RESUMO
BACKGROUND AND AIM: Reduction of serum sex steroid levels has been reported to occur after the administration of beta-adrenergic medication. In that beta-adrenergic blockade is a central pathophysiologic feature of asthma, this study was done to explore the possibility of hormonal alteration in asthma. METHODS: Sex steroids obtained from 22 postmenopausal asthmatic and 22 age-matched, postmenopausal, nonasthmatic women were assayed. No subject had received estrogens, progestins, or oral corticosteroids for 120 days before the study. RESULTS: Mean dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate (DHEAS; p < 0.002), dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA; p < 0.03), estradiol (p < 0.02), and estrone (p < 0.02) levels were lower in asthmatic patients compared with nonasthmatic subjects. Results could not be accounted for by current medication. Patients with asthma demonstrated no decrease in 17-hydroxyprogesterone or cortisol compared with nonasthmatic subjects, limiting findings to the delta 5, and not the delta 4, steroidogenic pathway. In a second phase of the study, DHEAS was measured before and after 3 days of oral beta-agonist stimulation in eight postmenopausal asthmatic women. Serum DHEAS concentration increased in eight of eight subjects, from a mean of 28.6 +/- 19.9 micrograms/dl (mean +/- SD) to 40.7 +/- 24.8 micrograms/dl (p = 0.002). Serum cortisol concentration was unchanged. CONCLUSION: The results indicate that postmenopausal asthmatic women have lower serum levels of adrenally derived sex steroids than their nonasthmatic peers and that this anomaly may be ameliorated by adrenergic stimulation.