Objective: In subclinical hypothyroidism (SH), impaired diastolic function has been documented at rest and on effort, while systolic dysfunction has only been assessed on effort. Design: The aim of the present study was: (a) to further assess systolic function at rest in SH; and (b) to ascertain whether cardiac dysfunction could precede TSH increase in euthyroid patients with a high risk of developing SH. Methods: We studied 32 patients with classical Hashimoto’s thyroiditis (22 with increased serum TSH (.3 mU/ml – group A), and 10 with normal serum TSH (,3 mU/ml – group B)); a third group (C), which included 13 healthy controls. All subjects underwent pulsed wave tissue Doppler imaging (PWTDI) to accurately quantify the global and regional left ventricular function. Results: When compared with group C, PWTDI indices showed that in both groups A and B there was a significant impairment of systolic ejection (P , 0.001 and P , 0.05, respectively), a delay in diastolic relaxation (P , 0.001 and P , 0.05, respectively) and a decrease in the compliance to the ventricular filling (P , 0.05). Several significant correlations were found between PWTDI parameters and serum-free T3 and T4 and TSH concentrations. Conclusion: PWTDI is a sensitive technique that allows detection of both diastolic and systolic abnormalities, not only in patients with SH, but also in euthyroid subjects with a high risk of developing thyroid failure. Futhermore, the significant correlations of several PWTDI indices with serum FT3 and TSH concentrations strongly support the concept of a continuum spectrum of a slight thyroid failure in autoimmune thyroiditis extending to subjects with serum TSH still within the normal range.

Cardiac function in borderline hypothyroidism: a study by pulsed wave tissue Doppler imaging

DEIDDA, MARTINO;MARIOTTI, STEFANO;MERCURO, GIUSEPPE
2005-01-01

Abstract

Objective: In subclinical hypothyroidism (SH), impaired diastolic function has been documented at rest and on effort, while systolic dysfunction has only been assessed on effort. Design: The aim of the present study was: (a) to further assess systolic function at rest in SH; and (b) to ascertain whether cardiac dysfunction could precede TSH increase in euthyroid patients with a high risk of developing SH. Methods: We studied 32 patients with classical Hashimoto’s thyroiditis (22 with increased serum TSH (.3 mU/ml – group A), and 10 with normal serum TSH (,3 mU/ml – group B)); a third group (C), which included 13 healthy controls. All subjects underwent pulsed wave tissue Doppler imaging (PWTDI) to accurately quantify the global and regional left ventricular function. Results: When compared with group C, PWTDI indices showed that in both groups A and B there was a significant impairment of systolic ejection (P , 0.001 and P , 0.05, respectively), a delay in diastolic relaxation (P , 0.001 and P , 0.05, respectively) and a decrease in the compliance to the ventricular filling (P , 0.05). Several significant correlations were found between PWTDI parameters and serum-free T3 and T4 and TSH concentrations. Conclusion: PWTDI is a sensitive technique that allows detection of both diastolic and systolic abnormalities, not only in patients with SH, but also in euthyroid subjects with a high risk of developing thyroid failure. Futhermore, the significant correlations of several PWTDI indices with serum FT3 and TSH concentrations strongly support the concept of a continuum spectrum of a slight thyroid failure in autoimmune thyroiditis extending to subjects with serum TSH still within the normal range.
File in questo prodotto:
Non ci sono file associati a questo prodotto.

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11584/103590
 Attenzione

Attenzione! I dati visualizzati non sono stati sottoposti a validazione da parte dell'ateneo

Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? 4
  • Scopus 37
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? 33
social impact