Sean, a 42-year-old single father, goes to his physician complaining of nausea and chronic fatigue. He reports having felt fatigued and listless for about half a year, but he had attributed this to stress. He has lost considerable weight and, strangely, his skin has a healthy tan, even though he spends long hours at work and rarely ventures outside. His doctor finds very low blood pressure and a rapid, weak pulse. Blood tests show that Sean does not have anemia, but his plasma glucose, cortisol, and Na1 are low, and his plasma K+is high. His doctor orders an ACTH stimulation test, in which Sean’s secretion of cortisol is measured after he is given a synthetic form of ACTH.
(a) What would account for Sean’s low plasma Na+and high plasma K+?
(b) What is the reason for doing an ACTH stimulation test?
(c) Which gland is primarily affected if ACTH does not cause a normal elevation of cortisol secretion? What is this abnormality called?
(d) Which gland is primarily affected if ACTH does cause an elevation of cortisol secretion?
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