Objective: Thyroxine (T4) is deiodinated to triiodothyronine (T3) by the hepatic type I iodothyronine deiodinase, a selenoprotein that is sensitive to selenium (Se) deficiency. After severe injury, T4 deiodination is decreased, leading to the low T3 syndrome. Injury increases free radical production, which inactivates the iodothyronine deiodinase.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTSH initiates its action by binding to specific membrane receptors' thyroid cells and induces activation of the adenylate cyclase-cAMP cascade. The factors involved in the regulation of TSH receptors are poorly known, except for the TSH dose-dependent regulatory effect. The fact that the thyroid gland of Graves' patients has a normal density of TSH receptors with suppressed TSH and high T4 and T3 levels suggests a modulatory role of thyroid hormones on TSH receptors.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSome years ago, we reported that colloid goiters could be produced experimentally in mice and rats by injection of TSH over a few days in the presence of ample iodine supply. This clearly showed that colloid accumulation and intense TSH stimulation are not mutually exclusive. In the present study, large colloid goiters, sharing many morphological and biochemical characteristics with human colloid goiters, were induced in rats and mice by treatment with 5,5-diphenyl-2-thiohydantoin (DPTH).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe relationships between the different circulating thyrotropin receptor antibodies (TSH-R-abs) in autoimmune thyroid disease (AITD) are complex. In order to investigate them, we have developed an assay for the simultaneous measurement of three types of TSH-R-abs: TSH-binding inhibiting immunoglobulin (TBII): thyroid-stimulating antibody (TS-ab) and TSH-stimulation blocking antibody (TSB-ab). A large number of patients with Graves' disease (GD)--untreated and treated--Hashimoto's thyroiditis (HT), primary myxedema (PM) and non-immune goiter (NIG) were investigated.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: To characterize the pulsatile secretions of luteinizing hormone (LH), follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH), and prolactin (PRL) during the menstrual cycle and to statistically evaluate their secretory concomitance.
Design: Pulsatility study performed during the midfollicular and midluteal phases of a same menstrual cycle, blood samples being collected every 10 minutes for 6 hours.
Setting: Participants investigated in the Division of Endocrinology, University Hospital.
Acta Endocrinol (Copenh)
January 1992
Aging in rats is characterized by low plasma concentrations of thyroid hormones with unchanged levels of TSH, suggesting an altered TSH action in addition to the impaired regulation of TSH secretion. To evaluate TSH action we determined TSH binding to thyroid membranes of young and old male rats (3-4 and 24-26 months of age), as well as the activity of adenylate cyclase in basal and stimulated conditions. Saturation analyses of [125I]-bTSH to thyroid membranes in the presence of increasing quantities of unlabelled bTSH (0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFActa Endocrinol (Copenh)
March 1991
Aging is associated with various neuroendocrine alterations, including in the rat a hypersecretion of PRL with maintained ovulations (repetitive pseudo-pregnancy) and a reduced activity of the hypothalamic dopaminergic neurons with loss of the neuron responsiveness to PRL, suggestive of age-related alterations in PRL receptors. In this study we have investigated PRL binding sites in the hypothalamus as well as in the mammary glands, the ovaries and the liver of young and old nulliparous female rats. The old rats (26-28 months) displayed spontaneous repetitive pseudopregnancies and they were compared with young (4-6 months) pseudopregnant rats; the binding studies were performed by saturation analysis using 125I-oPRL as ligand and particulate membrane preparations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFetal exposure to cyproterone acetate (CPA), while allowing, normal sexual morphogenesis, has previously been shown to lead to functional endocrine abnormalities in adult rats of both sexes. Because of this, we examined morphologically and morphometrically the hypothalamic nuclei involved in sexual dimorphism as well as the pituitary lactotropes of rats exposed in utero from day 15 to 20 of gestation to CPA. Male and female offspring was studied at the age of 70-80 days.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe compared unbound (free) testosterone radioimmunoassay concentrations in plasma and saliva from men, using a direct radioimmunoassay kit involving a ligand analog of testosterone as tracer. The assay failed to reveal detectable testosterone concentrations in saliva. In plasma the free testosterone levels were about 4 times lower than those obtained by calculation or ultrafiltration methods.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFActa Endocrinol (Copenh)
May 1990
The sex-related differences observed in the regulation of TSH secretion was further investigated by determination of the densities of T3 nuclear and TRH membrane receptors as well as the activity of 5'-deiodinase (5'D) in the anterior pituitary gland of adult male and female rats. The respective modulatory roles of androgens and estrogens on these parameters were evaluated by similar determinations carried out in castrated and in estrogen-treated male rats. The density of pituitary T3 and TRH receptors and the activity of 5'D type II were significantly greater in the female than in the male rats.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFVirchows Arch B Cell Pathol Incl Mol Pathol
February 1991
Severe structural changes leading to marked alterations in secretory activity are known to occur in the pituitary-thyroid axis 1 month after induction of postpuberal streptozocin (SZ)-diabetes. However, SZ-diabetic rats of different age groups have not been compared, nor has the maturity of the pituitary and thyroid glands at the onset of diabetes been correlated with the type and evolution of functional and structural changes. We thus induced diabetes in 1-month (prepuberal of 3-month (postpuberal) old male rats and compared diabetic with control groups 4 and 8 months after SZ or saline injection.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFStreptozocin-induced diabetes (STZ-D) in rats is associated with marked hypothyroidism characterized by functional impairment and structural lesions of the pituitary-thyroid axis. Degenerative axonal lesions, which can be prevented by insulin administration, have been reported in the mediobasal hypothalamus (MBH) of STZ-D rats. However, direct evidence connecting anatomic MBH lesions with functional impairment is still missing.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn the present study, changes in thyroid follicular cell volume and its regulation have been investigated during the early involution of a hyperplastic goitre. Male Wistar rats were administered an iodine deficient diet for 6 months with propylthiouracil (PTU, 0.15%) during the last two months.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAlterations with age in the control of thyrotropin (TSH) secretion by thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH) were evaluated at the hypothalamic and pituitary levels in young (3-5 months) and old (22-24 months) male rats. In the hypothalamus, TRH was quantified in the median eminence and in the mediobasal hypothalamus; in the adenohypophysis the membrane receptors for TRH were evaluated as well as the accumulation of TRH in the gland. As for TSH, its concentration was determined in the anterior pituitary gland and in plasma.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAging is characterized by a decreased secretion of thyroid hormones in rats associated with unchanged plasma TSH suggestive of impairments in the hypothalamo-pituitary-thyroid axis. Since it is known that pituitary T3 is more determinant on TSH secretion than plasma T3, we measured in young (4 months) and old (26 months) male rats the concentration of T3 in the anterior pituitary gland and found that it was similar in young and old animals despite the low circulating levels of thyroid hormones. This was suggestive of age-related differences in the intrapituitary T4 to T3 conversion.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAging is characterized by changes in neuroendocrine/endocrine functions which are manifest in female reproductive physiology and less perceptible in other functions such as thyroid, adrenal or growth/metabolic functions. The contribution of each level of the axis - hypothalamus, adenohypophysis or peripheral tissues - is not clearly established. Functional impairments with age are recognized in the peripheral glands (gonad, thyroid, adrenal) as well as in the pituitary, but increasing evidence is accumulating for a marked contribution of the hypothalamus in the age-associated endocrine changes observed in animals and humans.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFActa Endocrinol (Copenh)
January 1988
The pattern of thyroid function changes following severe trauma was assessed prospectively in 35 patients during the first 5 days after injury. Patients were divided into 2 groups to evaluate the effect of head injury: group I, patients with severe head injury; group II, patients with multiple injuries without head injury. The results demonstrate a low T3 and low T4 syndrome throughout the study, with decreases in both total and free levels of T3 and T4, normal or increased rT3 levels, and normal TSH levels.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA reduced secretion of thyroid hormones with age has been documented in humans and animals with no substantial increase in TSH secretion, which may be indicative of an age-related impairment of the pituitary sensitivity to the negative control exerted by thyroid hormones. We have evaluated in rats the influence of sex and age on pituitary T3 nuclear receptors--known to be determinant in the regulation of TSH secretion--as well as on T3 concentration in the pituitary gland. As regards sex, the density of T3 receptors and the concentration of T3 in pituitary gland and plasma were greater in females than in males whereas pituitary and plasma TSH concentrations were less.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe density of T3 nuclear receptors is known to vary with tissues and physiopathological conditions, but the factors involved in their regulation are still unknown. We have previously shown in the anterior pituitary gland that T3 modulates its own receptors; the density of T3 receptors in hypothyroid rats is half that in normal rats, and one injection of T3 is able to restore normal density of T3 receptors within 1-3 h. To determine whether T3 has a direct action on the synthesis of its nuclear receptor, the effect of cycloheximide (Cy) on T3-induced nuclear receptor was studied.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThyroid disorders are known to manifest occasionally as isolated psychiatric disorders. In order to determine whether thyroid dysfunctions could play a significant role in the pathogenesis of psychiatric disorders in the elderly, the prevalence of thyroid disorders was compared in a group of psychogeriatric patients and in a group of nonpsychiatric elderly patients. Thyroid function screening was performed in 157 patients consecutively admitted to a psychogeriatric unit, and the prevalence of hypothyroidism was determined in the different groups of psychiatric disorders (senile and multi-infarct dementia, organic brain syndrome of other etiologies, psychotic depression, neurotic depression, chronic delusional state, acute confusional state, and personality disorder).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAn influence of thyroid status on the secretory activity of hypothalamic dopaminergic neurons was observed in adult rats and its involvement in the regulation of prolactin (PRL) secretion was examined. The secretory activity of the tuberoinfundibular dopaminergic (TIDA) neurons was evaluated by measurement of dopamine (DA) biosynthesis in the neurons and DA release into hypophysial portal blood. The accumulation of DA and PRL in the adenohypophysis as well as PRL concentration in plasma were also estimated, and the various parameters were studied in thyroidectomized (TX), sham TX, TX rats treated for 7 days with thyroxine (T4; 20 micrograms/kg body weight daily) as well as in intact rats treated similarly with T4.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFVirchows Arch B Cell Pathol Incl Mol Pathol
September 1987
Streptozotocin diabetes in rats is associated with reduced function of the hypothalamo-pituitary-thyroid axis. The structure and hormone secretion of the thyroid and pituitary glands were studied in adult male rats 1 month after streptozotocin injection. The thyroid of diabetic rats was characterized by decreased follicle area and epithelial thickness.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWhether there is a link between the antiarrhythmic efficacy of amiodarone and its blocking effect on the peripheral conversion of tetraiodothyronine (T4) to triiodothyronine (T3) is uncertain. If such a link exists, oral intake of T3 during amiodarone treatment could reverse, at least partially, the antiarrhythmic efficacy of amiodarone. To assess the safety of oral intake of T3 during amiodarone treatment and gain further insight into the relation between the antiarrhythmic action of amiodarone and its metabolic effect on T4, 7 patients (aged 32 to 62 years) with multiple ventricular premature complexes (VPCs) but no underlying heart disease were studied.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLRH and its agonists have been shown to exert both stimulatory and inhibitory effects on testicular function. In the present study, the dose and length of treatment were tested to determine the appearance of the stimulatory and inhibitory effects of LRH agonist on testicular axis including the three levels. Two doses of an agonist of LRH, 40 and 100 ng/100 g body weight (buserelin, 'agonist'), were administered daily for 1 to 15 days to adult male rats.
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