Abstract

To investigate the cause(s) of central hypothyroidism with normal or elevated TSH concentrations, we evaluated the bioactivity of serum TSH as well as pituitary and thyroid function. Seven hypothyroid patients had documented deficiencies of anterior pituitary hormones other than TSH. Basal TSH concentrations ranged from 2.2-14.8 microU/mL. Six patients had low T4 and free T4 concentrations; the remaining patient had a low free T4 and a low normal T4 level with an elevated TSH concentration of 14.4 microU/mL. The mean increment in TSH 30, 60, and 90 min after TRH administration (mean delta TSH) in these patients was 13.5 +/- 9.1 microU/mL (mean +/- SD), which was not significantly different from the value in controls (9.2 +/- 3.5 microU/mL). However, the ratio of the T3 increment at 120 min (delta T3) to mean delta TSH (delta T3/mean delta TSH) in patients was 53.9 +/- 29.3 ng/microU, significantly lower than the control value of 239.5 +/- 97.5 ng/microU (P < 0.01), suggesting that the thyroid response to endogenous TSH was blunted. The serum T4 concentration correlated with the mean delta TSH in these patients (r = 0.78; P < 0.05), suggesting that hypothyroidism is dependent on conserved pituitary function. The mean bioactivity to immunoreactivity ratio of basal TSH in patients was 0.97 +/- 0.27 and was not significantly different from the normal value of 1.05 +/- 0.22. One of the two patients with high basal TSH (> 10 microU/mL) had a ratio of 0.59, which is just below the mean +/- SD of normal subjects (0.61), suggesting that most patients had normal TSH bioactivity in vitro. Our findings suggest that in vivo bioactivity of TSH is decreased because of a pituitary disorder, but in vitro bioactivity of TSH is variable in patients with central hypothyroidism.

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