6 research outputs found

    The future endocrine patient. Reflections on the future of clinical endocrinology

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    In recent years the future position of clinical endocrinology has been extensively discussed by Western European endocrine societies. Clinical endocrinology seems to suffer from being too intellectual, generating too little income, and lacking too few spectacular interventions. In this manuscript we describe 'the endocrine patient' of the past, the present, and the future. Complete therapeutic breakthroughs resulting in 'cure' are compared with 'halfway technologies' which help in creating the (life-long) chronic endocrine patient. The potential use of molecular diagnostics in optimalizing hormone replacement therapy is discussed. Clinical endocrinology is at risk of developing into a subspecialty where life-style drugs created for new diseases or conditions are offered, but also actively pursued by otherwise healthy individuals (e.g. in normal short stature, regulation of appetite, body composition, sexuality, reproduction and aging). The potential opportunities and risks for clinical endocrinology in creating 'the endocrine patient' of the future are discussed

    Aberrant levels of hematopoietic/neuronal growth and differentiation factors in euthyroid women at risk for autoimmune thyroid disease

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    Background Subjects at risk for major mood disorders have a higher risk to develop autoimmune thyroid disease (AITD) and vice-versa, implying a shared pathogenesis. In mood disorder patients, an abnormal profile of hematopoietic/neuronal growth factors is observed, suggesting that growth/differentiation abnormalities of these cell lineages may predispose to mood disorders. The first objective of our study was to investigate whether an aberrant profile of these hematopoietic/neuronal growth factors is also detectable in subjects at risk for AITD. A second objective was to study the inter relationship of these factors with previously determined and published growth factors/cytokines in the same subjects. Methods We studied 64 TPO-Ab-negative females with at least 1 first-or second-degree relative with AITD, 32 of whom did and 32 who did not seroconvert to TPO-Ab positivity in 5-year follow-up. Subjects were compared with 32 healthy controls (HCs). We measured serum levels of brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF), Stem Cell Factor (SCF), Insulin-like Growth Factor-Binding Protein 2 (IGFBP-2), Epidermal Growth Factor (EGF) and IL-7 at baseline. Results BDNF was significantly lower (8.2 vs 18.9 ng/ml, P<0.001), while EGF (506.9 vs 307.6 pg/ml, P = 0.003) and IGFBP-2 (388.3 vs 188.5 ng/ml, P = 0.028) were significantly higher in relatives than in HCs. Relatives who seroconverted in the next 5 years had significantly higher levels of SCF than non-seroconverters (26.5 vs 16.7 pg/ml, P = 0.017). In a cluster analysis with the previously published growth factors/cytokines SCF clustered together with IL-1β, IL-6 and CCL-3, of which high levels also prec

    Differential diagnosis in spinal and bulbar muscular atrophy clinical and molecular aspects

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    Kennedy disease is caused by an enlarged trinucleotide repeat sequence within the androgen receptor gene. We report here seven male patients with a benign motor neuron syndrome highly analogous to Kennedy disease but with a normal trinucleotide repeat

    Pilot study on the assessment of the setpoint of the hypothalamus- pituitary-thyroid axis in healthy volunteers

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    Objective: To determine the log-linear relationship between TSH and free thyroxine in healthy subjects, and the variation in baseline TSH/free thyroxine (FT4) combination in each individual. Subjects and methods: Twenty-one healthy volunteers (nine males and 12 females; mean age 60 years, range 51-74) were randomized to receive at 2300 h with 2-week intervals a single dose of placebo, 125 μg T4and 250 mg T4(arm 1, n = 10), or placebo, 25 μg triiodothyronine (T3) and 50 μg T3(arm 2, n = 11). Blood samples were taken in the morning (0800-1100 h) before and following the administration of the drug for the assessment of TSH, FT4and T3. Results: Intra- and inter-individual variation and the individuality index of the four baseline serum samples were respectively 21.6%, 41.9% and 0.52 for TSH; 9.9%, 16.5% and 0.60 for FT4; and 9.3%, 16.0% and 0.58 for T3. Substantial differences existed in the location of individual working points within the reference range. T4administration increased FT4(but not T3) and decreased TSH, resulting in a log-linear relationship (log TSH = 1.50-0.059xFT4, P<0.05) for the whole group. T3administration increased T3and decreased TSH (but not FT4), resulting in a log-linear relationship (log TSH = 0.790-0.245xT3, P<0.001) for the whole group. Log-linear relationships were not always significant when assessed for each subject separately. Conclusion: Individuality indices of TSH, FT4and T3are all ≤0.6, thereby limiting the usefulness of the population-based reference values. Accurate assessment of individual setpoints of the HPT axis was not possible with the applied single doses of T4or T3, and will require either prolonged administration or higher single doses of thyroid hormone

    Induction of type 3 deiodinase activity in inflammatory cells of mice with chronic local inflammation

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    During illness, changes in thyroid hormone metabolism occur, so-called nonthyroidal illness (NTI). NTI has been characterized by a fall of serum T 3 due to decreased extrathyroidal conversion of T4 into T3 by liver type 1 deiodinase (D1), without an increase in serum TSH. Type 3 deiodinase (D3) was thought not to play an important role during NTI, but recently it has been shown that D3 activity is up-regulated in liver and skeletal muscle of critically ill patients related to hypoxia. We studied D3 gene expression and activity in liver and muscle/subcutis of mice during illness, which was induced by two different stimuli: bacterial endotoxin (lipopolysaccharide) administration, resulting in an acute systemic response, and a turpentine injection in each hindlimb, resulting in a local sc abscess. Lipopolysaccharide induced a rapid decrease in liver D1 and D3 activity but not skeletal muscle of hindlimb. In contrast, local inflammation induced by turpentine did not decrease liver D1 and D3 activity but increased markedly D3 activity in the muscle/subcutis sample containing the abscess, associated with strongly increased IL-1β and IL-6 mRNA expression. Inflammatory cells, surrounding the abscess showed D3 and T3-transporter monocarboxylate transporter-8 immunoreactivity, whereas muscle cells did not show any immunoreactivity. In conclusion, local inflammation strongly induces D3 activity in inflammatory cells, especially in invading polymorphonuclear granulocytes, suggesting enhanced local degradation of T3. Copyrigh

    Polymorphisms in type 2 deiodinase are not associated with well-being, neurocognitive functioning, and preference for combined thyroxine/3,5,3′- triiodothyronine therapy

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    Introduction: Some patients on levothyroxine replacement display significant impairment in psychological well-being, compared with sex- and age-matched controls. Levothyroxine-treated patients can be assumed to derive T3 exclusively from deiodination of T4, which, in the central nervous system, is regulated by type II deiodinase (DII). Objective: We investigated whether two recently identified polymorphisms in the DII gene (DII-ORFa-Gly3Asp and DII-Thr92Ala) are determinants of well-being and neurocognitive functioning and associated with a preference for replacement with a combination of T3 and T4. Methods: Genotypes for both polymorphisms were determined in 141 patients with primary autoimmune hypothyroidism, adequately treated with levothyroxine monotherapy and participating in a randomized clinical trial comparing T4 therapy with T4/T3 combination therapy. Questionnaires on well-being and neurocognitive tests were performed at baseline. Results: Allele frequencies in patients with primary hypothyroidism were similar to those of healthy blood bank donors (32.0 vs. 33.9% for DII-ORFa-Gly3Asp and 40.4 vs. 38.8% for DII-Thr92Ala). DII polymorphisms were not associated with measures of well-being, neurocognitive functioning, or preference for combined T 4/T3 therapy. Conclusion: The DII-ORFa-Gly3Asp and DII-Thr92Ala polymorphisms do not explain differences in well-being, neurocognitive functioning, or appreciation of T4/T3 combination therapy in patients treated for hypothyroidism. Copyrigh
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