These tools will no longer be maintained as of December 31, 2024. Archived website can be found here. PubMed4Hh GitHub repository can be found here. Contact NLM Customer Service if you have questions.


PUBMED FOR HANDHELDS

Search MEDLINE/PubMed


  • Title: Congenital goitre and hypothyroidism with impaired iodide organification and high thyroid peroxidase concentration.
    Author: Medeiros-Neto GA, Nakashima T, Taurog A, Knobel M, Simonetti JP, Mattar E.
    Journal: Clin Endocrinol (Oxf); 1979; 11(2):123-39. PubMed ID: 487612.
    Abstract:
    A sibship of thirteen subjects whose parents were first cousins was studied for a defect in thyroid hormone synthesis. Five sibs were goitrous and had congenital hypothyroidism. All but one showed a positive perchlorate discharge test (PDT). Three other subjects were goitrous and euthyroid (one with a positive PDT), and the remaining five sibs were euthyroid with a presumably normal thyroid. However, an abnormally exaggerated TSH response to TRH was observed not only in the hypothyroid patients but also in six of the other subjects, indicating a decreased thyroid feedback at the pituitary level in the presence of a normal serum concentration of thyroid hormones. In two hypothyroid patients a normal serum T3, low serum T4 and a low reverse T3 were observed. Microscopic studies of thyroid tissue from three of the sibs disclosed marked cellular hyperplasia with no lymphocytic infiltration anywhere in the tissue. Peroxidase activity was determined on tissue from three sibs by three different assay procedures. It was within the normal range in one patient and was significantly elevated in the other two. There was no evidence for a qualitatively defective peroxidase. The defect in thyroid function in this family does not appear to involve a peroxidase deficiency. Thyroglobulin isolated from the thyroid glands of two of the goitrous, hypothyroid subjects was poorly iodinated but was judged to be normal by immunoreactive and ultracentrifugation procedures. Although the nature of the thyroid metabolic defect in this family was not elucidated, the evidence suggests a genetic defect, probably involving a recessive gene.
    [Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]