Association between exaggerated responsiveness to thyrotrophin-releasing hormone and hypercholesterolaemia
- PMID: 72952
- DOI: 10.1016/s0140-6736(77)92894-x
Association between exaggerated responsiveness to thyrotrophin-releasing hormone and hypercholesterolaemia
Abstract
Thyroid-function tests were performed on one hundred patients with suspected premyxoedema and the results compared with those in twenty age and sex matched controls. The increase in thyroid-stimulating hormone (T.S.H.) in response to thyrotrophin-releasing hormone (T.R.H.) was exaggerated in eighty-eight of the hundred patients with suspected premyxoedema. These included twenty-five with normal basal T.S.H. and sixty-three with a raised basal T.S.H. Serum-cholesterol concentration was significantly higher in those in whom premyxoedema was suspected than in the controls, even when patients presenting with degenerative arterial disease were excluded.
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