scholarly journals Evaluation of the effectiveness of treatment with thyroxine and iodotyrox drugs in patients with diffuse non-toxic goiter in Moscow

2000 ◽  
Vol 46 (3) ◽  
pp. 17-19
Author(s):  
I. O. Tomashevsky ◽  
G. A. Gerasimov ◽  
A. M. Artemova ◽  
D. I. Tomashevsky ◽  
V. G. Gerasimov ◽  
...  

The efficiency of therapy with a combined thyroxin-iodine drug and monotherapy with thyroxin was compared in patients with diffuse nontoxic goiter (DNG), and the effect of iodine intake was evaluated. The study was carried out in an outpatient setting by the double blind method in 46 women aged 18-50 years with DNG: 22 were treated by the combined drug (TI) containing 100 pg L-thyroxin and 100 pg potassium iodide per tablet (lodthyrox, Merck KGaA) and 24 were treated by thyroxin (T) in a dose of 100 pg (Euthyrox, Merck KGaA). The treatment was administeredfor 1 year. A year after this treatment, 15 women were treated with iodinated oil (IO) (lipidol capsules, Guerbet) containing 380 mg iodine. Thyroid volume, concentrations of intrathyroid stable iodine (ISI), pituitary thyrotropic hormone, free triiodothyronin and thyroxin, and antibodies to thyroglobulin and thyroid peroxidase in the blood were evaluated in all women before and during treatment. Therapy with T and TI equally decreased the size of the thyroid in DNG. ISI concentration decreased during TI treatment less than during monotherapy. Thyroid volume increased to the pre-treatment size 12 months after therapy with T or TI was discontinued, while ISI concentration remained lowered. Administration of IO led to a decrease in the thyroid size, less pronounced than during T or TI treatment, and to an increase in ISI concentration.

1998 ◽  
pp. 674-680 ◽  
Author(s):  
M Tajtakova ◽  
P Langer ◽  
V Gonsorcikova ◽  
D Hancinova ◽  

OBJECTIVE: To evaluate whether small iodine supplements decrease the incidence of adolescent thyroid hypertrophy in an iodine-sufficient population or whether such thyroid enlargement should be considered an inevitable physiological phenomenon. DESIGN: Beginning in September 1991 (after an initial examination in September 1990), 54 11-year-old children in Bardejov, Slovakia were given small iodine supplements (Thyrojod depot tablets containing 1530 microg iodide) every 2 weeks for 2 years followed by once weekly for 2 years. A second group of 63 children served as controls. In June 1995, there were still 52 treated and 60 control children in the study and these were examined; 44 treated and 48 control children remained in the study until June 1997. METHODS: In 1990, 1993, 1995, 1996 and 1997 the thyroid volume (ThV) was measured by ultrasound. Serum levels of TSH, thyroglobulin, total and free thyroxine and tri-iodothyronine and anti-thyroid peroxidase (anti-TPO), anti-thyroglobulin (anti-TG) and anti-TSH receptor (TSR) antibodies were estimated in 1990 and 1994, while only TSH, and anti-TPO and anti-TSR antibodies were measured in 1997. RESULTS: There was no difference between the groups at any interval in the serum levels of the hormones measured. Marginally increased TSH was found in two treated and two control children. Anti-TSR antibodies were negative in all children, while anti-TPO and anti-TG antibodies were found in one treated and four control children. At the age of 10 years (1990), 84% of all ThVs were less than 4 ml, indicating a previous life-long sufficient iodine intake. After the treatment was completed (June 1995), a significant difference in ThV (P < 0.04) was found between the whole treated (5.78 +/- 0.19 ml) and the whole control group (6.56 +/- 0.30 ml). However, there was already a marked difference in the 75th percentile (6.4 ml in treated vs 8.5 ml in controls) due to more rapid thyroid growth in certain children of the control group (ThV > 7.0 ml in 6/52 treated children vs 24/60 controls; P < 0.01). Since such differences were much higher in 1997, the children in each group whose ThV was in the range of the upper 25% in 1997 were retrospectively evaluated as arbitrary separate subgroups in all the time intervals and compared with the remaining 75% of children who showed moderate thyroid growth rate. Two years after the termination of treatment (June 1997), excessive thyroid growth continued in the upper quarter of 12 controls with the highest ThV (13.60 +/- 0.40 ml or 7.60 +/- 0.29 ml/m2; 12/12 with ThV > 11.0 ml), and a similar subgroup now also appeared in 11 previously treated children (10.79 +/- 0.51 ml or 6.19 +/- 0.30 ml/m2; 5/11 with ThV > 11.0 ml). At the same time, ThV in the remaining 75% of both control (8.12 +/- 0.38 ml or 4.82 +/- 0.17 ml/m2; 3/36 with ThV > 11.0 ml) and treated (7.20 +/- 0.30 ml or 4.39 +/- 0.17 ml/m2; 0/33 with ThV > 11.0 ml) children was significantly less (P < 0.01 to P < 0.001) than that in the appropriate rapidly growing subgroups. During the whole observation period (1990-1997), no difference was found between treated and control subgroups with moderate thyroid growth. CONCLUSIONS: Since iodine intake in Slovakia has been adequate for decades and sporadic iodine deficiency is highly unlikely, the observed excessive thyroid growth in certain adolescents may result from causes other than simple iodine deficiency (e.g. hereditary), which are nevertheless ameliorated by small iodine supplements. The question remains whether such a subgroup with rapidly growing thyroids should be included in the range of normal thyroid volumes in adolescents.


Author(s):  
Olha Kasiyan ◽  
Halyna Tkachenko ◽  
Natalia Kurhaluk ◽  
Svitlana Yurchenko ◽  
Alek Manenko

AbstractThe current study aimed to identify correlative and regressive dependencies between the water iodine concentration and the levels of TSH (thyroid-stimulating hormone), thyroglobulin antibodies (TgAbs), and thyroid peroxidase (TPOAb) in the serum of 168 in patients (34 men and 134 women) with a hypothyroid form of Hashimoto’s thyroiditis who use water from the supply network and individual wells. Based on the water iodine concentration, low and moderate degrees of iodine endemia in the location of the patients were determined. In the groups of men and women using water from different water supply sources, there were direct correlations between the water iodine concentrations and the TgAbs and TPOAb titers as well as an inverse dependence between iodine and TSH levels. Multivariate regressive analysis indicated that TgAb and TSH in the group of women using water from a supply network and TPOAb titers in the group of women using well water were independent factors associated with water iodine concentrations. Statistically significant correlations and regressive dependencies between the water iodine concentrations and the biomarkers of the thyroid status of the patients indicate the risk of Hashimoto’s thyroiditis progression, especially among women with additional iodine intake.


2003 ◽  
pp. 103-110 ◽  
Author(s):  
G Mazziotti ◽  
LD Premawardhana ◽  
AB Parkes ◽  
H Adams ◽  
PP Smyth ◽  
...  

OBJECTIVE: To study the evolution of thyroid autoimmunity, in relation to the change in goitre prevalence, during 3 Years of iodine prophylaxis in Sri Lanka. METHODS: Two groups of Sri Lankan schoolgirls between the ages of 10.8 and 17.5 Years were studied in 1998 (401 girls) and 2001 (282 girls). A prospective study was performed in 42 schoolgirls who were thyroid autoantibody (Ab)-positive (+ve) in 1998. Anthropometric measures, urinary iodine excretion (UIE), thyroid Volume, free thyroxine, free tri-iodothyronine, TSH, and thyroglobulin (Tg) and thyroid peroxidase (TPO) Ab were evaluated in all 683 girls. RESULTS: Goitre prevalence was significantly lower in 2001 compared with 1998 related to age (2.9% compared with 20.2%) and body surface area (11.6% compared with 40.8%), although UIE was unchanged. Prevalence of thyroid Ab in 2001 was also lower (23.4% compared with 49.9%); among those with the Ab, 34.8% had TgAb alone and 46.9% had a combination of TgAb+TPOAb, compared with 82.0% TgAb alone in 1998. In 2001, subclinical hypothyroidism was more frequent in Ab+ve (6.3%) than Ab-negative girls (1.0%). A cohort of 42 Ab+ve schoolgirls in 1998 (34 with TgAb alone, eight with TgAb+TPOAb) were evaluated again in 2001. Only 10 of them (23.8%) remained Ab+ve (mostly TPOAb+/-TgAb) in 2001. CONCLUSIONS: This study demonstrates that: (1) in 2001, goitre prevalence and thyroid autoimmunity rates were significantly lower than in 1998; (2) the pattern of thyroid Ab was different in the two surveys; (3) in 2001 alone, the occurrence of hypothyroidism was correlated with the presence of thyroid autoimmunity. These results indicate an evolution of thyroid autoimmune markers during the course of iodine prophylaxis, which has not been described before.


2017 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Thomas P. Lodise ◽  
Mark Redell ◽  
Shannon O. Armstrong ◽  
Katherine A. Sulham ◽  
G. Ralph Corey

Abstract Background The objective of this analysis was to evaluate the efficacy and safety of oritavancin compared with vancomycin for patients with acute bacterial skin and skin structure infections (ABSSSIs) who received treatment in the outpatient setting in the Phase 3 SOLO clinical trials. Methods SOLO I and SOLO II were 2 identically designed comparative, multicenter, double-blind, randomized studies to evaluate the efficacy and safety of a single 1200-mg dose of intravenous (IV) oritavancin versus 7–10 days of twice-daily IV vancomycin for the treatment of ABSSSI. Protocols were amended to allow enrolled patients to complete their entire course of antimicrobial therapy in an outpatient setting. The primary efficacy outcome was a composite endpoint (cessation of spread or reduction in size of the baseline lesion, absence of fever, and no rescue antibiotic at early clinical evaluation [ECE]) (48 to 72 hours). Key secondary endpoints included investigator-assessed clinical cure 7 to 14 days after end of treatment (posttherapy evaluation [PTE]) and 20% or greater reduction in lesion area at ECE. Safety was assessed until day 60. Results Seven hundred ninety-two patients (oritavancin, 392; vancomycin, 400) received entire course of treatment in the outpatient setting. Efficacy response rates at ECE and PTE were similar (primary composite endpoint at ECE: 80.4% vs 77.5% for oritavancin and vancomycin, respectively) as was incidence of adverse events. Five patients (1.3%) who received oritavancin and 9 (2.3%) vancomycin patients were subsequently admitted to a hospital. Conclusions Oritavancin provides a single-dose alternative to multidose vancomycin for treatment of ABSSSI in the outpatient setting.


2019 ◽  
Vol 15 (2) ◽  
pp. 38-41
Author(s):  
Michael B. Zimmermann

The status of iodine nutrition is a key factor in determining the prevalence of thyroid disorders in adults. The study under discussion provides data on the change in the incidence of nosological subtypes of overt thyrotoxicosis and hypothyroidism in adults during an increase in iodine intake after the introduction of mandatory salt iodization in Denmark. The authors carefully studied the case histories of all new patients with thyrotoxicosis and hypothyroidism registered in 2014–2016 in an open cohort of the population of Northern Jutland (n = 309,434), in which a moderate iodine deficiency has historically been observed and compared with incidence rates in 1997–1998 years before introduction of mandatory salt iodization began 2001. Over this period of time, iodine intake almost doubled. At the same time, the incidence rate of confirmed overt thyrotoxicosis significantly decreased: from the initial rate of 97.5 cases per 100,000 people per year in 1997–2000 to 48.8 cases per 100,000 people per year in 2014–2016. This result was due to a significant decrease in the incidence of multinodular toxic goiter, toxic adenoma and Graves’ disease in all age groups in both women and men. Moreover, the overall incidence of primary overt hypothyroidism has not changed.


2018 ◽  
Vol 127 (05) ◽  
pp. 281-288 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mario Štefanić ◽  
Stana Tokić ◽  
Mirjana Suver-Stević ◽  
Ljubica Glavaš-Obrovac

Abstract Background Co-inhibitory receptors (IR), such as TIGIT and FCRL3, provide a checkpoint against highly destructive immune responses. Co-expression of TIGIT and FCRL3, in particular, has been linked to the HELIOS+ subset of regulatory CD4+FOXP3+T-cells. Of these, CD4+FOXP3-exon(E)2+ cells have higher expression of IR and exhibit strongest suppressive properties. Nevertheless, how the expression of TIGIT, FCRL3, HELIOS, and FOXP3E2 is regulated in chronic autoimmune thyroiditis (AT), is not known. Methods Thirty patients with AT [encompassing spontaneously euthyroid (euAT), hypothyroid-untreated and L-thyroxine-treated cases)] and 10 healthy controls (HC) were recruited. FCRL3, TIGIT, HELIOS and FOXP3E2 mRNA expression levels in peripheral blood (PB) T cells were measured via quantitative real-time PCR and compared to clinicopathological factors. Results The TIGIT and FCRL3 expression levels from T cells of AT cases were inversely related to the thyroid volume, and were significantly increased in hypothyroid patients (on+off L-thyroxine), but not euAT cases. The FCRL3 expression in PB T cells positively correlated with thyroid-peroxidase autoantibody levels; by contrast, T cells from aged AT patients and combined samples (AT+HC) accumulated more TIGIT mRNA. The patients with higher TIGIT mRNA levels had a greater prevalence of hypothyroidism, showing higher peak thyrotropin levels at diagnosis or at follow-up. Conclusions Multiple IR, namely FCRL3 and TIGIT, but not the transcription factors HELIOS and FOXP3E2, showed increased mRNA levels in PB T cells from end-stage, long-standing and/or more aggressive AT, in proportion to disease severity. A relation with major clinical subphenotypes was observed, thereby identifying IR as potentially important players in AT.


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