When Your Body Can't Make Its Own Cortisol
Adrenal insufficiency (AI) is a condition where the adrenal glands — two small glands that sit on top of your kidneys — fail to produce enough cortisol. Cortisol is not just a "stress hormone." It is essential for blood pressure regulation, immune function, blood sugar control, and the basic energy systems that keep you functioning.
People with AI take hydrocortisone tablets every day to replace what their glands cannot produce. Getting the dose right is critical. But unlike insulin in diabetes — where blood sugar gives a real-time readout — there is no equivalent live feed for cortisol. A blood test taken at one moment in time only tells you what cortisol looked like at that exact moment, not whether your body has been adequately supplied over the past weeks or months.
The Limits of the Current Approach
Doctors currently rely on symptoms and occasional blood tests to judge whether a patient's hydrocortisone dose is right. But symptoms are subjective. Fatigue might mean undertreatment — or it might mean stress, poor sleep, or a dozen other things. Overtreated patients often feel fine in the short term, while quietly accumulating damage to blood pressure and metabolism.
But here's the twist: cortisol leaves a trace in your hair as it grows. Hair grows roughly one centimeter per month, and cortisol absorbed into the hair shaft stays there — a built-in timeline of your body's hormone exposure over the past several weeks.
Hair as a Long-Term Hormone Diary
Think of each centimeter of hair as a page in a diary. The outermost segment reflects recent weeks. The segment closer to the scalp reflects the weeks before that. By analyzing the first three centimeters of hair near the scalp, researchers can estimate cortisol exposure over roughly the past three months.
This is called hair cortisol concentration (HCC), and unlike a blood test, it cannot be affected by the stress of a hospital visit or the timing of a morning pill. It reflects what your body actually experienced over an extended period.
Researchers published findings in Frontiers in Medicine after studying 64 adults with hydrocortisone-treated adrenal insufficiency, matched against 64 healthy controls. They measured hair cortisol levels and compared them against symptoms of undertreatment (severe fatigue, significant pain) and signs of overtreatment (high blood pressure, elevated blood sugar, notable weight gain).
They also looked at whether different types of adrenal insufficiency — primary AI (where the adrenal gland itself fails) versus secondary AI (where the brain signal telling the gland to work fails) — produced different patterns.
Numbers That Tell the Difference
The results showed clear separation. Patients who were undertreated had hair cortisol levels averaging 2.1 nanograms per gram of hair. Overtreated patients averaged 14.1 ng/g. That's a more than six-fold difference — a gap large enough to be clinically meaningful.
The test was particularly strong at identifying patients with severe fatigue and pain from undertreatment, with accuracy scores (called AUC) of 0.906 and 0.898 respectively — meaning it correctly identified undertreated patients nearly 90% of the time. It also performed well at detecting signs of overtreatment-related high blood pressure.
This does not mean hair cortisol testing is ready to replace your current monitoring — but the accuracy numbers here are genuinely promising.
A Tool That Could Change Dose Conversations
Right now, if you go to an endocrinologist (a hormone specialist) and say "I feel exhausted all the time," there is often no objective test to confirm whether that exhaustion is from inadequate cortisol replacement. This research suggests that a hair sample collected at a clinic visit could provide a three-month cortisol record that helps answer that question in a way a one-time blood draw simply cannot.
Researchers also found that hair cortisol correlated with BMI, blood pressure, and hydrocortisone dose — suggesting it may reflect a wider picture of how well the body is managing with its current regimen.
A Few Honest Caveats
This was a cross-sectional study of 64 patients — a relatively small sample, observed at one point in time rather than tracked over months. The study cannot prove that adjusting doses based on hair cortisol leads to better long-term outcomes. Hair cortisol can also be affected by cosmetic treatments, some medications, and hair color — all factors that need further study.
The authors recommend prospective studies — where patients are monitored over time and doses are actually adjusted based on hair cortisol readings — to determine whether the test can improve real-world health outcomes. If those studies confirm what this research suggests, hair cortisol testing could eventually become a routine part of managing adrenal insufficiency, giving both patients and doctors a more honest, longer-range view of whether treatment is truly working.