UCLA conference. Autoimmune thyroid diseases--Graves' and Hashimoto's
- PMID: 204241
UCLA conference. Autoimmune thyroid diseases--Graves' and Hashimoto's
Abstract
Thyroid-related autoimmune diseases (Graves' thyroid disease, Graves' ophthalmopathy, and Hashimoto's thyroiditis) may occur alone or in any association. The diagnosis of Hashimoto's thyroiditis requires multiple criteria; pathologic changes in the thyroid are not due to antibodies but may result from cytotoxic lymphocytes or a deficiency of suppressive T cells. In Graves' and Hashimoto's diseases the increased prevalence of HLA-B8 may not be significant, but that of HLA-AW30 in Hashimoto's disease is. In 48 first-degree relatives of patients with Graves' disease, thyroid abnormalities were frequent but not correlated with HLA type. Elevated serum thyroglobulin levels in all patients with hyperthyroidism fell to normal after surgical resection or radioiodine therapy. Patients whose illness recurred after antithyroid drug treatment was stopped had higher pretreatment thyroglobulin levels and no fall during treatment; those whose illness remitted had lower initial levels and a significant fall during treatment. Sodium ipodate lowered serum triiodothyronine and thyroxine levels in hyperthyroid patients and may be useful in the treatment of hyperthyroidism.
Publication types
MeSH terms
Substances
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Research Materials