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Graves' ophthalmopathy and subclinical hypothyroidism: diagnostic value of the thyrotropin releasing hormone test.
Authors:P G Walfish  I S Gottesman  J L Baxter
Abstract:Five patients with Graves'' ophthalmopathy and no previously documented clinical or laboratory evidence of hyperthyroidism were studied. Their serum levels of thyroxine and triiodothyronine (T3) and their T3 uptake were normal. Although the baseline serum level of thyrotropin (TSH) was normal in two patients, it was increased on the other three, and when TSH releasing hormone (TRH) was administered the T3 response was impaired in three patients and the TSH response was exaggerated in all five. These findings facilitated the diagnosis of subclinical hypothyroidism and distinguished the patients from those with Graves'' ophthalmopathy and normal thyroid function or subclinical hyperthyroidism. Thyroid antibodies were detected in the serum of four of the five patients, suggesting the coexistence of chronic autoimmune thyroiditis; this disorder could account in part for the subclinical hypothyroidism, which was even present in the two patients in whom thyroid-stimulating immunoglobulin was found in the serum. These observations indicate the value of a TRH stimulation test in detecting subclinical hypothyroidism in patients with Graves'' ophthalmopathy who appear from clinical and routine laboratory studies to have normal thyroid function but could have normal function or subclinical hyperthyroidism.
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