Addison's Disease
The treatment for adrenal insufficiency is corticosteroids.
The dosage of which drug must be tapered off slowly to prevent acute adrenal insufficiency?
If there is adrenal insufficiency, treatment should be given by steroid replacement, which can prove to be lifesaving. Adrenal function should be tested periodically.
Addison's disease is the result of inadequate secretion of cortisol by the adrenal cortex.When your adrenal glands don't produce enough cortisol, it is called adrenal insufficiency. It can also be referred to as Addison's disease or hypocortisolism.
most common cause of Addison's disease is the destruction and/or shrinking (atrophy) of the adrenal cortex. In about 70% of all cases, this atrophy is believed to occur due to an autoimmune disorder
It is a type of adrenal insufficiency. The opposite is Cushing's Disease where there is too much.
Corticosteroids are used to replace hormones lost in adrenal insufficiency. There are short acting corticosteroids (cortisone and hydrocortisone), intermediate acting corticosteroids (methylprednisolone, prednisolone, prednisone, traimcinolone), and long acting corticosteroids (betamethasone, budesonide, and dexamethasone).
The central portion of the adrenal gland is known as the adrenal medulla. The function of the adrenal medulla is to secrete epinephrine into the body.
The adrenal cortex, where aldosterone is produced, is part of the adrenal gland.
Addison's disease is a disorder that causes your body produces insufficient amounts of certain hormones produced by the adrenal glands. In Addison's disease, your adrenal glands produce too little cortisol, and often not enough of aldosterone as well. It is also called Also called adrenal insufficiency or hypocortisolism.
Adrenal Medulla
The Adrenal gland (Specifically the adrenal cortex.)