| Literature DB >> 24145612 |
Abstract
Adipose tissue secretes a variety of active biological substances, called adipocytokines, that act in an autocrine, paracrine, and endocrine manner. They have roles in appetite control, thermogenesis, and thyroid and reproductive functions. All these molecules may lead to local and generalized inflammation, mediating obesity-associated vascular disorders including hypertension, diabetes, atherosclerosis, and insulin resistance. Thyroid dysfunction is associated with changes in body weight, thermogenesis, and energy expenditure. The connections between cardiovascular risk factors such as dyslipidemia, impaired glucose tolerance, insulin resistance, atherosclerosis, and thyroid dysfunction have been reported in several studies. The adipocytokines serve as causative or protective factors in the development of these disorders in the states of thyroid dysfunction. Abnormal levels of adipocytokines (adiponectin (ADP), leptin, resistin, vaspin, and visfatin) in hypo- and hyperthyroidism have been reported with controversial results. This review aims to update the implication of novel adipokines ADP, vaspin, and visfatin in thyroid dysfunction.Entities:
Keywords: metabolism; thyroid
Year: 2013 PMID: 24145612 PMCID: PMC3847914 DOI: 10.1530/EC-13-0061
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Endocr Connect ISSN: 2049-3614 Impact factor: 3.335
Summary of previous studies of adiponectin and thyroid hormone association.
| Positive association | |||
| | 68 healthy subjects | Positive ADP vs fT4 | |
| | 69 hyperthyroid patients | ↑ ADP in hyperthyroid patients | Positive ADP vs fT4 |
| ↓ ADP after establishment of hypothyroidism ( | Positive ADP vs fT3 | ||
| | 32 hyperthyroid Graves' patients | ↑ ADP levels in hyperthyroid than in euthyroid patients and controls | Positive ADP vs fT4 |
| 32 euthyroid Graves' patients | Positive ADP vs fT3 | ||
| 30 controls | Positive ADP vs TRAb (TRAb – the best predictor of ADP levels) | ||
| | 46 hyperthyroid patients | ↑ ADP levels in hyperthyroid patients than controls | Positive ADP vs fT4 |
| 23 hypothyroid patients | ↔ ADP levels in hypothyroid patients | Positive ADP vs fT3 | |
| 30 controls | Positive ADP vs insulin and HOMA-IR | ||
| Negative ADP vs total cholesterol, BMI, and triglyceride | |||
| | 39 hyperthyroid patients | No significant difference in ADP levels between the groups | Positive ADP vs fT4 |
| 23 controls | ↔ ADP after normalization of thyroid status | Positive ADP vs BMI and WC | |
| | 53 hypothyroid patients | ↓ ADP levels in hypothyroid patients and after normalization of thyroid status | Positive ADP vs WC and weight |
| 30 controls | |||
| | 76 hyperthyroid Graves' patients (26 without GO and 50 with GO) | ↑ ADP levels in hyperthyroid patients than controls | Positive ADP vs fT4 |
| 30 controls | ↔ ADP between patients with GO vs without GO | Positive ADP vs fT3 | |
| ↔ ADP between patients with active GO vs inactive GO | Positive ADP vs TRAb | ||
| | 120 hyperthyroid patients | ↓ ADP levels after normalization of thyroid status | Positive ADP vs fT4 |
| Negative ADP vs BMI (BMI – the best predictor of ADP levels) | |||
| | 28 thyroid carcinoma patients | ↔ ADP 4 weeks after thyroid hormone withdrawal | Positive ADP vs fT4 |
| | 234 euthyroid prepubertal children | Positive ADP vs fT4 | |
| | 321 healthy euthyroid pregnant women (24–28 weeks gestation) | Positive HMW ADP vs fT4 | |
| Negative HMW ADP vs fT3:fT4 ratio | |||
| No association | |||
| | 20 hyperthyroid patients | No significant difference in ADP levels among the groups | ↔ ADP vs HOMA-IR, glucose, and insulin |
| 20 hypothyroid patients | ↔ ADP in both hypo/hyperthyroid groups, after normalization of thyroid status | ||
| 20 euthyroid subjects | |||
| | 15 hyperthyroid patients | No significant difference in ADP levels among the groups | |
| 15 hypothyroid patients | |||
| 15 controls | |||
| | 22 women with differentiated thyroid carcinoma | ↔ ADP with thyroid hormone withdrawal | |
| | 67 hypothyroid patients | No significant difference in ADP levels among the groups | Positive ADP vs HDL |
| 56 hyperthyroid patients | Negative ADP vs BMI | ||
| 52 controls | |||
| | 98 euthyroid postmenopausal women with Hashimoto's thyroiditis | No significant difference in ADP levels between the groups | ↔ ADP vs TSH, fT4, and TPO Abs |
| 105 postmenopausal controls | |||
| | 19 hyperthyroid Graves' disease | No significant difference in ADP levels between the groups | |
| 19 controls | ↔ ADP after normalization of thyroid status | ||
| | 98 obese euthyroid women | No significant difference in ADP levels between the groups | ↔ ADP vs thyroid volume |
| 31 non-obese euthyroid women | ↔ ADP after weight loss | ||
| | 30 premenopausal euthyroid women with nodular goiter | ↔ ADP short-term after thyroidectomy-induced hypothyroidism despite significant ↑ in BMI and serum lipid levels | ↔ ADP vs thyroid hormones |
| | 43 subclinical hypothyroid patients | No significant difference in ADP levels between the groups | |
| 53 controls | ↑ ADP after normalization of thyroid status | ||
↑, Increase; ↓, decrease; ↔, no change; ADP, adiponectin; fT4, free thyroxine; fT3, free triiodothyronine; TPO Abs, thyroid peroxidase autoantibody; TRAb, TSH-R antibodies; WC, waist circumference; HMW, high molecular weight; GO, Graves' ophthalmopathy.