Management of Cushing syndrome: the tough questions

Published on March 31, 2024   47 min

A selection of talks on Clinical Practice

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0:00
Hello. My name is Kevin Yuen. I'm a Professor of medicine and Medical Director at the Barrow Neurological Institute in Phoenix, Arizona. Today my talk to you is entitled, Management of Cushing Syndrome: The tough Questions.
0:18
I'd like to start off with by giving you my personal disclaimer of trying to understand Cushing's syndrome since I was a medical student. It is pretty common that people who are unskilled and unaware of their own abilities often in this study they found that the self inflated assessments tends to be quite frequent. You can see here that when I first learned about Cushing's syndrome, I thought I knew everything. It turns out that, in fact, the more I learn, the more it became more complicated for me. At that point in time, there's a valley of despair where I'm never going to understand this. But eventually, over time, the more I learned, it starts to make sense and eventually it is a complicated condition, no question about it. That's why I'm presenting this talk to you. Hopefully, to demystify and improve the understanding of this very complicated, yet interesting and challenging disease.
1:20
Hypercortisolism can actually present in many ways. You can see here in the figures below that there is a variety of presentation in the patient. It can range from less severe where the biochemical abnormalities for cortisol secretion is less severe. Patients may actually not experience much in the way of clinical symptomatology to severe hypercortisolism where cortisol levels are generally tend to be very high and patients can present with the classic features of moon phase, buffalo hump, striae as you can see in the figure below.
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Management of Cushing syndrome: the tough questions

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