Course Content
Zambian Paediatric & Obstetrics-Gynecology (OB/GYN) Clinical Mastery

Paediatric Adrenal Crisis 

Lesson Objectives

By the end of this lesson, learners should be able to:

  1. Define adrenal crisis and understand its pathophysiology in children.

  2. Recognize the clinical features of adrenal crisis.

  3. List the investigations needed for diagnosis and monitoring.

  4. Describe stepwise management of adrenal crisis according to Zambian Paediatric Protocol.

  5. Understand the importance of hydrocortisone therapy and the limitations of other steroids.

Description

Adrenal crisis is a severe adrenocortical insufficiency resulting in peripheral shutdown, cyanosis, tachycardia, tachypnoea, hypotension, drowsiness, and coma.
It can be fatal if not quickly recognised and urgently treated.

Causes:

  • Congenital: Congenital adrenal hyperplasia, congenital adrenal hypoplasia, adrenoleukodystrophy.

  • Acquired: Acute bilateral adrenal haemorrhage (often due to sepsis, e.g., meningococcemia), rapid withdrawal of steroids, autoimmune Addison’s disease, tuberculosis, birth asphyxia, hypopituitarism.

Signs and Symptoms

Category Symptoms
Gastrointestinal Vomiting, diarrhoea, nausea, weight loss
Cardiovascular Hypotension, tachycardia, cyanosis
Metabolic Acidosis, hypoglycaemia
Neurological Drowsiness, coma, convulsions
Infectious / Dermatologic High fever, rash (petechiae, ecchymoses, purpura, dermal gangrene), neck stiffness in meningococcaemia

Investigations

Test Type Findings / Purpose
Random glucose Hypoglycaemia
Urinalysis Ketosis
ECG Hyperkalaemia
Serum cortisol <3 µg/dL at 9:00 AM defines low cortisol
ACTH Often elevated
Urea / Electrolytes Hyponatraemia, hyperkalaemia; monitor GFR via creatinine
Aldosterone Often normal
Urinary electrolytes Increased sodium and chloride, decreased potassium
Imaging Abdominal ultrasound, CT scan, MRI for adrenal size; CXR for infection or TB
Microbiology Gene Xpert for TB if indicated

Treatment

Step Action
Airway and Breathing Ensure airway is patent and ventilatory function is supported.
Circulation Correct shock with normal saline at 20 mL/kg; subsequently correct dehydration. Treat hypoglycaemia. Administer normal saline to correct salt deficit.
Steroid Therapy Hydrocortisone 8 mg/kg IV initially, then 4 mg/kg IV every 6 hours as daily maintenance. Note: Dexamethasone should not be used because it lacks mineralocorticoid activity.
Treat Underlying Cause Manage sepsis, infection, or other precipitating factors.

Key Points Summary

  • Adrenal crisis is life-threatening and requires immediate recognition.

  • Early fluid resuscitation, correction of hypoglycaemia, and IV hydrocortisone are lifesaving.

  • Investigations guide diagnosis and monitor electrolyte and metabolic derangements.

  • Treat any underlying cause promptly (infection, TB, autoimmune).

 

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