Yes, as a matter of fact several come to mind. Monty Hall the MC of "lets Make A Deal" has Crohns disease as does Mike McCready of Peal Jam, Shannon Daugherty of 90210 and the late Curt Cobain of Nirvana.
I believe the term "locked-in syndrome" refers to when a celebrity is under house arrest.
Daniel Tosh
poly sparkes
Roger Moore has syncope
I don't think anyone would know that ?.
yes orlando bloom
Cushings syndrome or Cushings disease is generally caused by a tumor on the pituitary gland and results metabolic disorders such as insulin resistance, obesity, diabetes, long hair coat, laminitis etc depending on the animal.
Yes
I believe the term "locked-in syndrome" refers to when a celebrity is under house arrest.
There have been no reports of specific celebrities publicly disclosing that they suffer from Gardner syndrome. This is likely due to the private and sensitive nature of medical conditions.
A pituitary tumor can cause Cushings, however a swelling that compresses the pituitary most usually will cause decreased function, not increased function as seen in Cushings. If the pituitary hormones that direct the adrenals fail, it is called Addisons' Disease.
Of course. Anything's possible.
A test that administers dexamethasone to differentiate between normal and cushings Normals will be suppressed then return to normal with a low dose of dexamethasone. Affected will be suppressed with a high dose of dexamethasone
Cushing's syndrome involves the overproduction of cortisol, commonly caused by a pituitary tumor that stimulates excess cortisol production from the adrenal glands. This leads to a variety of symptoms, including weight gain, high blood pressure, and muscle weakness.
Cushings has MANY symptoms, but itching, flaky, dry skin are some of the symptoms.
You have to keep the patient on maintenance therapy for long time. In case of any stress, the patient lands up in hypotension. You have to give that extra salt and additional doses of corticosteroids. You have to wait till the adrenal cortex of the patient takes over.
Any syndrome named after its discoverer.