Abstract

To investigate the relationship between TSH and abnormal thyroid stimulator(s) in patients with hyperthyroid Graves' disease in whom normal thyroid hormone levels in the serum were maintained by antithyroid drug therapy and in patients with euthyroid Graves' disease, determinations were made of the TSH concentration, action of thyroid stimulating immunoglobulins (TSAb and TBII), and T3 suppression. Out of thirty-three patients with hyperthyroid Graves' disease, twelve patients with subnormal TSH levels were all non-suppressible according to the T3 suppression test results and the detectability of TSAb and/or TBII was as high as 75%. In three out of five patients with euthyroid Graves' disease, the serum TSH level was subnormal. All three showed non-suppressibility in the T3 suppression test and positive action of either TSAb or TBII. One of them became clinically thyrotoxic when the TSAb activity was further increased and TBII became positive, and was therefore diagnosed as having hyperthyroid Graves' disease. The present findings suggest that there are still abnormal thyroid stimulator(s) in patients with hyperthyroid Graves' disease who have low TSH, even if their thyroid hormone concentrations remain normal. Moreover, it is likely that some of the patients with euthyroid Graves' disease are actually in a state of subclinical hyperthyroidism because of the presence of abnormal thyroid stimulator(s).

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