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Research Article Free access | 10.1172/JCI109601

Hypothyroidism as a Late Sequela in Patients with Graves' Disease Treated with Antithyroid Agents

Lawrence C. Wood and Sidney H. Ingbar

Thorndike Laboratory of Harvard Medical School and Department of Medicine, Beth Israel Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts 02215

Thyroid Unit, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts 02114

Find articles by Wood, L. in: PubMed | Google Scholar

Thorndike Laboratory of Harvard Medical School and Department of Medicine, Beth Israel Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts 02215

Thyroid Unit, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts 02114

Find articles by Ingbar, S. in: PubMed | Google Scholar

Published November 1, 1979 - More info

Published in Volume 64, Issue 5 on November 1, 1979
J Clin Invest. 1979;64(5):1429–1436. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI109601.
© 1979 The American Society for Clinical Investigation
Published November 1, 1979 - Version history
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Abstract

In 1971, thyroid function was evaluated in 15 unselected patients whose only therapy for diffuse toxic goiter was a course of thionamide drug treatment completed 20-27 yr earlier. One patient was frankly hypothyroid by clinical and laboratory criteria. The remaining 14 patients appeared clinically euthyroid and had a normal serum thyroxine (T4) concentration and thyroid radioiodine uptake (RAIU). Nevertheless, only 6 of 14 appeared to be entirely normal according to more refined criteria. The serum thyrotropin (TSH) concentration was markedly elevated in one patient and above the normal range (1.6±2.0; mean±2 SD) in five others. Thyroid stimulation with exogenous TSH revealed subnormal responses of the serum T4I, RAIU, or both, in 7 of 11 patients tested. An abnormal iodideperchlorate discharge test was found in 5 of 10 patients and appeared most abnormal in patients with abnormal RAIU responses to TSH. Fluorescent antimicrosomal antibody was found in the serum of 12 of the 15 patients, in contrast to an expected frequency of 7% in normal individuals of the same age.

By the time a second major follow-up study was completed in 1978, two additional patients had become frankly hypothyroid. A third subject met accepted criteria for subclinical hypothyroidism. One of these subjects had had a clearly elevated serum TSH concentration in 1972, and the remaining two had exhibited the highest responses of serum TSH (36, 26 μU/ml) to thyrotropin-releasing hormone among 10 patients tested in 1972.

One patient developed recurrent thyrotoxicosis in 1978, 25 yr after the onset of his first and only other apparent episode of hyperthyroidism. This patient was the only one who demonstrated a subnormal response to thyrotropin-releasing hormone in 1972. The remaining nine subjects that could be studied in 1978 exhibited varying combinations of abnormalities of thyroid function.

It is concluded that progressive failure of thyroid function is a common occurence in long-standing Graves' disease, and it is suggested that this results from concomitant chronic thyroiditis. We postulate that this inherent tendency toward thyroid failure is exaggerated by surgery or radioactive iodine, explaining the progressive increase in, and inordinate frequency of, hypothyroidism after ablative modes of therapy in diffuse toxic goiter.

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