Important interaction exists between thyroid function, weight control, and obesity. Several mechanisms seem to be involved, and in studies of groups of people the pattern of thyroid function tests depends on the balance of obesity and underlying thyroid disease in the cohort studied. Obese people with a normal thyroid gland tend to have activation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-thyroid axis with higher serum TSH and thyroid hormones in serum. On the other hand, small differences in thyroid function are associated with up to 5 kg difference in body weight. The weight loss after therapy of overt hypothyroidism is caused by excretion of water bound in tissues (myxoedema). Many patients treated for hyperthyroidism experience a gain of more weight than they lost during the active phase of the disease. The mechanism for this excessive weight gain has not been fully elucidated. New studies on the relation between L-T3 therapy and weight control are discussed. The interaction between weight control and therapy of thyroid disease is important to many patients and it should be studied in more detail.
Serum Tg is widely used in the control of thyroid cancer but also in the diagnosis of certain other thyroid diseases. Serum Tg may be useful in the characterization of the iodine status of a population, but little is known about determinants of serum Tg levels. We examined a random selection of 4,649 subjects from 2 regions in Denmark with different iodine status. Thyroid volume and structure were determined with ultrasonography, and thyroid function tests and Tg analysis were performed. The factor with the closest association with serum Tg levels was thyroid volume at ultrasonography (P < 0.001). Also thyroid nodularity (P < 0.001) and iodine excretion (P < 0.001) had close associations to serum Tg, even after adjusting for the influence of the other parameters. Thyroid dysfunction had a less pronounced but still highly significant association with serum Tg (P < 0.001), but no relation was found to serum TSH in general. The association with age seemed to rely on differences in the prevalence of thyroid abnormalities, and men had lower Tg levels than women of the same age. There was a marked difference in serum Tg between the two regions with slightly different iodine excretion also after adjusting for the other factors. In conclusion, serum Tg reflects thyroid abnormalities and thyroid function and is a sensitive marker of iodine deficiency in a population.
Transport of iodine in the mammary gland into breast milk plays a central role in various fields of prevention of thyroid diseases. First, a sufficient content of iodine in the mother's milk is necessary for normal brain development in the breastfed child. This is attained by expression during lactation in the mammary gland of the sodium iodide symporter (NIS), also responsible for iodine transport in the thyroid. Milk iodine content varies with the iodine intake of the mother, and urinary iodine excretion in groups of mothers seems to be a valuable indicator of the iodine status of their breastfed children. Second, iodine in dairy products provides a considerable part of iodine intake in many populations. Thiocyanate from rapeseed feeding of cows decreases milk iodine content, probably by competitive inhibition of NIS in the mammary gland. Alterations in feeding of dairy cows may alter the iodine content of consumer milk, and this may influence the risk of thyroid diseases in the population. Thiocyanate inhibition of iodine transport into milk may also be operative in humans with a high thiocyanate intake. This could further impair iodine status in breastfed children in low-iodine intake areas of the world. It can be speculated that a low-iodine content of mother's milk because of inhibition of NIS in the mammary gland may be one factor of importance for development of myxedematous cretinism.
A previous register linkage study showed an increased risk of thyroid cancer among patients previously discharged from a hospital with a diagnosis of a benign thyroid disorder. In this study, we have reviewed all available medical records, first to validate the earlier result and second to describe the symptomatology of patients with a history of benign thyroid disorder prior to the cancer diagnosis. The previous study identified 189 patients with a benign and subsequent malignant thyroid disorder. Medical records were obtainable for 156 of these patients and were reviewed. For 104 patients, benign and malignant thyroid diseases were metachronous (a clearly separated disease history of the benign and malignant diseases), and for 48 patients synchronous. In 4 cases, thyroid cancer could not be confirmed. Among patients with metachronous thyroid disorders, all major benign thyroid disorders were represented including hot nodules, diffuse and multinodular toxic and nontoxic goiter. Symptoms preceding diagnosis of thyroid cancer included growth of goiter/nodules, globulus, stridor, hoarseness, and metastasis. No major differences were found among patients with metachronous and synchronous benign and malignant thyroid disorder, apart from the fact that all metastases were found among metachronous cases. This study confirmed the conclusion that patients with a previous history of goiter or nodules have an increased risk of thyroid cancer. However, thyroid cancer still occurs too infrequently to warrant screening in all patients with a previous history of goiter or nodules.
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