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Research Article Free access | 10.1172/JCI106042

Parotid fluid cortisol and cortisone

Fred H. Katz and Ira L. Shannon

Department of Medicine, Loyola University Stritch School of Medicine, Hines, Illinois 60141

Section of Experimental Dentistry, U. S. Air Force School of Aerospace Medicine, Brooks Air Force Base, Texas 78235

Find articles by Katz, F. in: PubMed | Google Scholar

Department of Medicine, Loyola University Stritch School of Medicine, Hines, Illinois 60141

Section of Experimental Dentistry, U. S. Air Force School of Aerospace Medicine, Brooks Air Force Base, Texas 78235

Find articles by Shannon, I. in: PubMed | Google Scholar

Published May 1, 1969 - More info

Published in Volume 48, Issue 5 on May 1, 1969
J Clin Invest. 1969;48(5):848–855. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI106042.
© 1969 The American Society for Clinical Investigation
Published May 1, 1969 - Version history
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Abstract

Parotid fluid corticosteroids, substantially comprised of cortisol and cortisone, were previously demonstrated to rise to far greater levels 4 hr after administration of ACTH than they did in the third trimester of pregnancy, although the plasma total corticosteroid concentrations were similar in these two states. It was therefore suggested that only nonproteinbound corticosteroid gains access to parotid fluid. In the present study parotid fluid cortisol and cortisone and plasma dialyzable cortisol concentrations have been measured in normal men before and 2 hr after 40 U ACTH, and, in another group, before and after 10 days of diethystilbestrol (5 mg daily). Total plasma cortisol rose from a mean of 6.3 to 17.9 μg/100 ml after ACTH and from 14.6 to 39.4 mg/100 ml after the estrogen. However parotid fluid cortisol plus cortisone rose from 0.8 to 2.6 μg/100 ml after ACTH and to only 2.2 after estrogen. This rise resembled that of the plasma dialyzable cortisol (control 0.4, ACTH 1.8, estrogen 1.2 μg/100 ml) rather than the increase in total plasma cortisol which was over twice as high after estrogen as after ACTH. Thus parotid fluid corticosteroids seem to be a good measure of nonprotein-bound corticosteroid, the cortisol available to the cell. The total amount of cortisol plus cortisone excreted is approximately constant, independent of parotid fluid flow rate. Cortisone exceeds cortisol in parotid fluid in the basal state, but after ACTH the situation is reversed.

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