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Departments of Pediatrics (P.L.J., G.I.B., S.H.L., J.W.R., C.E.H.) and Medicine (M.H.S., P.A.M.), Divisions of Endocrinology and Neonatal Medicine, Oregon Health Sciences University, Portland, Oregon 97201
Address all correspondence and requests for reprints to: Patricia L. Jett, M.D., Neonatology Office, Rogue Valley Medical Center, 2825 East Barnett Road, Medford, Oregon 97504.
Cortisol is secreted by children and adults in a pulsatile pattern of 1530 peaks and nadirs each day with a circadian rhythm. Newborns are known to lack the circadian pattern, leading to uncertainty about the appropriate time for blood sampling for assessment of adrenal function. Because extremely low birth weight (ELBW) infants may manifest signs of adrenal insufficiency, knowledge of the pattern of cortisol levels is necessary to guide the appropriate timing of blood sampling. To define the pattern of plasma cortisol levels in 14 ELBW infants, we obtained blood specimens every 20 min over a 6-h period at 46 days of life. Although cortisol levels in the 14 infants ranged from 2.054.5 µg/dL, each infants cortisol levels varied little from his or her own mean cortisol level. The SDs calculated from each infants mean cortisol level were small, ranging from 0.374.12 µg/dL. Cluster analysis was applied to the data; only 0.6 cortisol pulses/infant·6-h period were detected. Each infants plasma cortisol levels were plotted against time, and regression analysis was performed. The slopes of the resulting lines of regression ranged from -0.0284 to 0.0221. Our data indicate that ELBW infants show little variability in their plasma cortisol levels over time; therefore, a single random measurement provides an adequate reflection of the adrenal status of the ELBW infant.
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