Inhibition by etomidate of steroidogenesis in isolated bovine adrenal cells.
Adverse side effects of the anaesthetic etomidate have been indirectly linked with inhibition of adrenocorticoid synthesis. The present in vitro study has shown that this is a direct effect and indicated which biosynthetic reactions are affected by etomidate. Isolated bovine adrenocortical cells were incubated with and without 10(-8)M ACTH and with increasing doses of etomidate (0-625 ng/ml). ACTH-stimulated cortisol synthesis was significantly inhibited by a concentration of etomidate (25 ng/ml), which is much less than therapeutic plasma levels (100-500 ng/ml). Both basal and ACTH stimulated synthesis of cortisol, progesterone, 17 alpha hydroxyprogesterone and corticosterone were inhibited by 625 ng etomidate/ml whereas deoxycorticosterone output was more than doubled with this dose of anaesthetic. These observations suggest that etomidate inhibits mitochondrial cytochrome P450-dependent hydroxylation reactions in the adrenal steroidogenic pathway.[1]References
- Inhibition by etomidate of steroidogenesis in isolated bovine adrenal cells. Kenyon, C.J., Young, J., Gray, C.E., Fraser, R. J. Clin. Endocrinol. Metab. (1984) [Pubmed]
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