regulate tonicity of
the blood (i.e., whether plasma Na+ is or ¯) by “diluting” out serum Na+. Vasopressin
still has some effect on volume status, but aldosterone’s effect is more robust.
- In addition to upregulating aldosterone synthase in the zona glomerulosa of the
adrenal cortex, has 3 other very important roles for USMLE:
o 1) Constricts the efferent arterioles leaving the kidney.
§ This causes hydrostatic pressure backup at the glomerulus, which
maintains GFR in the setting of ¯ renal perfusion; this means FF,
since the latter is GFR/renal perfusion.
§ It makes sense that AT II constricts the efferent arterioles, because
when renal perfusion is ¯, GFR will ¯ unless we get a “squeezing of the
hose” / backup effect leaving the kidney, which functions to maintain
AT II
the same glomerular filtration in spite of that ¯ in renal blood flow.
o 2) Constricts peripheral arterioles.
§ Helps to maintain basal blood pressure.
§ Main reason this function of AT II is HY for USMLE is because they want
you to know that ACE inhibitors (e.g., lisinopril) or AT II receptor
blockers (e.g., valsartan) ¯ afterload on the heart by relieving the
constrictive effects of AT II on peripheral arterioles. This promotes
ejection fraction, since there is now less force for the heart to pump
against. This effect at helping to EF, in addition to their ability to ¯
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Renovascular hypertension
- Narrowing of one or both renal arteries due to atherosclerosis that causes
renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system (RAAS) and BP.
- Q will be patient over the age of 50 with cardiovascular disease risk factors,
such as diabetes, HTN, and/or smoking.
- Patients who have pre-existing HTN causing atherosclerosis leading to RAS will
often have 10-20 years of background HTN that then becomes accelerated over
a few-month to 2-year period. What this means is: the slowly developing
atherosclerosis in the renal arteries finally reaches a point at which the kidney is
unable to maintain autoregulation, and the RAS is now clinical (i.e., accelerated
HTN of BP within, e.g., 3 months).
- Another way USMLE will give RAS is by giving BP in patient with significant
evidence of atherosclerotic disease (i.e., Hx of coronary artery bypass grafting,
Renal artery stenosis intermittent claudication), and then ask for the most likely cause à RAS. You
(RAS) have to say, “Well he clearly has atherosclerosis in his coronaries and aortoiliac
vessels, so that means he’ll have it in the renal arteries too.”
- Q can say older patient with carotid bruit has recent in BP and then ask for
diagnosis à answer = RAS. Similar to above, if the patient has atherosclerosis in
one location (i.e., the carotids), then he/she will have it elsewhere too.
- HY factoid about RAS is that ACEi or ARBs will cause renin and/or creatinine
to go up. This is a HY point that is often overlooked and is asked on NBMEs. I
have not seen NBME care whether it’s uni- or bilateral in this case. à Kidney
can autoregulate across flux in perfusion. Patients with already-compromised
renal blood flow are more sensitive to the subtle ¯ in filtration fraction that
occurs secondary to ACEi/ARB use, so renin/creatinine .
- If USMLE gives you unilateral RAS, renin is only from that kidney. The other
kidney will not produce renin.
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- After renin and aldosterone levels are obtained, MR angiography of the renal
vessels is what USMLE wants for the next best step in diagnosis.
- The answer on USMLE for narrowing of the renal arteries in a woman 20s-40s.
- Not the same as renal artery stenosis, and not caused by atherosclerosis.
- If you broadly say “renal artery stenosis,” that specifically refers to
atherosclerosis of the renal arteries in patient >50 with CVD.
- FMD is tunica media hyperplasia (not dysplasia, despite the name) that results
in a “string of beads” appearance on renal angiogram.
Fibromuscular dysplasia
(FMD)
Polyarteritis nodosa
(PAN)
Angiogram of PAN shows pearls that are more distal in the renal vasculature;
FMD, in contrast, shows more proximal beading, with the termini not as
conspicuously involved.
- There is an NBME Q where they list both PAN and FMD as answer choices and
it relies on you knowing the angiogram to get it right. They don’t mention
hepatitis B, but answer is PAN. That’s why I’m harping on this here.
- Causes fibrinoid necrosis.
- Can be caused by hepatitis B.
- Spares the pulmonary vasculature.
- The answer on USMLE for hypertension in a neonate following umbilical artery
Renal artery thrombosis
catheterization. USMLE simply wants “ renin, aldosterone” as the answer.
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- Sounds weird, but you need to know umbilical artery catheterization is a major
risk factor for renal artery thrombosis in neonates.
- 2CK NBME Q gives brief umbilical artery catheter insertion in kid born 26
weeks’ gestation in order to monitor blood pressure for a pneumonia. 3 weeks
later, he has BP (128/86) à answer = “ renin, aldosterone” as answer.
- BP in term neonates should be ~60/40. In a preemie 29 weeks’ gestation, it
should be ~50/30.
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- ¯ cortisol causes chronic fatigue syndrome. This is one of the most over-looked
details in NBME Qs and in real life. Any time a patient has ongoing chronic fatigue
that is unexplained, cortisol levels should be checked. If they are ¯, hydrocortisone
will immediately boost the patient.
- Tx for Addison = fludrocortisone +/- hydrocortisone. Fludrocortisone is a
mineralocorticoid similar to aldosterone. Hydrocortisone is a glucocorticoid similar to
cortisol.
- - Meningococcal septicemia causing bilateral hemorrhagic necrosis of the adrenal
glands, resulting in ¯ aldosterone and ¯ cortisol.
Waterhouse-
- - Vignette will be ¯ BP + ¯ Na+ + K+ + ¯ bicarb in patient with meningococcal
Friderichsen
infection (e.g., recent meningitis + non-blanching rash), where answer = ACTH
stimulation test.
Adrenal crisis
- - Patients who are on chronic glucocorticoids (i.e., prednisone) for autoimmune conditions such as IBD, RA,
SLE, etc., will have a chronically suppressed adrenal gland that is atrophied, since prednisone is a cortisol
analogue that induces negative-feedback and shuts off ACTH production.
- - This means that if these patients encounter a stressor such as surgery, trauma, infection, or thyroid storm,
where glucocorticoids normally experience rate of consumption, they are unable to “mount a stress
response,” (i.e., unable to produce an acute production of cortisol), so they are prone to acute
glucocorticoid deficiency and a precipitous ¯¯ in BP.
- - Q will tell you patient has SLE treated with prednisone who goes into surgery and gets a ¯¯ drop in BP to
80/40 + fluids and pressors don’t help; Q asks next best step à answer = IV hydrocortisone or
methylprednisolone. What we are doing is replenishing the glucocorticoid. “Pressors” can refer to NE, E, or
even desmopressin.
- - Remember that without cortisol (or cortisol equivalent, i.e., exogenous glucocorticoid), we can’t get
adequate a1-recepor expression on arterioles, so even if NE and E are floating around in normal amounts
(or given exogenously), they can’t bind to a1-receptors to maintain BP.
- - This concept is referred to as: “glucocorticoids are permissive of the effects of catecholamines,” where
they literally “permit” NE and E to do their job.
- - The Q can also tell you patient being treated with prednisone for SLE or RA experiences an acute
thyroiditis (remember autoimmune diseases go together) and gets ¯¯ in BP à answer = hydrocortisone
(after fluids). Or patient with autoimmune disease gets an infection + ¯¯ in BP à answer = hydrocortisone
(after fluids).
- - I reiterate this concept because it is exceedingly HY on 2CK content in particular and is missed by students
all of the time. If you’re studying for Step 1, you still need to know the physio / pharm behind this concept.
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fuck is the potassium low. Is aldosterone high?” No. All glucocorticoids have some degree of
mineralocorticoid effect at the kidney similar to aldosterone. In patients who have high cortisol, the effect
longer term can occasionally cause hypokalemia. This detail is particularly important for 2CK vignettes.
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- - If high-dose dex is given and they ask for the arrows for how ACTH and cortisol
will change, the answer is “¯ ACTH, ¯ cortisol.”
- - ACTH + cortisol.
- - Does not suppress with high-dose dex.
Small cell lung cancer
- - If high-dose dex is given and they ask for the arrows for how ACTH and cortisol
will change, the answer is “no change ACTH, no change cortisol.”
- - ¯ ACTH + cortisol.
- - Does not suppress with high-dose dex.
Adrenal adenoma - - Same as with small cell lung cancer, if high-dose dex is given and they ask for the
arrows for how ACTH and cortisol will change, the answer is “no change ACTH, no
change cortisol.”
- - ¯ ACTH + ¯ cortisol (holy shit).
- - Exogenous steroids (i.e., prednisone, hydrocortisone) are not the same thing as
Exogenous steroids
cortisol. The result is suppression of endogenous cortisol.
- - Students get this wrong all of the time.
Miscellaneous
- - Glucocorticoids can cause “glucocorticoid psychosis,” which can present as an
overt psychosis, delirium-like presentation, or even just as general mood
Glucocorticoid
disturbance, i.e., depression.
psychosis
- - The vignette can give you Cushing syndrome + depression, or recent IV
methylprednisolone injection + delirium-like presentation 24-48 hours later.
- - Licorice contains glycyrrhizic acid, which leads to mineralocorticoid effect, at the
Licorice kidney (i.e., similar to aldosterone).
- - Can cause hypokalemia in those who drink excessive licorice tea.
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- - The relevance of these conditions is that they are a cause of ambiguous genitalia and/or virilization.
- - Presentations are variable, with Qs giving vignettes in neonates, children, and adults. So the way to
differentiate them comes down to electrolytes and BP.
- - For both 21- AND 11-hydroxylase deficiencies:
o 17-OH substrates (i.e., 17-OH-progesterone and 17-OH-pregnenolone).
o DHEA-S, androstenedione.
o If you see any of these up in the Q, you know right away answer is either 21- or 11-deficiency. This
is because it’s impossible to get 17-OH substrates in 17-hydroxylase deficiency.
Catecholamine-secreting tumors
- - Catecholamine-secreting tumor of adrenal medulla.
- - Derived from neural crest (i.e., chromaffin cells of adrenal medulla).
- - Occurs in adults; can calcify.
- - Causes paroxysmal (i.e., comes and goes) BP, which presents as periodic
palpitations and pounding headaches.
- - Because the HTN is paroxysmal, the patient can have BP measured in the office at
120/80, so do not exclude pheo in this case.
- - Stressors (e.g., sitting up on the examination table) can trigger NE + E release
Pheochromocytoma
from the tumor, where BP shoots up to >180/100. This is different from whitecoat
hypertension, where young patient has 140/90 measured due to being slightly
nervous.
- - Diagnose with urinary/serum metanephrines. If positive, then do CT abdomen.
- - Tx = phenoxybenzamine (irreversible a1-blocker). If you give beta-blocker first,
this will kill the patient. This is because if you block beta receptors, the NE and E
have little to bind to now except a receptors (mainly a1), so we get arteriolar
constriction and BP shoots up. This is called “unopposed alpha.”
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- - Some students ask about giving propranolol after phenoxybenzamine. The answer
is, yes, in theory this can be done. But USMLE doesn’t assess this. They want
straight-up alpha-blockade.
- - Pheo can be idiopathic or part of condition such as MEN 2A/B or NF1.
- - If a patient has medullary thyroid cancer, you must check for pheochromocytoma
before doing thyroidectomy. This is because if the patient has MEN 2 and you don’t
check for pheo first, doing surgery will cause BP due to catecholamine release
and kill the patient.
- - Essentially the “pediatric pheo”; N-myc gene.
- - Secretes catecholamines; can calcify (same as pheo in adults).
- - Grows from the median (midline) sympathetic chain. Usually intra-abdominal but
can sometimes be in the posterior mediastinum. Sounds odd, but the latter shows
up on a Peds CMS form.
Neuroblastoma - - Causes BP and findings such as opsoclonus-myoclonus syndrome (dancing eyes)
and violaceous eyelids (sounds like heliotrope rash of dermatomyositis but
unrelated).
- - Diagnose with urinary homovanillic acid (HVA) and vanillylmandelic acid (VMA),
which are metabolites of catecholamines.
- - Metaiodobenzylguanidine scan can be done after HVA and VMA detected.
Carcinoid tumor
- Neuroendocrine tumor of small bowel, appendix, or lung that is S-100 (+) and consists of small blue cells.
- Secretes serotonin.
- Presents as flushing, tachycardia, diaphoresis, and diarrhea.
- Tricuspid regurg common (holosystolic murmur that increases with inspiration) due to tricuspid lesions.
- Diagnose with urinary 5-hydroxyindole acetic acid (5-HIAA).
- - Don’t confuse with serotonin syndrome, which is a drug interaction (e.g., starting a monoamine oxidase
inhibitor too soon after discontinuing an SSRI, or if a patient takes St John wort with an SSRI).
Polyglandular syndromes
- - All MEN syndromes and Carney complex are autosomal dominant.
- - MEN1 gene mutation.
- - Parathyroid adenoma (or hyperplasia), pituitary adenoma, pancreatic adenoma.
o Zollinger-Ellison syndrome (gastrinoma) is highest yield pancreatic tumor in
MEN 1. Will present as recurrent peptic ulcers. I discuss this stuff in detail in
the HY Gastro PDF.
o Parathyroid adenoma often presents with calcium urolithiasis, where they
MEN 1
will mention flank or groin pain in patient with Hx of ulcers (Zollinger-Ellison).
o Prolactinoma is highest yield pituitary tumor.
o USMLE need not give the full constellation of findings for the MEN syndromes.
There is an NBME Q floating around where the patient has a parathyroid
adenoma – nothing more – and the answer is just MEN1 as the gene that’s
mutated.
- - RET proto-oncogene mutation.
- - Parathyroid adenoma (or hyperplasia), pheochromocytoma, medullary thyroid
carcinoma.
o As mentioned earlier, RET mutations need not cause the full constellation of
MEN 2A
findings. NBME Qs can give isolated medullary thyroid carcinoma in a family,
and the answer is just RET.
o In theory, isolated parathyroid adenoma could also be RET, but with the
NBME example I mentioned above they listed MEN1 without also listing RET.
MEN 2B - - RET proto-oncogene mutation.
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Islet-cell HY points
- - ¯ Blood glucose by promoting uptake into cells, especially skeletal muscle and adipose
tissue, via induction of GLUT4 translocation to cell surface. Uptake into the liver occurs via
upregulation of glucokinase (hexokinase variant in the liver).
Insulin - - Glycogenesis by glycogen synthase activity.
function - - Lipogenesis by promoting the conversion of excess glucose into fatty acids, followed by
storage of the fatty acids in adipose tissue.
- - Protein synthesis by enhancing amino acid uptake into cells and promoting ribosome
formation.
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- - Inhibition of Gluconeogenesis.
- - Pancreatic beta cells take up glucose via GLUT2 à ATP is produced within the cell à
Insulin
closure of the ATP-gated K+ channel à K+ builds up within the b-islet cell à cell depolarizes
secretion
à Ca2+ influxes into the cell à this triggers release of insulin-filled vesicles from the b cell.
- - Insulin binds to a tyrosine kinase on the cell surface of skeletal muscle and adipose tissue
à this ultimately results in GLUT-4 expression on the cell surface, which allows for
glucose to enter the cell.
Insulin - - USMLE wants you to know that insulin causes: tyrosine-kinase activity, serine-
binding threonine kinase activity, and ¯ ubiquitin-mediated proteolysis.
- - Ubiquitin is normally tagged to proteins for degradation during catabolic processes, but
insulin promotes anabolic processes (i.e., protein synthesis).
- - I talk about this stuff more in the HY Biochemistry and HY Arrows PDFs.
- - During the production of insulin, the precursor protein called proinsulin contains a peptide
sequence called C-peptide that is ultimately cleaved off.
- - This means that endogenous insulin and C-peptide are present in equimolar amounts in
the circulation.
- - If a patient has insulin, we can look at C-peptide levels to know whether that insulin is
endogenously produced or exogenously injected.
- - If C-peptide levels are ¯, the insulin is injected.
- - If C-peptide levels are normal/, the insulin is endogenously produced.
- - The tricky part for USMLE is with respect to the workup when C-peptide levels are found
C-peptide
to be normal/. Some students erroneously say, “Oh that’s insulinoma!” Chill. Before you
jump on CT of the abdomen looking for insulinoma, USMLE first wants you to check “serum
hypoglycemic levels,” which refers to medications that can cause insulin secretion (i.e.,
insulin secretagogues), such as sulfonylureas, meglitinides, GLP-1 analogues, and DPP-4
inhibitors. I discuss these more below. If serum levels of these drugs are negative, then we
can do CT of the abdomen looking for insulinoma.
- - High insulin presents as Whipple triad – i.e., 1) hypoglycemia, 2) symptoms / signs of
hypoglycemia (i.e., tachycardia, tremulousness), 3) worsens between meals / gets better
with meals.
- - Blood glucose by gluconeogenesis.
- - Glycogenolysis (glycogen breakdown into glucose).
- - Lipolysis (breakdown of fatty acids into acetyl-CoAs for ketogenesis).
- - Protein catabolism (i.e., ubiquitination).
Glucagon
- - USMLE wants you to know glucagon adenylyl cyclase activity and cAMP. And in theory,
b-blockade can reverse the effects of glucagon by ¯ cAMP ( G-a-s G-protein activity).
- - Glucagonoma causes a combo of serum glucose and a body rash known as necrolytic
migratory erythema.
- - As mentioned earlier, somatostatin is aka growth hormone-inhibiting hormone (GHIH) and
shuts off its secretion from the anterior pituitary. It also ¯ secretion of insulin and glucagon
Somatostatin from the pancreas.
- - Somatostatinoma presents with steatorrhea.
- - I discuss this stuff in more detail in the HY Gastro PDF.
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- - For extensive info on the effects of diabetes on different organ systems (i.e., cardio, renal, ophthal, GIT,
pregnancy, etc.), use those corresponding HY PDFs I’ve made. I will keep the focus here on endocrine and
electrolytes / acid-base.
- - Diagnosis of DM is made by measuring two fasting glucoses >126 mg/dL, any one random fasting glucose
>200 mg/dL, or an HbA1c of >6.5%.
- - Absence of insulin; autoimmune-mediated; no one specific gene, although HLA-DR3/4 are
associated.
- - Often described as “genetic susceptibility with environmental trigger” (i.e., viral infection,
usually Coxsackie B).
- - Occurs almost always in children or teenagers of normal BMI.
- - Pathogenesis is usually combo of an antibody- (anti-GAD65 or -ZnT8) and T-cell-mediated
process that leads to destruction of b-islet cells in the tail of the pancreas à ¯ insulin
secretion à inability to recruit GLUT4 to cell surface of skeletal muscle and adipose tissue
à inability to take up glucose into cells à cells are starved of energy à gluconeogenesis
+ ketogenesis.
- - Hyperglycemia occurs as a result of continued glucose production by the liver
(gluconeogenesis) in combination with ¯ uptake by skeletal muscle and adipose tissue.
- - Biopsy of pancreas shows inflammatory infiltrate in acute type I DM; in late type I (i.e.,
years later), it shows atrophy and fibrosis.
- - It is the absence of insulin in type I DM that enables ketogenesis. In type II DM, ketones are
low, not high, because insulin is present.
- - Ketone bodies (USMLE likes b-hydroxybutyrate) are highly acidic, so will drop the blood pH
(high anion-gap metabolic acidosis).
- - Vignette will give kid or teenager with polyuria, polydipsia, and sometimes vomiting, who
has severe metabolic acidosis (bicarb ¯), which is due to diabetic ketoacidosis. Breath can be
fruity in odor (smell of ketones). DKA will have:
- ¯ pH, ¯ HCO3-, ¯ CO2.
- Ketone bodies are acidic à causes metabolic acidosis (decreased bicarbonate).
- CO2 is acidic, so we blow that off to compensate. Kussmaul breathing is deep, labored
breathing seen in DKA.
Type I - b-hydroxybutyrate, serum osmolality, anion gap.
- b-hydroxybutyrate is a ketone body. Since we have ketosis (ketone production), it will
be increased. I have seen this specific ketone body as an arrow on an offline Step 1
NBME.
- Serum osmolality is increased because serum glucose is markedly increased (insulin
isn’t present to drive glucose into cells). Even though serum sodium is low (so you might
think osmolality is low similar to SIADH), the glucose makes serum osmolality high.
- DKA is the D in MUDPILES, so anion gap is up.
- - ¯ Serum Na+, serum K+, ¯ total body K+, GFR.
- Serum sodium is decreased mostly due to dilutional hyponatremia. As mentioned
earlier, serum osmolality is high, which causes fluid retention intravascularly à dilutes
out serum sodium. In addition, low insulin means less glucose enters cells à less ATP
production à less cellular Na+/K+-ATPase activation à sodium not pumped out of
cells.
- We describe the state of K+ as: hyperkalemia (high serum K+) despite a low total body
potassium.
- Serum potassium is high for two main reasons:
1) Potassium-proton shift: Acidosis (due to ketosis) causes protons in the blood to
exchange with potassium in the cell via the H+/K+-antiporter (i.e., H+ goes into cell;
K+ moves out).
2) Insulin drives potassium into cells (and we don’t have insulin in DKA): Insulin
normally leads to the upregulation of a Na+/K+-ATPase antiporter that moves 3Na+
out for every 2K+ in. If insulin is low, then less K+ will be moved into the cell à
hyperkalemia (high potassium in blood).
- Total body potassium is low because of increased losses at the kidney. Since
serum potassium is high, more potassium is filtered through the glomerulus, so
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more is excreted (i.e., the kidney thinks there’s too much potassium in the body
since more is being filtered, so it tries to get rid of more of it). However, this causes
bodily depletion of K+ because the processes that cause hyperkalemia are
unmitigated, so the kidney continues to excrete potassium.
- GFR is increased because of hyperfiltration secondary to hyperglycemia. That is,
since serum glucose is high, more glucose is filtered through the glomerulus, which
pulls water with it à hyperfiltration.
- Tx for DKA is normal saline first (i.e., 0.9% NaCl), prior to giving insulin.
- Serum potassium will drop as insulin is given. If the Q tells you patient has DKA + shows
you normal potassium (even though it’s usually high) + insulin is given + patient now has
arrhythmia, the answer is potassium for which electrolyte is disturbed (i.e., potassium was
normal prior to giving insulin, but now it’s been driven into cells and the patient’s developed
hypokalemia).
- Bicarb is always a wrong answer for low pH in DKA.
- Don’t confuse DKA with a hypoglycemic episode. The latter will be a type I diabetic who
went out to do exercise or who was cleaning the roof of his house, who is now found
unconscious à if insulin dose is not decreased prior to exercise, patient can get
hypoglycemia. The Tx is intramuscular glucagon (2CK likes this) or dextrose in water.
- Sometimes the USMLE can give a bit of a weird Q where they say a patient is given insulin
for diabetes but has prolonged hypoglycemia + they ask why à answer = “deficiency of
counter-regulatory glucagon.” You need to know that in advanced diabetes, the glucagon-
producing a-islet cells of the pancreas can also get fucked up. I’ve also seen this Q asked for
chronic alcoholism and pancreatectomy; in both cases, if insulin is given, prolonged
hypoglycemia can result from “deficiency of counter-regulatory glucagon.”
- - Insulin resistance; seen usually in high-BMI adults, but can rarely show up in Peds (2CK
Peds form gives type II in a 17-yr-old).
- - High BMI causes insulin resistance because adipose tissue secretes adipokines that impair
insulin signaling.
- - Insulin is high initially (hyperinsulinemia) due to b-cell hypertrophy in order to compensate
for peripheral insulin resistance.
- - Ketones are absent/low because the presence of insulin inhibits ketogenesis.
- - The two above points are the highest yield pieces of info for USMLE.
- - Biopsy of the pancreas initially shows b-cell hypertrophy, but years later will show amyloid
deposition and cell shrinkage.
- - Same as with type I, hyperglycemia occurs as a result of continued glucose production by
the liver (gluconeogenesis) in combination with ¯ uptake by skeletal muscle and adipose
tissue.
- - Hyperosmolar hyperglycemic state (HHS) is seen in type II; DKA is strictly type I on USMLE.
Type II
- - In HHS, glucose is usually >600 mg/dL (in DKA, it need not be this high) and bicarb is usually
not below 20 mEq/L (NR 22-28); in DKA, bicarb can be as low as it wants (I’ve seen 5 mEq/L
on NBME).
- - The USMLE vignette will give massive paragraph Q where they mention glucose is 700 and
then ask for the cause of mental status change à answer = “hyperosmolality,” or simply
“hyperglycemia,” or “osmotic diuresis” (causes severe dehydration). I point this out because
this is particularly prevalent on 2CK NBMEs, where they’ll give a 15-line bullshit paragraph
with tons of lab values that the student spends 9 minutes reading, but meanwhile you can
see glucose is 650 and then the answer is just “osmotic diuresis” or “hyperosmolality”;
should take two seconds to answer.
- - Mental status change is technically due to hyperosmolality in the ECF of the brain pulling
water out of the ICF (i.e., the cells).
- - Treat HHS with normal saline first prior to insulin.
- - I discuss the various meds for type II diabetes later in this PDF.
- - Hereditary hemochromatosis (“bronze diabetes”) à iron deposition in tail of the
Other
pancreas, leading to impaired fasting glucose / overt diabetes. Hyperpigmentation is due to
causes
hemosiderin deposition. Patients can also get cardiomyopathy, infertility, and pseudogout.
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- - Cushing syndrome (as discussed earlier) can cause diabetes due to the insulin resistance
caused by glucocorticoids.
- - Acromegaly (growth hormone causes insulin resistance).
- - Alcoholism can cause chronic pancreatitis that not only leads to exocrine pancreatic
burnout and steatorrhea, but can also cause diabetes due to loss of islet cells.
- - Pancreatectomy is self-explanatory. If you remove some of the tail of the pancreas, this
can lead to diabetes.
- - Tacrolimus is a HY drug that can cause diabetes. Other drugs can do this, but tacrolimus is
the notable one for USMLE. Tacrolimus is an immunosuppressant that ¯ IL-2 synthesis and T
cell stimulation.
Electrolytes
- - 8.4-10.2 mg/dL.
- - Low Ca causes “up” presentation of tetany and hyperreflexia; high Ca causes “down”
presentation of muscle flaccidity and hyporeflexia; high Ca also associated with
delirium/confusion (hypercalcemic crisis).
- - High calcium HY causes are sarcoidosis (due to vitamin D), primary
hyperparathyroidism (adenoma, hyperplasia, MEN 1/2A), metastatic malignancy, multiple
Calcium
myeloma, and thiazides (cause - Ca reabsorption in DCT).
- - Low calcium HY causes are rickets/osteomalacia (¯ vitamin D), secondary
hyperparathyroidism (renal failure), post-thyroidectomy (concomitant loss of
parathyroids), DiGeorge syndrome (agenesis of 3rd and 4th pharyngeal pouches), and loop
diuretics (¯ paracellular reabsorption), hypomagnesemia (hypo-Mg can cause hypo-Ca and
hypo-K non-responsive to supplementation; usually seen in alcoholics).
- - 135-145 mEq/L.
- - Sodium derangement (high and low) causes CNS dysfunction – i.e., confusion, stupor, or
coma.
- - Na can often be normal in USMLE vignettes despite your expectation that it might be
characteristically deranged – e.g., patient has Conn syndrome and yet the sodium is
Sodium
normal, and you’re like wtf? (because you expect it to be elevated); this is typical for
USMLE vignettes.
- - High Na HY causes are primary hyperaldosteronism, renal artery stenosis, fibromuscular
dysplasia, dehydration, diabetes insipidus.
- - Low Na HY causes are Addison disease, psychogenic polydipsia, SIADH.
- - 3.5-5.0 mEq/L.
- - Potassium derangement (high and low) causes cardiac dysfunction à arrhythmia
(contrast this with Na, which causes CNS dysfunction).
- - High K HY causes are Addison disease, renal failure, polypharmacy with agents such as
potassium-sparing diuretics and digoxin.
Potassium
- - Low K HY causes are primary hyperaldosteronism, renal artery stenosis, fibromuscular
dysplasia, Cushing disease (chronically high glucocorticoid levels can cause hypo-K due to
distal renal secretion similar to mineralocorticoids), vomiting, diarrhea, loop diuretics and
thiazides, and hypomagnesemia (hypo-Mg can cause hypo-K and hypo-Ca non-responsive
to supplementation; usually seen in alcoholics).
- - 2.5-4.5 mg/dL.
- - High phosphorus HY causes are hypoparathyroidism, secondary hyperparathyroidism,
Phosphate renal failure, tumor lysis syndrome, and sarcoidosis ( vitamin D).
- - Low phosphorus HY causes are primary hyperparathyroidism, rickets / osteomalacia, and
refeeding syndrome.
- - 1.7-2.2 mg/dL.
- - Magnesium derangement causes effects similar to Ca – i.e., low Mg presents with an
Magnesium
“up” state of hyperreflexia and increased muscle tone; high Mg presents with a “down”
state of hyporeflexia and muscle flaccidity.
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Acid/base
(If you want practice with acid/base USMLE Qs and/or are confused by certain things I list in this table, go
through my HY Arrows PDF. I discuss this stuff in comprehensive detail).
- Normal blood pH: 7.35-7.45.
- Normal blood HCO3-: 22-28 mEq/L.
- Normal blood pCO2: 33-44 mmHg.
Metabolic acidosis- - Low pH caused by low HCO3; pCO2 will go down to compensate (CO2 is acidic).
- MUDPILES is mnemonic for high-anion-gap metabolic acidoses à Methanol,
Uremia (renal failure), DKA, Phenformin (weird drug you don’t need to worry
about), Iron tablets / Isoniazid, Lactic acidosis, Ethylene glycol (antifreeze),
Salicylates (aspirin).
- If the patient has metabolic acidosis and the anion gap is normal in the Q, you can
High anion-gap
eliminate the MUDPILES answers and choose an answer like renal tubular acidosis
metabolic acidoses
(RTA).
- Anion gap is calculated as Na+ - (HCO3- + Cl-).
- Anion gap of 8-12 is normal. So 13 or greater is high. I specifically write “13 or
greater” because there is an NBME Q where anion gap comes out to 12, and they
want renal tubular acidosis. I talk in detail in the HY Renal PDF about RTA.
Normal anion-gap- - Diarrhea, RTA, adrenal insufficiency, and CAH (21-deficiency) are most important.
metabolic acidoses
- - High pH caused by high HCO3; pCO2 will go up to compensate.
Metabolic alkalosis - Conn syndrome, renal artery stenosis, fibromuscular dysplasia, vomiting, loops
and thiazides (promote RAS activation due to volume depletion).
- - Low pH caused by high CO2; HCO3 goes up if chronic to compensate (bicarb is
basic).
Respiratory acidosis - Acute (normal bicarb): hypoventilation due to opioids, benzos, barbiturates.
- Chronic (high bicarb): COPD, obstructive sleep apnea, obesity, ankylosing
spondylitis, severe kyphoscoliosis.
- - High pH caused by low CO2; HCO3 goes down if chronic to compensate.
- - Acute (normal bicarb): asthma attack, panic attack, most pulmonary emboli,
Respiratory alkalosis altitude sickness (first day at high altitude).
- - Chronic (low bicarb): living at high altitude, pregnancy (progesterone upregulates
respiratory center).
- - Should be noted that primary metabolic acid/base derangements are compensated for instantly by
changes in respiration (i.e., it’s easy to retain or breathe off CO2 merely by changing respiratory rate),
whereas primary respiratory derangements are compensated for slowly because it takes time for the
kidney to alter bicarb excretion.
- - Winter formula is used to calculate predicted pCO2 based on any change in bicarb, where: Predicted pCO2
= (1.5xHCO3) + 8 +/- 2. For example, if a patient has DKA and bicarb is 14 mEq/L, we expect pCO2 to be 27-
31 mmHg. If pCO2 is lower than 27, then the patient has a concurrent respiratory alkalosis; if higher than
31, then the patient has a concurrent respiratory acidosis.
Salicylate toxicity
- - Diagnosis is salicylate (aspirin) toxicity. Tinnitus (ear-ringing) is the most common first symptom.
- - This patient has mixed metabolic acidosis-respiratory alkalosis (i.e., both a metabolic acidosis and
respiratory alkalosis at the same time).
- - Aspirin initially causes an isolated respiratory alkalosis (within the first 20 minutes) due to direct
upregulation of respiratory centers in the brain.
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- - However, aspirin itself is an acid (salicylic acid), so it will ultimately cause a metabolic acidosis that wins
over the respiratory alkalosis (i.e., pH will ultimately go low).
- - Anion gap is high. Salicylates are the S in MUDPILES.
- - Sodium and potassium are normal in salicylate toxicity. I have seen these arrows listed before, which
causes students confusion, but they are unchanged. Sometimes the Q will give you numerical values where
you need to calculate anion gap – i.e., Na+ - (HCO3- + Cl-). The value must be 13 or greater since it is one of
the MUDPILES. Normal range is 8-12.
- - In summary, once again, for aspirin:
o First 20 mins: acute respiratory alkalosis ( pH, « HCO3-, ¯ CO2).
o After 20 mins: mixed metabolic acidosis-respiratory alkalosis (¯ pH, ¯ HCO3-, ¯ CO2, anion-gap).
- - The low bicarbonate we see after 20 minutes is not compensation. It coincidentally goes low (as we’d
expect for renal compensation in the setting of respiratory alkalosis). But remember that the kidney cannot
induce this change until a minimum of 12-24 hours later. The reason bicarb is low after 20 minutes is
because aspirin itself is an acid that is causing a metabolic acidosis and driving the bicarb low.
- - A 2CK-level point is that Na+ and Cl- can be abnormal insofar as the bicarb is low and anion gap is high.
- - Potassium must always be normal.
- - You might get an aspirin Q where you’re forced to choose either an up or down arrow for chloride and you
say, “I haven’t heard of that before. I thought it would just be normal.” But if you’re forced to choose,
clearly you’d go with the answer where chloride is low, since anion gap is calculated as Na+ - (HCO3- + Cl-),
and a low chloride would make the anion gap higher than the answer choice with high chloride.
Miscellaneous HY acid/base
- - ¯ Serum K , ¯ Cl , HCO3-, CO2, pH.
+ -
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If you’ve read the above, you’ve finished this PDF for all intents and purposes for USMLE. Now you can
proceed to my HY Arrows PDF.
I’m adding the original bullet points from my old HY Endocrine PDF below because some whiny med
students said they preferred this style instead. Hard to appease everyone.
collecting duct + late-DCT à reabsorbs 3Na into blood for secretion of every 2K into tubular cell
(goes to urine)
- Acid-base role of aldosterone à causes direct proton secretion at apical membrane of cortical
collecting duct
means decreased intracellular Na à favorable high-low gradient of Na from urine into tubular cell à
- Acid-base / biochemical disturbance in Addison à low Na, high K, low bicarb, low pH (metabolic
acidosis)
- Low BP in WFS + fluids are given; next best step? à give dexamethasone to compensate for low
cortisol
- If WFS is hemorrhagic necrosis, what HY scenario contrasts à Sheehan syndrome is ischemic necrosis
- Cause of Sheehan à anterior pituitary doubles in size during pregnancy to increase prolactin
- USMLE arrow Q for Sheehan à down ACTH, down TSH, down prolactin, up aldosterone (NBME exam)
- How do you Dx Addison disease à ACTH stimulation test (if cortisol doesn’t go up appreciably, Dx
confirmed)
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- Weird hematologic finding in Addison à eosinophilia (don’t go chasing ova, stool, parasites)
anterior pituitary à increase in CRH à increase in POMC (precursor to ACTH and alpha-MSH)
- Important point about fludrocortisone à corticosteroid with high mineralocorticoid effect (acts like
aldosterone) à can be used to overcome low aldosterone + low cortisol caused by Addison
low mineralocorticoid effect (do not act like aldosterone) à hydrocortisone classically used to treat
- Potassium levels in secondary hypoadrenalism? à normal because aldosterone intact through RAAS;
- High BP + high renin/aldosterone ratio in older patient with cardiovascular disease à renal artery
stenosis
- Patient with high BP + given ACEi + now creatinine increases; Dx? à renal artery stenosis or FMD
- Acid-base / biochemical disturbance in RAS or FMD à high Na, low K, high bicarb, high pH (metabolic
alkalosis)
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- How does RAAS work? à Low blood volume à JGC secrete renin à renin cleaves angiotensinogen
(produced by the liver) in the plasma into angiotensin I à AT-I goes to lungs and is cleaved by ACE
into AT-II à AT-II goes to zona glomerulosa of adrenal cortex à upregulates aldosterone synthase
arterioles (increases afterload) + renal efferent arterioles (increases filtration fraction [GFR/RPF] in
setting of low blood volume, meaning that GFR is maintained despite low renal plasma flow) +
- ACEi (e.g., enalapril) effect on RAAS à increases renin, increases AT-I, decreases AT-II, decreases
aldosterone
- ARB (e.g., valsartan) effect on RAAS à increases renin, increases AT-I, increases AT-II, decreases
aldosterone
- Spironolactone effect on RAAS à increases renin, increases AT-I, increases AT-II, increases
aldosterone
- Paroxysmal headaches/palpitations (high BP) + high glucose à PCC (catecholamines cause liver to
make glucose)
- Tx for PCC à phenoxybenzamine first (irreversible alpha-1 blocker); never beta-blocker first
- Why phenoxybenzamine first to treat PCC à if you give beta-blocker first, you get “unopposed
alpha,” meaning all of the NE + E (catecholamines) floating around bind to alpha-1, causing massive
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- Kid with painless flank mass that doesn’t cross midline à Wilms tumor
- Cushing syndrome vs Cushing disease à syndrome = what you look like + refers to any cause of
Cushingoid appearance; Cushing disease only = anterior pituitary ACTH-secreting tumor; in other
- Pt not on exogenous steroids + Cushingoid; most common cause? à Cushing disease most common
- Main causes of Cushing syndrome à exogenous steroids (most common overall), Cushing disease
(most common endogenous), small cell bronchogenic carcinoma (ectopic ACTH), cortisol-secreting
tumor (or diffuse hyperplasia) of zona fasciculata of adrenal cortex; CRH tumor rare as fuck
- Patient with chronic disease (i.e., IBD, SLE, RA) + Cushingoid; what are the ACTH + cortisol levels à
need to know this means patient is taking prednisone à low ACTH + low cortisol (prednisone is NOT
the same thing as cortisol) à prednisone suppresses CRH and ACTH secretion at hypothalamus and
- Patient with Cushing disease; ACTH + cortisol levels? à high ACTH + high cortisol
- Smoker + Cushingoid; ACTH + cortisol levels? à high ACTH (ectopic) + high cortisol
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- Low-dose dexamethasone suppression test à tells us yes or no, patient has pathologic cause of
Cushing syndrome (i.e., Cushing disease, or SCC of lung, or cortisol-secreting tumor), but we can’t
establish the causation from this; if cortisol doesn’t suppress à yes, patient has true Cushing
syndrome (proceed to high-dose test); if cortisol suppresses à no, patient does not have Cushing
- High-dose dex à only cause of Cushing syndrome that will suppress in response is Cushing disease
- Pt has no suppression to low- or high-dose dex à ACTH high? à Yes, answer = SCC of lung; No à
- Cushingoid + low ACTH + high cortisol à cortisol-secreting tumor (or diffuse hyperplasia) of adrenal
cortex
- Why dex test not most accurate? à false-positives in e.g., depression, alcoholism
- Why acanthosis nigricans à caused by insulin resistance (unrelated: also can be caused by visceral
malignancies)
- Why low K in Cushing syndrome à chronic elevation of glucocorticoid effect at kidney can push out
- Why hyperpigmentation à high ACTH secretion means POMC is high à high alpha-MSH as well
- Why purple striae à glucocorticoids weaken collagen à micro bleeding into skin
- Graph shows you two scenarios: 1) NE given alone, then BP increases a little; 2) NE + cortisol given
together, then BP increases a lot; why the difference? à cortisol is permissive of the effects of
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catecholamines (don’t choose synergistic or additive); once again, cortisol merely allows NE and E to
- Why normally ratio of E to NE in the blood is 80/20? à NE draining venously out of the adrenal
medulla passes through the adrenal cortex à cortisol upregulates PNMT (converts NE to E)
- What does low cortisol cause? à chronic fatigue syndrome (as mentioned earlier but super
important)
- If PTH causes bone resorption, why the fuck would it bind to osteoblasts (which build bone) à
because PTH causes osteoblasts to express RANK-Ligand on their cell surface à binds to RANK
- How do osteoclasts resorb bone à intracellular carbonic anhydrase II (CAH-II) à creates H2CO3 from
H2O and CO2; then the H2CO3 à bicarb + proton à protons accumulate at bone-osteoclast interface
- What is teriparatide à N-terminus PTH analogue that binds to osteoblasts, and then rather than
causing bone resorption, actually stimulates bone growth (difference in mechanism not well
- Three effects of PTH at the kidney? à 1) it upregulates 1-alpha hydroxylase activity in the PCT
(converts inactive 25-OH-D3 into active 1,25-(OH)2-D3; 2) decreases PO4 reabsorption in PCT by
increases Ca reabsorption in the late-DCT by upregulating the apical TRPV5 transporter à reabsorbs
calcium.
- What does secretion in kidney terms mean à excretion through the tubular wall (excretion is
umbrella term à filtration = excretion through Bowman capsule; secretion = through tubular wall)
- Primary hyperparathyroidism biochemical disturbance? à high Ca, low PO4, high ALP, high PTH
- Why is ALP high à ALP reflects osteoblast activity; if PTH high, then ALP also high (but annoyingly, if
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- Who gets primary hyperPTH à usually parathyroid adenoma (e.g., 22 yr old girl with nodule)
- Who else gets primaryPTH à MEN1 + MEN2A (can be diffuse 4-gland hyperplasia in MEN patients)
- Fuck, what are the MEN syndromes again? à Relax. MEN1 = parathyroid, pituitary, pancreas; MEN2A
= parathyroid, PCC, medullary thyroid carcinoma; MEN2B = PCC, medullary thyroid carcinoma,
mucosal neuromas, and Marfanoid body habitus (“oid” means looks like but ain’t)
- Question says girl has high Ca + low PO4 + nodule of left, superior parathyroid gland; what’s the
- USMLE classically likes DiGeorge syndrome for agenesis of 3rd + 4th pouches, but will see if you can
- Other weird info I need to know for primaryPTH? à Yeah, firstly, urinary Ca is high, not low.
- Wtf, how is that possible if PTH reabsorbs Ca from urine à because serum Ca is high, so the net
amount in the urine is still high (this is a HY arrow Q that everyone gets wrong); in other words, on
the USMLE, in primaryPTH à serum Ca up; serum PO4 down; serum ALP up; urinary Ca up (oh wow)
- Second weird factoid about primaryPTH à urinary cAMP is elevated (USMLE likes this for some
magical reason)
- Why does chronic renal failure cause secondaryPTH à inability to activate vitamin D3 in PCT à
decreased Ca absorption through small bowel à low serum Ca à stimulates PTH release (this
mechanism is on 2CK NBME interestingly); kidney also simply cannot reabsorb Ca as well, further
- What about low Ca in acute renal failure; doesn’t it take a while for vitamin D effects to occur à if
- Why high PO4 in renal disease à kidney can’t filter it out; even though there’s less activated D3 and
PO4 absorption through small bowel is also decreased, the inability of the kidney to excrete it “wins”
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- Biochemical disturbance of vitamin D deficiency à low Ca, low PO4, normal/high PTH, normal/high
ALP
- Function of vitamin D à increases Ca + PO4 absorption in the bowel (don’t worry about minimal role
in bone)
- I don’t get it though; if in chronic renal failure there’s vitamin D deficiency due to less activation, why
is there low Ca and high PO4? Isn’t vitamin D deficiency always low Ca and low PO4? à chronic renal
failure “wins” in terms of phosphate always à so although low vitamin D, there’s still high PO4.
- Any changes to the bones in a patient with chronic renal disease à renal osteodystrophy
- Osteitis fibrosa cystica à high PTH can cause “brown tumors” of bone + cholesterol accumulation in
bone
- Where does vitamin D deficiency start à stratum basale of skin (asked on USMLE)
- What is the sequence for production? à 7-dehydrocholsterol in skin goes to cholecalciferol via UV-B
(calcidiol) à then this goes to the kidney where, via PTH activing 1-alpha-hydroxylase, it gets
converted to active 1,25-(OH)2-D3 à then this goes to small bowel to cause Ca + PO4 absorption
- If person doesn’t get sunlight, what can he/she not make à cholecalciferol (7-dehydro is wrong
- What about 7-dehydrocholesterol in relation to sunlight à we make this on our own, then UV-B
- Alcoholic who eats plenty of dairy + gets sunlight + has vitamin D deficiency à answer = decreased
hepatic hydroxylation
- Inject person with Ca; what happens to their vitamin D notably à answer = increased 24,25-(OH)2-
D3.
- Wtf is 24,25? à 25-OH-D3 is immediately converted to 24,25 as a storage form (think of them as the
same)
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- Inject with Ca à Ca binds to Ca-sensing receptor at parathyroid gland à negative feedback à causes
hypomagnesemia à Mg needed for basal levels of PTH release (so low PTH à low Ca) + renal
retention of K
- Who gets high vitamin D (hypervitaminosis D) à granulomatous disease (sarcoidosis) à don’t be the
fool who says “girl tried to commit suicide by ODing on vitamin D pills?”
- Why high vitamin D in sarcoidosis à epithelioid (activated) macrophages secrete 1-alpha hydroxylase
- Ca and PTH levels in sarcoidosis à high Ca, low PTH (negative feedback)
- Sarcoidosis, any weird fact they ask about Ca? à Answer = “decreased Ca in feces” (makes sense)
- Biochemical disturbance in high vit D à high Ca, normal or high PO4, normal or low PTH, normal or
low ALP (USMLE will only give you one correct answer, don’t worry, but I write the possibilities here
so you don’t get a Q where you see normal PTH or PO4 and are wondering wtf, but Ca always up)
- Sarcoidosis other weird info à increased serum ACE (correct, angiotensin-converting enzyme; weird)
- Sarcoidosis, what happens first, high urinary Ca or high serum Ca à high urinary Ca (kidney will
- 20s-30s African American woman with dry cough; CXR shows nodularity; Dx? à sarcoidosis;
- 20s-30s African American woman with dry cough; CXR shows nodularity; Dx? à “noncaseating
granulomas” (sarcoidosis)
- 20s-30s African American woman with dry cough; CXR is normal Dx? à asthma (1/3 of asthma
- 20s-30s African American woman with dry cough; CXR is normal Dx? à “increased activation of mast
cells” (asthma)
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- Mutation in calcium-sensing receptor on parathyroid gland à loss of negative feedback à PTH goes
up, serum Ca up
hypercalcemia (FHH)
- Mechanism for low urinary Ca in FHH? à not fully elucidated, but literature suggests increased
hypocalcemia à parathyroid chief cell hyperplasia that does not resolve with renal transplant à
result is high Ca, variable PO4 (high if still renal impaired), high ALP, high PTH
- What is pseudohypoparathyroidism? à insensitivity to PTH à high PTH but low Ca + high PO4
- Anything special about pseudohypoparathyroidism? à Yes. This is one of the highest yield yet
underemphasized conditions on the USMLE Step 1. In other words, my students get these Qs on the
exam regularly but the resources don’t emphasize the different types of this condition
- Type 1a = Albright Hereditary Osteodystrophy = is simply the name of the phenotype à AHO has
shortened 4th + 5th metacarpals, short stature + intellectual disability + urinary cAMP does not
- Type 1b à high PTH + low Ca + high PO4 + no AHO phenotype (just biochemical disturbance)
- Type 2 à same as Type 1b but urinary cAMP increases in response to exogenous PTH
- Mike, this sounds pedantic though. The USMLE really asks about pseudohypoparathyroidism like
that? à Yeah. They ask it as arrow questions. And I personally had two pseudohypoPTH Qs on my
- Graves disease parameters à low TSH, high T3, high T4, increased iodine uptake
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immunoglobulin)
- PTU and methimazole MOAs à both inhibit thyroperoxidase, but PTU also inhibits peripheral
conversion of T4 to T3)
other words, there are numerous causes of hyperthyroidism (e.g., toxic multinodular goiter, toxic
adenoma, etc.), but only Graves will cause the eye findings
- Why do the eye findings occur in Graves? à glycosaminoglycan deposition in/around extra-ocular
muscles
- What is the role of potassium iodide (KI) in hyperthyroid Tx? à shuts off gland production (Wolff-
Chaikoff effect) à answer in person exposed to nuclear fallout or radioiodine vapors in laboratory
- Hashimoto parameters à high TSH, low T3, low T4, decreased iodine uptake
- Histo of Hashimoto à lymphocytic infiltrate (easy to remember bc the non-eponymous name for
- 45M + high cholesterol + high hepatic AST + HR of 55 à Hashimoto (hypothyroidism can cause
bradycardia, high cholesterol, and high AST [the latter is weird, correct])
lymphoma)
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- 22M + viral infection + very tender thyroid à subacute granulomatous thyroiditis (de Quervain)
- De Quervain parameters à triphasic à causes hyper-, then hypo-, then rebounds to euthyroid state
- 22M + very tender thyroid + HR of 88 + tremulousness + heat intolerance à low TSH, high T3, high
T4, decreased iodine uptake (in contrast to Graves, which is painless and uptake is high)
- 27F + gave birth to healthy boy 6 months ago following uncomplicated labor + no weight change or
mood disturbance + on no meds + vitals WNL + dry skin + thyroid gland enlarged and non-tender +
TSH high + T4 low; most likely explanation for these findings? à answer = “thyroiditis” à Dx =
hypothyroidism (1/3 of women experience both phases; 1/3 experience just hyperthyroid phase; 1/3
only hypothyroid phase); affects 5-10% of women postpartum; hyperthyroid phase usually occurs 1-4
months postpartum; hypothyroid phase occurs about 4-8 months postpartum; thought to be caused
- Tx for subacute thyroiditis à aspirin first, not steroids; steroids may be used later
- Surreptitious thyrotoxicosis àself- injection of thyroxine à low TSH, high T3, high T4, small thyroid
- Injection of triiodothyroinine (T3) à TSH will go down, T3 goes up (clearly), T4 does not go up
- Injection of thyroxine à TSH will go down (negative feedback), T4 goes up (clearly), T3 goes up (due
- What is reverse T3? à an inactive form of T3; T4 is converted peripherally into T3 (active) and reverse
T3 (inactive)
- Anything else I need to know about reverse T3? à it’s increased in euthyroid sick syndrome à times
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more T4 is converted to reverse T3 à parameters in euthyroid sick syndrome: normal TSH, normal
- What is sublinical hypothyroidism à high TSH but normal T3 + T4 (don’t confuse with ESS)
- Subclinical hypothyroidism Tx à don’t treat unless TSH >10 (normal is 0.5-5), Hashimoto Abs are
- Want to check thyroid function, what’s the first thing to order à TSH
- Want to check thyroid function in pregnancy, what’s the first thing to order à free T4
- What is free T4 à most thyroid hormone is protein-bound and inactive; free T4 tells you definitively
- Pregnancy and thyroid à estrogen causes increased thyroid-binding globulin production by the liver
à mops of T4 à less free T4 à less negative feedback at hypothalamus + anterior pituitary à TSH
goes up transiently to compensate à more T4 made à free T4 rebounds to normal but now total T4
is high à parameters you need to know for pregnancy: normal TSH + high total T4 + normal free T4 +
- Hyperthyroidism in pregnancy à LH, FSH, TSH, hCG all share same alpha-subunit; their beta-subunits
differ; some women have increases sensitivity of TSH receptor to alpha-subunit, so high hCG in early
- Graves in pregnancy à avoid methimazole in first trimester (teratogenic; causes aplasia cutis
congenita) à give PTU in first-trimester à in second + third trimesters, switch from PTU to
- Pt being treated for Graves + mouth ulcers à agranulocytosis (neutropenia) caused by methimazole
or PTU.
- Young child with normal free T4 and low total T4 à thyroid-binding globulin deficiency (opposite of
pregnancy)
- Young child + large belly + large tongue + hypotonia à cretinism (congenital hypothyroidism)
- Evaluation of thyroid cancer, first step? à palpation of thyroid gland (on FM 2CK form as answer)
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- If thyroid nodule present, then check TSH; if TSH normal or high à answer = ultrasound first, then
FNA; if TSH low, do radioiodine uptake scan; thyroid cancer is cold, not hot, which is why no ultimate
- Diabetic ketoacidosis parameters à low serum Na, high serum K (hyperkalemia), low total body K,
- Why low serum Na in DKA à osmotic effect of high glucose in blood à dilutional hyponatremia; in
- Why high serum K in DKA à three main reasons: 1) insulin normally drives K into cells, so if insulin
isn’t there, K is higher in blood; 2) less glucose driven into cells by GLUT4 (bc normally upregulated by
insulin) means less ATP production à normally 1 ATP drives 2K into cell and 3Na out; so if less ATP-
ase activation, less K enters cell à higher in blood; 3) potassium-proton exchange; if acidosis ensues,
more H driven into cells means K moves out to balance charge à hyperkalemia
- Then what does low total body potassium mean à just to be clear, the patient is hyperkalemic (high
K in the blood) yet has low K overall in the body à kidney senses high K in urine and therefore
increases excretion of it (kaliuresis) à body is now losing K à but three above mechanisms leading to
hyperkalemia continue unabated, so K stays high in serum even though body is now urinating it out.
- Why does the potassium stuff matter so much with DKA à because when you Tx DKA and start giving
insulin (fluids first btw; giving insulin immediately is the wrong answer; give insulin after first
administering a bolus of normal saline), K will now be driven into the cells, which will bring K down to
normal in the serum, but bear in mind it was low in the cells à so now risk of normal in cells but low
in blood à need to supplement K to patient when K falls below 5.2 (normal is 3.5-5 mEq/L). Stop all
- High in serum in type II DM à insulin is high initially; ketones absent (only ketones in DKA; DKA is
type I only)
- Type II diabetic crisis? à hyperosmolar hyperglycemic non-ketotic syndrome (HHNS) à still give
fluids first
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- Glucose numbers in DKA vs HHNS à low-hundreds for DKA (i.e., 2-300s); can be 600-1000 for HHNS
- Acid-base disturbance in aspirin toxicity first 20 mins à resp. alkalosis (low CO2, high pH, normal O2,
- Acid-base disturbance in PE à resp. alkalosis (low CO2, high pH, low O2, normal bicarb [too acute to
change])
- Acid-base disturbance in asthma à resp. alkalosis (low CO2, high pH, low O2, normal bicarb [too
acute to change])
- Premature ovarian failure + Turner syndrome + menopause à high FSH (low inhibin) + low estrogen
- Anovulation. Cause USMLE wants? à insulin resistance à causes abnormal GnRH pulsation
- Why hirsutism in anovulation à abnormal GnRH pulsation causes high LH/FSH ratio
- Why high LH/FSH ratio important in anovulation/PCOS à ovulation stimulated when follicle not
- What’s LH do? à Stimulates theca interna cells (females) and Leydig cells (males) to make androgens
- What’s FSH do? à Stimulates granulosa cells (females) and Sertoli cells (males) to make aromatase;
- Tx for PCOS if they ask for meds and/or weight loss already tried à OCPs (if not wanting pregnancy);
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- Where does ADH (vasopressin) act à medullary collecting duct à causes aquaporin insertion on
- Where is ADH made? à supraoptic nucleus of hypothalamus à merely stored in posterior pituitary
- Neurophysins I’ve heard about. What are those à Showed up in UWorld à carrier proteins needed
- When does ADH go up à when serum sodium too high à brings sodium back down; ADH will also be
secreted in response to lower blood volume, although aldosterone is major volume regulator; ADH is
- When considering SIADH vs diabetes insipidus (DI) vs psychogenic polydipsia (PP) à what’s the next
- SIADH important causes à small cell bronchogenic carcinoma ectopic ACTH, or head trauma (can
- SIADH parameters à high urine osmolality (concentrated) + low serum sodium (normal is 135-145)
- Tx for SIADH à if small cell lung cancer, chemotherapy (HY to know you can’t do surgery for small
cell); if insufficient, give -vaptans (conivaptan, tolvaptan), which are ADH receptor antagonists, or
demeclocycline (a tetracycline antibiotic that causes nephrogenic DI, but is a Tx for SIADH).
pituitary à low ADH + low urine osmolality (dilute urine) + high serum sodium (concentrated serum)
- Nephrogenic DI à lack of sensitivity of kidney V2 receptors to ADH à high ADH, low urine osmolality
- Diabetes insipidus urine parameters relative to serum: PCT is isotonic (same; always unchanged),
medullary collecting duct is hypotonic (dilute compared to serum), juxtaglomerular apparatus (JGA) is
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hypotonic (always hypotonic no matter what the patient’s condition bc value measured at the top of
thick ascending loop of Henle after ions have been absorbed out of urine)
- SIADH urine parameters relative to serum: PCT is isotonic (same; always unchanged), medullary
collecting duct is hypertonic (reabsorbing lots of free H2O), JGA is hypotonic (as discussed above)
- Dude jumps into cold lake; what happens to central blood volume + atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP) +
ADH levels? à CBV up (cold à sympathetic activation à alpha-1 agonism peripherally to decrease
surface area of blood vessels to conserve heat à blood forced to core) + ANP up (if CBV up, then right
atrial stretch up; ANP is body’s natural diuretic à causes PCT to decrease Na reabsorption) + ADH
down (baroreceptor at carotid sinus senses greater stretch à has a role not just on HR but also ADH
release)
- Psychogenic polydipsia (PP)? à person drinks too much à low serum sodium + low urine osmolality
- Prolactin does what à milk production à acts through JAK/STAT tyrosine kinase
- Important points about acromegaly à causes diabetes mellitus (GH causes insulin resistance),
hypertension, carpal tunnel syndrome, arthritis, cardiomyopathy; and yes, prognathism (lantern jaw)
- Growth hormone acts directly at tissues? à USMLE wants you to know it causes liver to increase
- Which hormone counteracts GH à somatostatin à generally acts to shut off other hormone
- Congenital adrenal hyperplasia (CAH) à caused by 21, 11, or 17 hydroxylase deficiency in adrenal
- 11 hydroxylase deficiency à adrenal can still make 11-deoxycorticosterone in zona glomerulosa + 11-
deoxycortisol in zona fasciculata à BP not low (sometimes high) + K not high; DHEA-S still high
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- What does ACTH do at adrenal gland à upregulates desmolase, which converts cholesterol into
- What does angiotensin II do at the adrenal gland à upregulates aldosterone synthase, converting 11-
- What is metyrapone testing? à 11-beta hydroxylase inhibitor à can be used in the diagnosis of
adrenal insufficiency or Cushing à re the former, if you give metyrapone, cortisol should go down
normally and ACTH + 11-deoxycorticosterone should go up; if ACTH goes up but 11-
deoxycorticosterone doesn’t à adrenal dysfunction (Addison); if ACTH doesn’t go up, then it’s
secondary hypoadrenalism)
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