| Literature DB >> 21048840 |
Anne-Sophie Gauchez1, Magali Pizzo, Dany Alcaraz-Galvain, Karim Chikh, Jacques Orgiazzi, Georg Brabant, Catherine Ronin, Anne Charrié.
Abstract
Background. For unknown reasons, the prevalence of thyroid autoimmune disorders is higher in patients with Down's syndrome than in the general population. The present case strongly supports a recent evaluation of propagating screening for thyroid disease in this group of patients to assure early diagnosis of hypothyroidism. Methods. In a 25-year-old man diagnosed with Down's syndrome, clinical manifestations of hypothyroidism were lacking, but profound biochemical abnormalities were found with particularly high levels of thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH). Antigenic properties of TSH were characterized using a panel of anti-TSH antibodies. Results. Technical problems not infrequently associated with TSH measurements are convincingly ruled out. Antigenic characterization of the patient's circulating TSH revealed circulating forms of TSH different from pituitary TSH which closely resembled TSH recombinant human hormone. Conclusions. It appears counterintuitive that the bioactivity of TSH decreases in the hypothyroid state as higher bioactivity of TSH is anticipated in hypothyroidism promoted by an increased hypothalamic TRH drive. In contrast, diminished negative thyroid hormone feedback will enhance posttranslational glycosylation of TSH subunits and increase sialylation of the carbohydrate side chains. Both exert a negative effect on TSH bioactivity, only compensated by the very high levels of the hormone as in the present case.Entities:
Year: 2010 PMID: 21048840 PMCID: PMC2957696 DOI: 10.4061/2010/703978
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Thyroid Res
Control of initial thyroid parameters TSH, FT3, and FT4 by different assays and additional biological parameters.
| Patient's results | Reference values | |
|---|---|---|
| TSH | 13921 | 0.25–4 mIU/L |
| 12002 | 0.27–4.2 mIU/L | |
| 15403∗ | 0.29–3.8 mIU/L | |
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| FT4 | 0.664 | 8.2–18 pmol/L |
| 1.65 | 11.5–23 pmol/L | |
| 1.35∗ | 13–22.6 pmol/L | |
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| FT3 | 1.144 | 4.2–8.3 pmol/L |
| 1.75 | 2.5–5.8 pmol/L | |
| 1.95∗ | 2.8–5.3 pmol/L | |
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| Anti-thyroid peroxidase antibodies (AbTPO) 6 | 4047 | <60 kU/L |
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| Thyroglobulin (Tg) 1 | < 0.7 | <50 |
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| Anti-thyroglobulin antibodies (AbTg) 6 | 198 | <60 kU/L |
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| Anti-TSH receptor antibodies (TSHR) 6 | 216 | <1.0 U/L |
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| Blocking anti-TSHR 7 | 81 | <10% |
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| Stimulating anti-TSHR 7 | 243 | 100% |
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| Anti-T3 antibodies 7 | 4.9 | <7.9% |
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| Anti-T4 antibodies 7 | 3.7 | <7% |
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| Anti-TSH antibodies 7 | 13 | <18% |
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| Total cholesterol8 | 9.3 | 4.5–6.0 mmol/L |
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| Total Testosterone1 | 11.3 | 8.2–34.6 nmol/L |
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| Alpha-subunits3 | 2.8 | <0.8 IU/L |
| Prolactin3 | 1009 | 30–545 mIU/L |
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| Luteinizing hormone (LH) 3 | 4.6 | 1.8–8.4 IU/L |
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| Follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) 3 | 18.3 | 2.2–10 IU/L |
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| Radioelectrophoresis: | ||
| (i) Thyroxin-Binding Protein | 69.7 | 63.6–81.2% |
| (ii) Albumin | 6.0 | 2.9–9.7% |
| (iii) Transthyretin | 23.8 | 12.5–29.7% |
| (iv) Immunoglobulins | 0.5 | <2.0% |
1CisBio, 2Modular Roche Diagnostic, 3IRMA Beckman Coulter, 4RIA lisophase Cis Bio, 5RIA Beckman Coulter, 6Brahms, 7in-house assay, Biological Center Lyon Sud, 8Olympus. *Pretreatment with “Heterophilic Blocking Tube” scantibodies.
Figure 1(a) Hormone circulating in cancer patients injected with Thyrogen: pool of 4 patients, TSH = 311 mIU/L (Thyrogen patients) versus recTSH. (b) Thyrogen patients versus young patient. (c) Pool of patients with overt hypothyroidism (TSH approx. 177 mIU/L) versus young patient.