Monday, 26 September 2011

Hypothyroidism and Goiter - Hypothyroidism Causes Enlargement of the Thyroid




Hypothyroidism and Goiter - Hypothyroidism Causes Enlargement of the Thyroid

Hypothyroidism, in general, has exactly the opposite effects as those of hyperthyroidism, although it may be caused by autoimmunity as well but a kind of immunity that destroys the gland rather than stimulates it. Most of the patients first have autoimmune thyroiditis, an inflammation of the thyroid glands. This causes deterioration and eventually, fibrosis of the gland or the replacement of thyroid tissue with connective tissue. Fibrotic tissue is incapable of producing thyroid hormone and a deficiency in the hormone occurs. In most cases, an enlagement of the thyroid gland is observed.
Endemic Colloid Goiter
Around 50 milligrams of iodine are required every year for the normal functioning of the thyroid gland and for production of sufficient amounts of thyroid hormone. In some areas of the world like the Swiss Alps, the Andes, and the Great Lakes regions of the United States of America, there are less than adequate quantities of iodine in the soil for the foodstuffs to contain this yearly requirement. In the days when iodized table salt was not yet available, people from these areas developed extremely large thyroid glands called endemic goiters.
Endemic goiters develop when the lack of iodine prevents the formation of sufficient quantities of the thyroid hormones thyroxine and triiodothyronine. Because of the low concentrations of thyroid hormone, there is nothing that could inhibit the production of thyroid-stimulating hormone or TSH by the pituitary gland, which would result in the anterior pituitary gland secreting increased amounts of the hormone targeting the thyroid gland. The increased levels of TSH stimulate the thyroid gland to produce increased amounts of thyroglobulin. However, without iodine to bind to the tyrosine residues in the tyroglobulin molecule, there is still no production of hormones. This causes the thyroid gland to increase in size, sometimes to as large as 10 to 20 times its normal size.
Idiopathic Nontoxic Colloid Goiter
Similarly enlarged thyroid glands filled with colloid may also happen to people who do not have an iodine deficiency, unlike patients with endemic goiter. These people may have normal levels of thyroid hormone secretion but more often than not, the secretion of thyroid hormone is depressed like that of endemic goiter.
The exact cause for the enlargement of the thyroids of patients with iodiopathic nontoxic colloid goiter is not known. However, most of these patients do show signs of mild thyroiditis, which led to the suggestion that thyroiditis might lead to slightly lower concentrations of the hormone, which in turn could cause increase in TSH secretion and progressive growth of unaffected portions of the gland. This could explain why the thyroid glands of these patients are usually nodular, with some areas exhibiting growth while some are being destroyed by thyroiditis.

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