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Review
. 2003 Dec:1 Suppl 2:185-90; discussion 190.

Congenital hypothyroidism clinical aspects and late consequences

Affiliations
  • PMID: 16444157
Review

Congenital hypothyroidism clinical aspects and late consequences

Atilla Büyükgebiz. Pediatr Endocrinol Rev. 2003 Dec.

Abstract

Congenital hypothyroidism (CH) is the commonest treatable cause of mental retardation. The prevelance is 1/3000 - 1/4000 live births worldwide. The importance of CH is that, the longer the diagnosis of CH is delayed, the higher the risk of mental retardation and neurologic sequale; such as poor motor coordination, ataxia, spastic diplegia, muscular hypotonia, strabismus, learning disability and diminished attention span. The most common cause of permenant CH is thyroid dysgenesis (85-90%) in which the transcription factors TTF1,TTF2 and PAX8 would appear to be obvious candidate genes in the aetiology. Especially cardiac defects and some other birth defects are described in patients with CH. Inborn errors of thyroid hormonogenesis are responsible for 10-15% of CH cases and usually have autosomal recessive inheritance, consistent with a single gene mutation. Transient CH is very common in prematures with an estimate of 10% of CH babies identified on newborn screening, or 1 in 40,000 neonates. CH neonates are usually symptom-free and the most encountered symptoms are prolonged jaundice, large fontanelles and umbilical hernia. In general, the extent of clinical findings depends on the cause, severity and duration of hypothyroidism. An elevated TSH>20 microm Iu/L and a decreased concentration of T4 confirms the diagnosis of CH. Infants with permanant abnormalities of thyroid function mostly have a serum TSH concentration > 50 microm Iu/L. Ultrasonography, thyroid scintigraphy, bone x ray of the knee and serum thyroglobulin concentration are the other essentials after diagnosis to clarify the status of the thyroid and the severity of hypothyroidism. The higher doses of 10- 15 microm g/kg/day and the commencement of treatment before 2 weeks gave rise to better long term outcome of CH patients. In the follow up of the patients noncompliance is the most important problem and serum freeT4 or T4 and TSH should be obtained at each visit to adjust the doses of L-thyroxine. Still a small number of patients with severe hypothyroidism in utero or reflected by clinical signs and symptoms extremely low T4 levels and delayed bone age may have intellectual deficits despite normal intelligence.

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