Access the full text.
Sign up today, get DeepDyve free for 14 days.
R. Barton, M. Horan, J. Weijers, A. Sakkee, N. Roberts, C. Bezooijen (1993)
Cortisol production rate and the urinary excretion of 17-hydroxycorticosteroids, free cortisol, and 6 beta-hydroxycortisol in healthy elderly men and women.Journal of gerontology, 48 5
W. Pardridge (1987)
Plasma protein-mediated transport of steroid and thyroid hormones.The American journal of physiology, 252 2 Pt 1
Effect of proximal femur fracture on cortisol kinetics in old people . ( Abstract . )
Burke Burke, Beardwell Beardwell (1973)
Cushing's syndromeQuart J Med, New Series, 42
B. Passingham, R. Barton (1987)
Application of high-performance liquid chromatography to the measurement of cortisol secretion rate.Journal of chromatography, 416 1
G. Ligthart, J. Corberand, C. Fournier, P. Galanaud, W. Hijmans, B. Kennès, H. Müller-hermelink, G. Steinmann (1984)
Admission criteria for immunogerontological studies in man: The senieur protocolMechanisms of Ageing and Development, 28
C. Cope, E. Black (1959)
Reliability of Some Adrenal Function TestsBritish Medical Journal, 2
Laxmi Srivastava, E. Werk, Katherine Thrasher, L. Sholiton, Richard Kozera, Wolfram Nolten, HARVEY Knowles (1973)
Plasma cortisone concentration as measured by radioimmunoassay.The Journal of clinical endocrinology and metabolism, 36 5
P. Goforth, Gudas Cj (1980)
Effects of steroids on wound healing: a review of the literature.The Journal of foot surgery, 19 1
I. Greatorex (1988)
Proximal femoral fractures: an assessment of the outcome of health care in elderly people.Community medicine, 10 3
T. Young, A. Gibbs (1984)
Prognostic factors for the elderly with proximal femoral fracture.Archives of Emergency Medicine, 1
H. Doncaster, R. Barton, M. Horan, N. Roberts (1993)
Factors influencing cortisol-adrenocorticotrophin relationships in elderly women with upper femur fractures.The Journal of trauma, 34 1
C. Cope, E. Black (1958)
The behaviour of 14c-cortisol and estimation of cortisol production rate in man.Clinical science, 17 1
K. Frayn, H. Stoner, R. Barton, D. Heath, C. Galasko (1983)
Persistence of high plasma glucose, insulin and cortisol concentrations in elderly patients with proximal femoral fractures.Age and ageing, 12 1
P. Stewart, R. Valentino, A. Wallace, D. Burt, CedricH.L. Shackleton, C. Edwards (1987)
MINERALOCORTICOID ACTIVITY OF LIQUORICE: 11-BETA-HYDROXYSTEROID DEHYDROGENASE DEFICIENCY COMES OF AGEThe Lancet, 330
C. Cope, J. Pearson (1965)
Clinical value of the cortisol secretion rateJournal of Clinical Pathology, 18
R. Barton, B. Passingham (1981)
Effect of binding to plasma proteins on the interpretation of plasma cortisol concentrations after accidental injury.Clinical science, 61 4
Y. Ichikawa (1966)
Metabolism of cortisol-4-C14 in patients with infectious and collagen diseasesMetabolism-clinical and Experimental, 15
N. Roberts, R. Barton, M. Horan, A. White (1990)
Adrenal function after upper femoral fracture in elderly people: persistence of stimulation and the roles of adrenocorticotrophic hormone and immobility.Age and ageing, 19 5
(1967)
Statistical Methods, Sixth Edition
N. Gold, E. Singleton, D. Macfarlane, F. Moore (1958)
Quantitative determination of the urinary cortisol metabolites, tetrahydro F, allo-tetrahydro F and tetrahydro E: effects of adrenocorticotropin and complex trauma in the human.The Journal of clinical investigation, 37 6
A. Meikle, H. Takiguchi, S. Mizutani, F. Tyler, C. West (1969)
Urinary cortisol excretion determined by competitive protein-binding radioassay: a test of adrenal cortical function.The Journal of laboratory and clinical medicine, 74 5
C. Mendel (1989)
The free hormone hypothesis: a physiologically based mathematical model.Endocrine reviews, 10 3
Horan Horan, Fisher Fisher, Barton Barton (1991)
Effect of proximal femur fracture on cortisol kinetics in old people(Abstract.) Circ Shock, 34
Abstract. Cortisol production rate and urinary free cortisol excretion have been measured in healthy elderly women and elderly women about two weeks after upper femur fracture. Plasma cortisol was determined mid‐morning, at the start of urine collection. All three variables were higher in the injured patients than in the control subjects. Urinary free cortisol excretion showed the greatest rise and was correlated with cortisol production rate in the patients. In the control subjects there was no correlation and nearly all the points fell below the regression line for the injured patients, indicating that urinary free cortisol excretion rose in relation to cortisol production rate after injury. Measurement of creatinine clearance showed that this was not due to an increased glomerular filtration rate, and a possible explanation is decreased metabolic clearance of cortisol. Plasma cortisol was not significantly correlated with either cortisol production rate or urinary free cortisol excretion.
European Journal of Clinical Investigation – Wiley
Published: Mar 1, 1993
Read and print from thousands of top scholarly journals.
Already have an account? Log in
Bookmark this article. You can see your Bookmarks on your DeepDyve Library.
To save an article, log in first, or sign up for a DeepDyve account if you don’t already have one.
Copy and paste the desired citation format or use the link below to download a file formatted for EndNote
Access the full text.
Sign up today, get DeepDyve free for 14 days.
All DeepDyve websites use cookies to improve your online experience. They were placed on your computer when you launched this website. You can change your cookie settings through your browser.