A disease caused by excessive secretion of the hormone cortisol by the adrenal glands. Among the signs and symptoms of Cushing's syndrome are: protein depletion, causing muscle wasting and weakness; fragility of the blood vessels, causing increased susceptibility to bruising; decalcification of the bones, causing spinal curvature; occasional biochemical disorders such as diabetes; and---most obvious of all---the "moon face" and "buffalo hump" caused by facial obesity and redistribution of body fat. Women also suffer masculinization: Excessive hair grows on the body, the voice deepens, and menstruation ceases.

Cushing's syndrome is relatively rare, is more common in women than in men, and develops most frequently in women over 30, particularly after a pregnancy. The complicated disorders of the body seen in Cushing's syndrome---all due to an excess of cortisol hormones---are nowadays more commonly seen as a result of long-term treatment with large doses of cortisone or similar steroid drugs. People who depend on steroids to control such conditions as asthma, rheumatoid arthritis, or colitis can develop the characteristic "moon face" of Cushing's syndrome as an early sign of chronic over dosage.

Apart from excessive steroid treatment, the cause of Cushing's syndrome is either a small tumor of one of the adrenal glands (which lie just above the kidneys) or a tumor of the pituitary gland leading to excessive production of the adrenal-stimulating hormone ACTH. In either case, the tumor must be treated. Pituitary tumors must be surgically removed or, if this proves impossible, treated with supervoltage irradiation. Adrenal tumors can usually be treated by surgery.

The diagnosis is made by careful biochemical assessment of hormone output and, in particular, by measurement of the urinary excretion of cortisone breakdown products over a given period. Skull X-ray studies (to reveal a possible tumor of the pituitary gland) and complicated blood tests also are necessary. Once the diagnosis is made, drugs are necessary to compensate for the chemical, mineral, and other hormonal deficiencies.

When the diseased adrenal gland is removed surgically along the tumor, the remaining gland is often found to be shrunken. Thus, supplements of the correct amount of cortisone-like hormone are necessary until the other gland recovers function; they may be necessary throughout life.