Introduction. Despite the fact that today patients with hypothyroidism manage to correct their hormonal profile, perfect control is not always achieved during the course of the disease. This was noted in a study of 22 people with hypothyroidism according to medical records for 8.24±0.76 years: the average TSH level was 7.14±2.37 mIU∕l, T4 was 23.01±4.38 pmol/l, although at the start of the study TSH was 3.72±0.76 mIU∕l and T4 was 13.8±1.96 pmol/l. Ultimately, this affected cognitive functions, including attention, speech and memory, despite the fact that cognitive impairment with drug compensation of hypothyroidism is considered reversible.
 The results of a morphological study of the hippocampus and frontal lobe of the brain in rats with experimental hypothyroidism at an early stage can serve as a prototype for changes in the corresponding structures responsible for cognitive functions in individuals with hypothyroidism, even against the background of relative compensation with a long course of the disease.
 Objective. To study morphology of the brain areas responsible for cognitive functions, in particular the hippocampus and anterior-frontal cortex in rats in the early stages of experimental hypothyroidism.
 Materials and methods. The study included 12 white outbred sexually mature male rats. Hypothyroidism was modelled in 7 rats using the drug “Mercazolil” (“Zdorovye”, Ukraine). After 28 days, the animals underwent light-optical study of the histological structure of CA1, CA3 fields of the hippocampus, dentate gyrus and anterior-frontal cortex. Five animals were intact and, accordingly, served as controls.
 Results. The light-optical examination revealed the sequence and depth of the violations: the most pronounced dystrophic changes with vacuolation of structures occur in the dentate gyrus; in the hippocampus itself, the CA1 field is the most vulnerable; lateralisation of hippocampal morphological changes with left-sided dominance was detected; minor morphological changes were detected in the anterior-frontal cortex. It is important that neuro-glial changes occur in parallel with vascular disorders.
 Conclusions. Under the conditions of simulated hypothyroidism, changes occur in all studied brain components with their left-sided dominance, except for the anterior-frontal cortex.
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