Budesonide-Related Iatrogenic Cushing's Syndrome in Microscopic Colitis
Author(s) -
Kartikeya Tripathi,
Thomas Dunzendorfer
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
acg case reports journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.112
H-Index - 4
ISSN - 2326-3253
DOI - 10.14309/crj.2017.5
Subject(s) - budesonide , medicine , lymphocytic colitis , prednisone , corticosteroid , colitis , diarrhea , microscopic colitis , adverse effect , gastroenterology , glucocorticoid , inflammatory bowel disease , disease
Budesonide is the treatment of choice for microscopic colitis because of its excellent risk to benefit ratio. It is a potent, well-absorbed corticosteroid, but because of a high rate of first-pass metabolism in the liver, its systemic bioavailability is low. It has fewer corticosteroid-related adverse effects than prednisone, and adrenal suppression is considered to be rare. We present a middle-aged woman with lymphocytic colitis whose symptoms responded to budesonide but developed budesonide-related iatrogenic Cushing's syndrome. Withdrawal of budesonide led to restoration of normal pituitary-adrenal responsiveness but at the price of recurrent diarrhea due to re-emergence of lymphocytic colitis.
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