SIGNIFICANCE OF THE CONCENTRATION OF NONPROTEIN-BOUND PLASMA CORTISOL IN NORMAL SUBJECTS, CUSHING'S SYNDROME, PREGNANCY, AND DURING ESTROGEN THERAPY*†

RICHARD P. DOE(University of Minnesota Medical Center), Horace H. Zinneman(University of Minnesota Medical Center), Edmund B. Flink(University of Minnesota Medical Center), Robert A. Ulstrom(University of Minnesota Medical Center), RUTH ENGST(University of Minnesota Medical Center), Mary D. Lewis(University of Minnesota Medical Center), Janet Johnson(University of Minnesota Medical Center)
The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism
November 1, 1960
Cited by 114

Abstract

The concentrations of total 17-hydroxycorticosteroid (17-OH-CS) and protein- bound 17-OHCS were determined in plasma from various normal and abnormal subjects. The concentration of nonprotein-bound 17-OH-CS was then calculated by subtraction of the protein-bound value from the total 17-OH-CS value. Elevated plasma total 17-OH-CS concentration in Cushing's syndrome was shown to be due entirely to an increase in the nonprotein-bound 17-OH-CS fraction. Conversely, the elevated plasma total 17-OH-CS concentration in estrogen-treated males without signs of Cushing's syndrome was shown to be due entirely to an increase in the protein-bound 17-OH-CS. In women in the third trimester of pregnancy (with signs of mild adrenocortical hyperfunction) the levels of both protein-bound and nonprotein-bound plasma 17-OH-CS were increased. It is suggested that the nonprotein-bound plasma 17-OH-CS fraction is the immediately active form of cortisol. It probably has high activity because it is able to diffuse readily across capillaries and cell membranes.


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