| Literature DB >> 23762775 |
Offie P Soldin1, Sarah H Chung, Christine Colie.
Abstract
During the last four decades, there have been considerable advances in the efficacy and precision of serum thyroid function testing. The development of the third generation assays for the measurement of serum thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH, thyrotropin) and the log-linear relationship with free thyroxine (T4) established TSH as the hallmark of thyroid function testing. While it is widely accepted that TSH outside of the normal range is consistent with thyroid dysfunction, a vast multitude of additional factors must be considered before an accurate clinical diagnosis can be made. This is especially important during pregnancy, when the thyroid is under considerable additional pregnancy-related demands requiring significant maternal physiological changes. This paper examines serum TSH measurement in pregnancy and some associated potential confounding factors.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23762775 PMCID: PMC3665256 DOI: 10.1155/2013/148157
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Thyroid Res
Clinical situations in which measurements of serum TSH alone may yield misleading results.
| Condition | Serum TSH | Consequences of Clinical Action based on Serum TSH value Alone | Serum FT4 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Heterophile antibodies | Normal | Failure to diagnose thyrotoxicosis | High |
| Central hypothyroidism | Normal* | Failure to diagnose hypothyroidism and investigate hypothalamic-pituitary structure function | Low |
| TSH-secreting pituitary adenoma | Normal* | Failure to diagnose thyrotoxicosis and investigate pituitary structure and function | High |
| Thyroid hormone resistance | Normal* | Failure to recognize the condition | High |
| Poor compliance with T4 therapy | High | Inappropriate increase in dose of T4 | High |
| Delayed recovery of TSH secretion after treatment of hyperthyroidism | Normal or low | Failure to diagnose impending hypothyroidism | Low |
*Serum TSH concentrations may also be high in these conditions, which should prompt measurements of serum FT4 and further investigation.
Causes of elevated serum TSH concentrations.
| Assay-related | |
| Dysfunctions of the thyroid gland | |
| Dysfunctions of the pituitary gland | |
| Environmental |
Trimester-specific reference intervals for TSH (mIU/L) [30].
| First trimester | 0.1–2.5 |
| Second trimester | 0.2–3.0 |
| Third trimester | 0.3–3.0 |