| Literature DB >> 31617169 |
Abstract
Thyroid hormone levels are reduced in cardiovascular diseases and this phenomenon is associated with worse outcomes. It is unclear whether the changes in thyroid hormone bioavailability to the affected myocardium are beneficial or if this is a maladaptive response. Experimental studies from animal models of acute myocardial infarction (AMI) suggest that thyroid hormone treatment may be beneficial. There is limited data available on the use of thyroid hormones in patients with AMI and heart failure and this suggests that treatment to normalise thyroid hormone levels may be safe and potentially efficacious. Similarly, evidence of thyroid hormone therapy in patients undergoing cardiac surgery or during cardiac transplantation is limited. It is therefore difficult to draw any firm conclusions about benefits or risks of thyroid hormone treatment in these conditions. Large scale clinical trials of thyroid hormones in patients with cardiac conditions are required to confirm safety and evaluate efficacy. Furthermore, it needs to be elucidated which hormone to administer (thyroxine or triiodothyronine), when in the disease pathway to treat, dose of thyroid hormone to administer, and which parameters to utilise to assess safety and efficacy. Until these important questions are answered thyroid hormone therapy in cardiovascular diseases must remain within the research domain.Entities:
Keywords: Acute myocardial infarction; Cardiac transplantation; Coronary artery bypass grafting; Heart failure; Left ventricular function; Thyroid hormones
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31617169 PMCID: PMC6794474 DOI: 10.1007/s12020-019-02050-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Endocrine ISSN: 1355-008X Impact factor: 3.633
Fig. 1Thyroid hormone actions on the cardiomyocyte Thyroid hormones T4 (thyroxine) and triiodothyronine (T3) enter the cardiomyocyte via plasma membrane transporters. Inside the myocardial cell, T4 can be activated by the enzyme DIO2 (deiodinase 2) to the active form T3, and both T4 and T3 can be inactivated by DIO3 (deiodinase 3) to rT3 (reverse T3) and T2 (diiodothyronine), respectively. From the cytosol T3 diffuses into the nucleus and binds to thyroid hormone receptors (TR) in the presence of TRE (thyroid hormone response elements) and initiates the regulation of target genes and other metabiolic pathways (genomic actions). In addition, thyroid hormones also have direct nongenomic actions. Adapted from Jabbar et al. [3]
Fig. 2Effects of low serum T3 levels in acute myocardial infarction T3—triiodothyronine, DIO3—deiodinase 3, DIO2—deiodinase 2, TR—thyroid hormone receptor
Effects of thyroid hormone T3 on various cardiovascular and neuroendocrine parameters in patients with heart failure
| Parameter and effect |
|---|
| Left ventricular systolic function ⇑ |
| Left ventricular diastolic function ⇑ |
| Systemic vascular resistance ⇓ |
| Noradrenaline ⇓ |
| Aldosterone ⇓ |
| Natriuretic peptide synthesis ⇑ |
| Myocardial blood flow ⇑ |