Autoimmune thyroid disease. Clinical and biological correlations
2009
In this article, we analyze the clinical and biological data concerning the autoimmune thyroid diseases in patients recruited in an endocrinology clinic at the university hospital center of Hotel-Dieu de France between March 2005 and November 2005. We studied 121 patients (51 with Basedow disease and 70 with Hashimoto thyroiditis), between 13 and 68 years old, with a BMI of 24.68 kg/m2 and with a female predominance (105 women). Symptoms of hyperthyroidism represented the most frequent cause of consultation. The distribution of patients regarding their thyroid disease showed that 42.1% of patients had hyperthyroidism (only one patient had subclinical hyperthyroidism), 21.5% had a subclinical hypothyroidism, 28.1% had clinical hypothyroidism and 8.3% had euthyroid goiter. Half of the patients had at least a member of their family whith a thyroid disease. The autoimmune thyroid diseases are strongly associated to other autoimmune diseases and to repetitive spontaneous abortion. Thus, 39% of the married women had had at least one spontaneous abortion and 26.4% of the patients had one or more autoimmune disease associated to their thyroid disease; diabetes mellitus type 1 representing the most frequent one. Concerning the treatment, we remarked a remission of 30 patients (66.7%) with Basedow disease after 18 months of antithyroid drug treatment of 45 patients. In Hashimoto thyroiditis, we remarked a frequent evolution of patients with subclinical hypothyroidism to overt hypothyroidism when medical treatment was not initiated.
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