Abstract

Baseline thyroid-secreting-hormone (TSH)-assessed by means of ultrasensitive assays (IRMA)-and free-thyroid-hormone (FT4) levels were determined in 84 depressed females, and the TSH responses to 200 micrograms thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH) (IV) measured. It was found that TRH-induced TSH responses were linearly and positively related to basal TSH-IRMA; lower TRH-stimulated TSH secretion in melancholic patients was attributable to lowered basal TSH-IRMA values. A progression was found-within the euthyroid range-of basal TSH-IRMA values towards lower levels along the diagnostic spectrum: the highest basal TSH-IRMA levels were witnessed in minor depressives and the lowest in melancholics, while simple major-depressed females occupied an intermediate position. This shift appears to be indicative of severity of illness. Basal TSH-IRMA data can roughly be used as a clinical tool separating melancholia from minor depression: at a threshold value of less than or equal to 1 microUI/ml, sensitivity was 56% and specificity 92%. It is concluded that basal TSH-IRMA provides a more accurate representation of melancholia than peak TSH responses, which appear to constitute little more than a magnified, but biased signal of basal TSH-IRMA. In future, the assay of basal TSH-IRMA could replace TRH testing.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call