Abstract
The authors measured thyrotropin binding inhibitory immunoglobulin (TBII), thyroid stimulating antibody (TSAb), and thyroid stimulation blocking antibody (TSBAb) sequentially in patients who developed hyperthyroidism following primary hypothyroidism, and compared changes in these various funcional parameters of thyrotropin receptor antibody (TRAb) with clinical manifestations, in order to investigate the role of TRAb in the development of hyperthyroidism following primary hypothyroidism.In a patient with goitrous chronic thyroiditis, TBII, TSAb and TSBAb were not detected at the initial hypothyroid phase. But with appearance of TBII and TSAb, the patient developed hyperthyroidism. In a patient with primary nongoitrous myxedema, initially high TBII and TSBAb were detected without TSAb activity. His TSBAb disappeared and TSAb appeared with development of goiter growth and hyperthyroidism.These two mechanisms, that is, appearance of previously absent TSAb and conversion of TSBAb to TSAb, might play a causative role in the development of hyperthyroidism following primary hypothyroidism. These phenomena might be evidence that Graves’ disease, chronic thyroiditis, and primary nongoitrous myxedema are on a continuing spectrum of a common syndrome sharing similar pathophysiology, at least with respect to TRAb.
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