D Bouglé 1 , R Morello 2 , J Brouard 1 . Show Affiliations »
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: High TSH levels often observed in overweight subjects are associated with metabolic risk. Thyroid hormones which are involved in fat and carbohydrates metabolism are more rarely studied; their blood levels were measured to more precisely explain the relationships between thyroid function and obesity, in healthy overweight youth. This correlation was studied at baseline and during follow-up of some patients. MATERIALS/ METHODS: Data collected were BMI and BMI z score, thyroid hormones (TSH, fT4, fT3), fasting blood glucose, HOMA-IR, lipids (triglycerides, HDL and LDL cholesterol), transaminase activity, fibrinogen, leptin, IGF-I; body composition (biphotonic absorptiometry). Data collected in a sample of the group after 6-18 months of medical intervention could also be studied. RESULTS: At baseline, 13% of the 528 obese subjects (55% girls; 11.3±2.4 years, range 4.1-17.9; BMI z score: 5.4±2.4) had TSH>4mUI/l; fT3 levels were associated with age and transaminase activity; using multivariate regression analysis, with z-score and age as covariates, fT4 showed correlations with TSH, insulin, HOMA IR, blood lipids, and fibrinogen. No correlations were found with leptin, iodine excretion, IGF-I.In 79 patients followed for 52±15 wk (45% girls; age range 8-18.3 years), univariate regression showed a positive correlation between changes in TSH and HOMA-IR, and between changes in fT4 and HDL. Multivariate regression analysis with z score as covariate showed that baseline TSH was associated with negative changes in HOMA-IR. CONCLUSIONS: Increased TSH may be predictive of a decrease in insulin resistance, it should be measured with thyroid hormones; fT4 was associated with a low metabolic risk. Changes in thyroid function could protect against the occurrence of obesity-associated metabolic diseases. © J. A. Barth Verlag in Georg Thieme Verlag KG Stuttgart · New York.
OBJECTIVES: High TSH levels often observed in overweight subjects are associated with metabolic risk. Thyroid hormones which are involved in fat and carbohydrates metabolism are more rarely studied; their blood levels were measured to more precisely explain the relationships between thyroid function and obesity , in healthy overweight youth. This correlation was studied at baseline and during follow-up of some patients . MATERIALS/ METHODS: Data collected were BMI and BMI z score, thyroid hormones (TSH , fT4, fT3), fasting blood glucose , HOMA-IR, lipids (triglycerides , HDL and LDL cholesterol ), transaminase activity, fibrinogen , leptin , IGF-I ; body composition (biphotonic absorptiometry). Data collected in a sample of the group after 6-18 months of medical intervention could also be studied. RESULTS: At baseline, 13% of the 528 obese subjects (55% girls ; 11.3±2.4 years, range 4.1-17.9; BMI z score: 5.4±2.4) had TSH >4mUI/l; fT3 levels were associated with age and transaminase activity; using multivariate regression analysis, with z-score and age as covariates, fT4 showed correlations with TSH , insulin , HOMA IR, blood lipids , and fibrinogen . No correlations were found with leptin , iodine excretion, IGF-I .In 79 patients followed for 52±15 wk (45% girls ; age range 8-18.3 years), univariate regression showed a positive correlation between changes in TSH and HOMA-IR, and between changes in fT4 and HDL. Multivariate regression analysis with z score as covariate showed that baseline TSH was associated with negative changes in HOMA-IR. CONCLUSIONS: Increased TSH may be predictive of a decrease in insulin resistance, it should be measured with thyroid hormones; fT4 was associated with a low metabolic risk. Changes in thyroid function could protect against the occurrence of obesity -associated metabolic diseases . © J. A. Barth Verlag in Georg Thieme Verlag KG Stuttgart · New York.
Entities: Chemical
Disease
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Year: 2014
PMID: 25140994 DOI: 10.1055/s-0034-1377046
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Exp Clin Endocrinol Diabetes ISSN: 0947-7349 Impact factor: 2.949