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Metabolism: Clinical and Experimental 1976-Sep

Studies on obesity. III. effect of triiodothyronine (T3) on thyroglobulin autoantibodies in euthyroid obese subjects.

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B N Premachandra
I B Perlstein

Nyckelord

Abstrakt

Effect of T3 therapy on tanned red cell agglutinating thyroglobulin (TRC-TG) antibodies in 10 obese subjects without apparent thyroid disease was investigated. Six other obese subjects without thyroid dysfunction and of approximately the same mean age who also had circulating TRC-TG antibodies served as control subjects and were untreated. In vitro thyroid tests (TSH, total and free T4) performed before T3 therapy, as well as clinical examination, showed thyroid function to be normal in all subjects, and there was no evidence of thyroiditis. TRC-TG antibodies were present in low to moderate titers of 40-1280 in control subjects as well as in subjects selected for T3 treatment. Therapy with T3 was started at 50 mug/day and gradually increased to a maximum of 250 mug/day, depending on clinical needs. T3-treated as well as untreated obese control subjects were all maintained on a high protein, low fat, low carbohydrate diet. Duration of T3 therapy varied from 2-8 mo, and in all but one T3-treated subject, TRC-TG antibodies completely disappeared. In the one exceptional case, TRC-TG antibody titer decreased from 1280 to 80 after 7 mo of therapy. In non-T3-treated obese control subjects, antibody titers remained at the same levels throughout the observation period, thereby indicating a lack of spontaneous regression of circulating immune response. Therapy with T3, by inhibiting TSH, may have caused regression of inapparent immunologic thyroid lesion, thus leading to the disappearance of circulating TRC antibodies; alternatively, T3 specifically may have accelerated catabolism of thyroid antibodies. The latter possibility is favored in the absence of clinical and laboratory evidence of thyroiditis in T3-treated subjects.

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