Iodized oil (1 ml im) was given to 58 goitrous patients from a mildly iodine-deficient area in Greece. Goiter size, urinary iodine, and serum T4, T3RU, T3, rT3, TSH, thyroxine-binding globulin (TBG), and thyroid autoantibodies were measured before and 1, 3, and 6 months after the injection. Goiter size decreased. Serum T4 remained relatively constant, but TBG decreased and therefore T3RU and FTI increased. Serum T3 and rT3 initially decreased (P less than 0.001) and then increased at the sixth month (P less than 0.001), both showing roughly parallel changes. Serum TSH, initially normal (1.42 +/- 0.11 (SEM) mU/liter), decreased to 0.65 +/- 0.01 and 0.76 +/- 0.05 mU/liter at the third and sixth month (difference from baseline P less than 0.001). Thyroid autoantibodies, both against thyroglobulin and the microsomal antigen, were undetectable before treatment, but became positive in 42.8% of the patients 3 and 6 months later. Three patients developed transient hyperthyroidism. This occurred 3 or 6 months after treatment, and was associated with high titers of thyroid autoantibodies. These results indicate that: 1) transient hyperthyroidism may occur after the administration of iodized oil, possibly because of thyroid tissue necrosis and leakage of hormones, and 2) serum TBG decreases after iodized oil, a finding not previously reported and one whose cause is not known.
Our results demonstrate that endothelial dysfunction of conduit arteries can be detected in patients with insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus without microalbuminuria, probably contributing to the high prevalence of atherosclerosis in these patients.
Serum thyroid hormones and antithyroid autoantibodies (AAB) were assayed in 87 randomly selected hypercholesterolemic persons compared to 80 controls with normal serum total cholesterol (TC). Of the 87 hypercholesterolemic persons 22 (25%) had positive AAB compared to 5 (6%) controls. Furthermore, 8 of the hypercholesterolemic patients had a serum TSH level above 5 mU/l, i.e. the had subclinical hypothyroidism, not diagnosed before, whereas thyroid function was normal in all normocholesterolemic persons. The new and unexpected finding was that the hypercholesterolemic persons had on average a significantly higher serum TSH than the controls, and this was true even when persons with positive AAB were excluded. There was a significant correlation between TC and serum TSH. It is concluded that hypothyroidism may not be an all-or-none phenomenon, and that many hypercholesterolemic persons with thyroid tests within the conventional normal range may have a slight impairment of their thyroid function.
Iodides in hyperthyroidism have a variable and unpredictable intensity and duration of antithyroid effect. Their antithyroid effect is smaller in normal controls. They have no important effect on the peripheral metabolism of thyroid hormones.
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