What does adrenal insufficiency actually feel like in daily life?
In this episode, Chloe and Alex explore a My Adrenal Life article titled “Adrenal Insufficiency: Medically Real Things Patients Are Rarely Told.” The discussion looks at the gap between the textbook definition of adrenal insufficiency and the real-world experiences many patients face every day.
Most people are taught that adrenal insufficiency is simply a condition treated with steroid replacement to prevent adrenal crisis. But staying alive and functioning well are very different outcomes. Cortisol is involved in far more than emergency stress responses. It helps regulate circulation, brain energy supply, immune signaling, digestion, and recovery from stress.
Chloe opens the episode with a scenario many patients recognize: sitting still while the heart pounds, hands tremble, and a sense of doom appears without any emotional trigger. From the outside, it can look like anxiety. Physiologically, however, the body may be relying on adrenaline because cortisol levels are insufficient.
One key topic is circulation. Cortisol helps blood vessels respond properly to adrenaline and maintain vascular tone. Without it, blood vessels may not constrict effectively when someone stands or exerts themselves. Blood can pool in the lower body, causing dizziness, fatigue, or near-fainting episodes even when blood pressure readings appear normal in a clinic.
The episode also explores how adrenal insufficiency can affect brain energy metabolism. The brain relies heavily on glucose, and cortisol helps maintain a steady supply. When cortisol is low, the brain may experience reduced fuel availability. This can lead to brain fog, slowed thinking, sensory sensitivity, irritability, and difficulty finding words.
Because these symptoms affect mood and cognition, they are often mistaken for anxiety or depression rather than metabolic stress.
Chloe and Alex also discuss the idea that adrenal crisis often develops gradually. Early warning signs may include nausea, light or sound sensitivity, cognitive slowing, or unusual fatigue long before a collapse occurs.
Another challenge is what the article calls the “normal labs fallacy.” Blood tests measure hormone levels at a single moment, but cortisol needs change constantly with activity, illness, emotional stress, and metabolic demand. People living with adrenal insufficiency must often manage these demands manually through medication timing and stress dosing.
The conversation also examines how cortisol and adrenaline interact. Cortisol normally stabilizes the body’s response to adrenaline. When cortisol is low, adrenaline may become unopposed, producing shaking, rapid heart rate, sweating, and symptoms that resemble panic attacks.
The episode also touches on infection, delayed crashes after exertion, emotional stress, digestive symptoms, and how cortisol helps regulate inflammation throughout the body.
Ultimately, the discussion reframes adrenal insufficiency as a condition that requires constant physiologic adjustment. Stability is not a fixed state but an ongoing balance between stress, activity, illness, and recovery.
Understanding this broader picture can help explain symptoms that often feel confusing or invisible to others.
Visit us at www.MyAdrenalLife.com and our Facebook Group.