Abstract

Serum total T4 (T4), total T3 (T3), free T4 (FT4), free T3 (FT3), and T4-binding globulin concentrations and T3 resin uptake values were measured in 17 women with thyrotoxicosis due to painless thyroiditis (PT) and compared with the same parameters in 17 women with thyrotoxicosis due to Graves' disease (GD) with similar serum T4 levels. The mean serum T3 resin uptake value and T3, FT4, and FT3 concentrations in the PT patients were significantly lower than those in the GD patients. The mean serum T4-binding globulin concentration [20.2 +/- 4.2 (+/- SD) microgram/mL] in patients with PT did not differ significantly from those in patients with GD (18.0 +/- 2.6 micrograms/mL) and normal euthyroid women (21.9 +/- 4.0 micrograms/mL). The serum T3 to T4 (nanogram per microgram) ratio was higher than 20 in 14 GD patients, but lower than 20 in all patients with PT, whereas the individual serum FT3 to FT4 ratio values considerably overlapped in the 2 groups. In patients with PT, FT4 correlated well with T4 at various times during the clinical course. These findings indicate that the elevation in serum FT4 in patients with PT is mostly due to the increase in circulating T4 levels, whereas GD patients also have some diminution in T4 binding. The serum T3 to T4 ratio, but not the FT3 to FT4 ratio, may be helpful for differentiation between the two diseases.

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