Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-jn8rn Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-22T16:10:43.088Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Cushing's Syndrome: A Psychiatric Study of 29 Patients

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 January 2018

Samuel I. Cohen*
Affiliation:
The London Hospital, Whitechapel, London E1 1BB

Summary

Among a consecutive unselected series of 29 patients with Cushing's syndrome 21 had bilateral adrenal hyperplasia and 8 had tumours. Twenty-five (86 per cent) were significantly depressed; three of the tumour patients, but only one of the hyperplasia group were free of symptoms so that if there are no psychiatric symptoms there is a three in four chance that the patient has a tumour. There was a family history of depression or suicide or a history of early bereavement or separation in half the cases. In six of the hyperplasia patients a major emotional disturbance had preceded the onset, and in five this was a loss. The severity of the depression was not related to the level of circulating Cortisol. The depression was rapidly relieved when the tumour or hyperplastic glands were removed. Depression in Cushing's syndrome might result from a substance other than Cortisol produced by the adrenal under excessive pituitary and/or hypothalamic stimulation, which could play a part in the aetiology of depressive illness in general.

Type
Papers
Copyright
Copyright © Royal College of Psychiatrists, 1980 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Brown, G. W., Harris, T. & Copeland, J. R. (1977) Depression and loss. British Journal of Psychiatry, 130, 118.Google Scholar
Carroll, B. J. (1976) Psychoendocrine relationships in affective disorders. In Modem Trends in Psychosomatic Medicine 3. Ed. Hill, O. W., pp 129–33. London: Butterworths.Google Scholar
Cushing, H. (1913) Psychiatric disturbances associated with disorders of the ductless glands. American Journal of Insanity, 69, 965–90.Google Scholar
Cushing, H. (1932) The basophil adenomas of the pituitary body and their clinical manifestations. Bulletin of the Johns Hopkins Hospital, 50, 137–95.Google Scholar
Furger, R. (1961) Psychiatrische Untersuchungen beim Cushing-Syndrome. Schweizer Archiv für Neurologic, Neurochirurgie und Psychiatric, 88, 939.Google Scholar
Gibbons, J. L. & McHugh, P. R. (1961–3) Plasma Cortisol in depressive illness. Journal of Psychiatric Research, 1, 162–71.Google Scholar
Gifford, S. & Gunderson, J. G. (1970) Cushing's disease as a psychosomatic disorder. A selective review of the clinical and experimental literature and a report of ten cases. Perspectives in Biology and Medicine, 13, 169221.Google Scholar
Hurxthal, L. M. & O'Sullivan, J. B. (1959) Cushing's Syndrome: clinical differential diagnosis and complications. Annals of Internal Medicine, 51, 116.Google Scholar
Maas, J. W. (1972) Adrenocortical steroid hormones, electrolytes and the disposition of the catecholamines with particular reference to depressive states. Journal of Psychiatric Research, 9, 227–41.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Quarton, G., Clark, L., Cobb, S., et al (1955) Mental disturbances associated with ACTH and Cortisone. Medicine (Baltimore), 34, 1350.Google Scholar
Sachar, E. J. (1975) Evidence for neuroendocrine abnormalities in major mental illnesses. In Biology of the Major Psychoses; Research Publications: Association for Research in Nervous and Mental Disease. New York: Raven Press, 54, 347–58.Google Scholar
Schwab, J. J., Bialow, M., Brown, J. M. & Holzer, C. E. (1967) Diagnosing depression in medical inpatients. Annals of Internal Medicine, 67, 695707.Google Scholar
Spillane, J. D. (1951) Nervous and mental disorders in Cushing's syndrome. Brain, 74, 7294.Google Scholar
Trethowan, W. H. & Cobb, S. (1952) Neuropsychiatric aspects of Cushing's syndrome. Archives of Neurology and Psychiatry, 67, 283309.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Submit a response

eLetters

No eLetters have been published for this article.