Declining thyroid autoantibodies during treatment and decreased lymphocytic infiltration after treatment of patients with Graves' disease suggest immunosuppressive actions of antithyroid drugs. However, the recent report of similar relapse rates after low and high dose carbimazole treatment of Graves' disease seems to contradict the immunosuppression thesis. We therefore determined the intrathyroidal methimazole concentrations with a high performance liquid chromatography method in 17 patients undergoing subtotal thyroid resection for relapsing Graves' disease.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA serum sample of an outpatient, under long-term amiodarone (AM) treatment was submitted for routine checkup of thyroid function parameters. It revealed the pattern of euthyroid dysalbuminemic hyperthyroxinemia. Since no results have been published so far covering the influence of amiodarone on the specific thyroxine binding proteins, we undertook a prospective study to investigate 28 amiodarone patients, comparing these with a series of age and sex matched euthyroid subjects.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSeveral lines of evidence support an etiological role of iodine for the initiation and perpetuation of autoimmune thyroid disease. However, varying relapse rates after increased iodine supplementation have been reported for Graves' disease. Furthermore the effects of iodine on the intensity of human autoimmune thyroiditis have previously only been investigated by indirect parameters and actions of iodine on thyroid function and a possible enhancement of the intrathyroidal autoimmune process in Graves' disease are difficult to separate in previous studies.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFExp Clin Endocrinol
December 1991
This work describes a simple photometric determination of the iodine concentration in thyroid tissue, a method based on the well-known catalytic Sandell-Kolthoff reaction. The modified ceric arsenite reaction is very sensitive and does not require complicated laboratory equipment. It can be performed in any routine clinical laboratory if instructions are followed strictly.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFActa Med Austriaca
September 1991
The euthyroid hyperthyroxinemia (EHT) is characterized on the one hand by a normal basal THS or TRH-TSH response but also by high plasma values of total thyroxine (TT4) on the other. However if only TT4 is assessed, "hyperthyroidism" may be diagnosed erroneously. EHT may be caused by an increase of specific thyroxine binding proteins which may be hereditary (permanent) or acquired (transient).
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