Endocrine System: Thyroid Flashcards
Where is the thyroid found? What 2 cells are found in it?
lateral to the first 5 tracheal rings
- parafollicular (C) cells - produce thyroglobulin, transport thyroid hormones, transport iodine
- follicular epithelial cells - produce colloid, T3, and T4
What regulates the thyroid? What 2 hormones does it produce?
synthesis and secretion regulated by TSH
- thyroxine (T4) = 100% synthesized by thyroid
- triiodothyronine (T3) = more potent than T4, 40/60 produced in thyroid and systemic cells
Which thyroid hormone is produced more? How is the other one produced?
T4
T3 is produced outside of the thyroid from deiodination of T4 (also producing a small amount of reverse T3)
How do T4 and T3 compare?
T4 = less reactive on target cells, 99.9% bound to albumin or thyroid binding globulin, 0.1% unbound (fT4)
T3 = more reactive on target cells, 99% bound, 1% unbound (fT3)
What are the biologically active forms of T3 and T4?
fT3 (1%), fT4 (0.1%) —> can diffuse into target cells
How does the HPT axis control thyroid hormone production and secretion?
high concentrations of fT3 and fT4 will have a negative feedback loop to decrease function and secretions from the hypothalamus and pituitary
What are 7 major functions of thyroid hormones?
- maintain basal metabolic rate (BMR)
- controls oxygen consumption (basal RBC concentration), GFR, and glucose metabolism
- required for proper development of musculoskeletal system and organs in juveniles
- essential for normal catecholamine actions
- enable lipoprotein lipase (LPL) activity for lipolysis
- maintain normal haircoat and sebaceous gland activity
- maintain normal neural signal transduction
What 4 baseline tests are used to assess thyroid gland function? What collection is required to test these on?
- T4 and fT4*
- endogenous TSH*
- T3 and fT3
- T3 suppression test
SERUM (not part of typical routine biochem)
What is included in thyroid panels for dogs and cats?
DOGS = total thyroxine (tT4), free thyroxine (fT4), TSH
CATS = total thyroxine (tT4) +/- free thyroxine (fT4)
What does thyroxine (T4) testing measure? What is the gold standard? What else is done?
total circulating T4 (protein-bound and free)
radioimmunoassay (RIA)
Snap ELISA kit —> not reliable for diagnosing hypothyroidism, reliable for normal [T4]
What 3 medications can cause a false decrease in tT4 value? What commonly causes a false increase?
- glucocorticoids
- sulfonamides
- phenobarbital
~10% of hypothyroid dogs produce anti-T4 antibodies, which confound results
What does free thyroxine (fT4) testing measure? What is the gold standard? What else can be done?
unbound, circulating T4
equilibrium dialysis (ED)
radioimmunoassay (RIA) —> underestimates fT4 in dogs
Why is fT4 testing preferred over tT4 testing?
- better at assessing thyroid status, as fT4 is the biologically active form
- results are less affected by medications
(more expensive and time-consuming, so it is less commonly done)
Why is T3 and fT3 testing not commonly done in dogs? In which breeds may it be beneficial?
more falsely increased or decreased results due to greater prevalence of T3 autoantibodies
sighthounds (Greyhounds, Whippets) —> tend to have lower T4 and fT4 levels than other dogs, but comparable T3
What are the 3 types of assays used for TSH testing? Which one is preferred?
- immunoradiometric*
- chemiluminescent
- ELISA
- = differentiates normal from increased TSH concentrations, but cannot detect lower concentrations
What is considered the single gold standard test to measure thyroid status? What are the 4 steps?
TSH stimulation test (expensive and time-consuming)
- measure baseline T4
- administer TSH (bovine or recombinant human)
- re-measure T4 6 hours after
- should see minimal increase in T4 following TSH administration in hypothyroid dogs