Abstract
The relationship between serum thyrotropin (TSH) and serum triiodothyronine (T3) before and after injection of different doses of thyrotropin releasing hormone (TRH), given as single injections or as multiple injections with short intervals, was investigated in normal men. A positive correlation between prestimulated serum TSH and serum T3 levels and between the increase in the serum TSH and the serum T3 levels after TRH was found when repeated tests were performed in the same individual. There was a dose dependent TSH and T3 response to TRH. The smallest dose that produced a maximal response of both TSH and T3 was only 30 mug TRH. After six injections of 30 mug TRH with an interval of 30 minutes the increase in TSH was two times and the increase in T3 was three times as high as the maximal increase after single injections of TRH. This test with multiple injections of TRH may prove to be of clinical value in the measurement of both pituitary and thyroid function in selected patients. The close positive correlation between the serum TSH and serum T3 levels in basal conditions, demonstrated in four normal subjects in this study, probably reflects the steady state level determined by the hypothalamus from which the feedback control of TSH secretion operates.
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