Abstract
Rapid-cycling bipolar patients have a high prevalence of hypothyroidism, and this disturbance in their hypothalamic-pituitary-thyroid (HPT) function may provide a model for understanding the less severe thyroid dysfunction present in other forms of affective disorder. For these reasons, we investigated HPT function in eight rapid-cycling bipolar patients and eight normal controls by measuring plasma levels of thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) and cortisol every 30 min during a baseline 24-h period and during an additional night of sleep deprivation. Thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH) (500μg) challenge tests were also performed in the patients. Controls exhibited a significant circadian variation in TSH with a nocturnal rise that was augmented by sleep deprivation. In the rapid cyclers, the nocturnal rise in TSH was absent, and sleep deprivation failed to raise their TSH levels significantly compared with baseline. Low nocturnal TSH levels were associated with blunted TSH responses to TRH infusions; due to the relatively brief sampling interval used in the TRH challenge tests, however, these results do not reliably discriminate between hypothalamic and pituitary dysfunction as an etiology for low nocturnal TSH levels. Additional studies are needed to determine the precise nature of the HPT disturbance in rapid-cycling patients.
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