Hi there,
What I found out today has completely messed in my head.
But let's start from the beginning. I have more and more proofs that I may have Cushing's disease. The cause of the disease is high cortisol. I had cortisol tested in my 24h urine collection and it was 2,4 times higher than normal range. However the endo I went to said that I can't have Cushing's, because I don't have stretch marks and cortisol has to be 4 times higher than normal range.
As I found out this is not necessary to have stretch marks in Cushing's. Then I found out that high cortisol makes you prone to infections and especially shingles outbreaks (which I have all the time now).
This is the leaflet for hydrocortisone, which is the same as cortisol (Hydrocortisone is the pharmaceutical term for cortisol used for oral administration,
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hydrocortisone)
http://www.answers.com/topic/ciprofloxacin-hydrocortisoneand it warns against taking hydrocortisone if you have:
infection (like chickenpox, herpes, tuberculosis, or shingles)
Maybe this is not the best description, but anyway recurrent shingles (and other infections) may be explained by high cortisol - Cushing's disease.
Except this, I have many other high-cortisol-related issues - glaucoma, fat belly...
**
Ok, that was sound explanation for shingles and this doesn't mean that I can't have thalassemia AND Cushing's, right?
But then I found this:
"Polycythemia as the first manifestation of Cushing's disease"
http://cat.inist.fr/?aModele=afficheN&cpsidt=18286286This would sugggest that high cortisol might affect blood parameters in a way similar to thalassemia... Actually, to resemble thalassemia, cortisol levels should be not that high...
I do not know the exact mechanism of cortisol action on blood and hemoglobin, and that is my question: what does it do to the blood
?I can't find the answer myself.
I may only speculate that it may be one of the following:
a) Action on erythrocyte membrane to make the erythrocyte break down more easily (this one is most likely).
b) Action on the bone marrow so that it makes more erythrocytes (they are mature at a younger age), and more hemoglobin
c) Action on hemoglobin gene to produce more hemoglobin of one kind and thus it looks even more realistically like thalassemia (least likely)
And to make Cushing's even more probable, my parents do not have any signs of thalassemia in their blood. I have elevated levels of hemoglobin F and A2, but can it be that it is not due to thalassemia, but hypercortisolemia
?And even if I have thalassemia, my hemoglobin level is quite high for a thal - 15,2 was the highest I had (normal 14-18). Never had any problems with anemia...
Well, that's something to think about... I'll keep you posted, how the situation develops, and what the cortisol levels are really like...
Regards,
B.