Hyperadrenalemia

What is hyperadrialeninemia? Hyperadrenalineemia is a pathological condition in which the level of total adrenaline in the blood is increased above 50% of the normal value. This is a rare disease that mainly affects men aged 20-50 years. By itself, hyperadrinalinemia does not have



**Hyperadrenaline** is a condition in which an increased concentration of the hormone adrenaline or its precursor norepinephrine is observed in the patient’s blood. These substances are produced from small amounts of the hormone norepinephrine in nerve tissue. During pregnancy, that is, during childbirth, after the birth of a child, a woman’s body uses high doses of norepinephrine to maintain the normal functioning of the body of the mother and her fetus. This condition is called hypercatecholaminemia.

**Hypercataneolimia** is a hyperfunction of noradrenergic nerve fibers, accompanied by an increase in the concentration of catecholamines in the blood and an increase in the content of adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH), which regulates the activity of the adrenal cortex.

Increased activity of the sympathoadrenal system usually occurs against the background of stress, physical activity, surgery, or during acute inflammatory reactions. High levels of catecholamine hormones have been shown to stimulate weight loss and are inversely related to central fat mass.

The causes of hypercatecholalemia can vary and depend on the cause of the excessive production of catecholamines. It could be:

1. Physiological hypercatecholemia occurs in women during pregnancy or after natural childbirth, when the body produces a large amount of norepinephrine - adrenaline. 2. Artificial hypercatecholia