The recommendations for the dietary allowance of iodine are 150 micrograms per day for adolescents and adults. Thyrotropin (TSH) and thyroglobulin (Tg) can be used as surveillance indicators for assessing iodine deficiency disorders. We compared the relation between TSH and Tg, free triiodothyronine, and thyroxine serum levels with urinary iodine excretion in 2311 untreated euthyroid patients using our modified cericarsenite method. An adequate iodine intake may be assumed when TSH and Tg values are at the lower end of the normal range. Patients were grouped according to urinary iodine excretion and goiter size. In the group with an iodine excretion between 201 and 300 micrograms of iodine per gram of creatinine, the lowest TSH values and even low Tg levels could be shown. We conclude that an iodine intake of approximately 250 micrograms/day is associated with the lowest TSH stimulation to thyrocytes. In the groups separated according to thyroid size, significantly higher Tg levels were found in the patients with uninodular and multinodular goiter as a result of longstanding iodine deficiency, whereas actual urinary iodine excretion did not differ significantly. Additionally, iodine excretion of 39,913 euthyroid patients between 1984 was 1996 was examined. In Austria iodized salt (10 mg KI/kg) was introduced by law in 1963 and increased to 20 mg KI/kg salt in 1990. An initial increase of iodine excretion until 1993 was followed by a decrease in 1994 and 1995 without further changes in 1996. These results show that iodine intake has improved since 1984; however, in 1996 iodine excretion in one-third of the investigated patients was under 100 micrograms per gram of creatinine and more than 80% had less than 200 micrograms per gram of creatinine.
Forty-seven patients were submitted to 68 radioimmunoscintigraphic investigations for primary or recurrent colorectal cancer. Immunoscintigraphy with Immu-4 correctly detected 28 primary colorectal cancers of 29 and 12 of 12 recurrent colorectal cancers. Overall accuracy was 93.75 percent in primary and 91.6 percent in recurrent colorectal cancer. Immunoscintigraphy had a decisive influence on treatment planning in every third primary colorectal cancer patient and was by far superior to CT scan in the detection of early recurrences, especially in patients with a history of abdominoperineal or low anterior resection. Immu-4 scintigraphy is a safe and convenient diagnostic approach to colorectal cancer. Because radioactivity is acceptably low and the method is absolutely free of side effects, there are no objections to the repeated use of immunoscintigraphy which provides important information in primary diagnosis as well as in the follow-up of colorectal cancer patients.
Today silent myocardial ischemia (SMI) is a well-recognized phenomenon. However, in the absence of clinical signs suggesting coronary artery disease (CAD), a streamlined diagnostic approach for precise clarification has proved to be difficult. Sensitivity and specificity of ergometric results are rather poor in symptom-free patients. Thus the question arises, whether the necessity of coronary angiography can be established more precisely by 201TI myocardial SPECT in these patients. Treadmill exercise according to the Bruce protocol, 201TI myocardial SPECT and coronary angiography were performed in a total of 106 patients with suspected SMI. In group I (high probability of ischemia; n = 46), reversible defects detected by SPECT correlated well with significant stenoses and irreversible defects with subtotal stenoses or complete occlusions. SPECT sensitivity in the detection of ischemia was 91 %, its specificity 96%. In group II (low probability of ischemia; n = 60), SPECT sensitivity was as high as in group I (94%) but due to a high number of false-positive results (e. g. cardiomyopathy) specificity was only 75%. However, SPECT was superior to exercise ECG (sensitivity 70%; specificity 56%) in the detection of SMI. In addition, ß-endorphin levels were determined in 180 healthy subjects, 37 patients with symptomatic CAD and in 34 patients with SMI before and during maximum exercise. Exercise values in patients with SMI were significantly higher than in healthy subjects or in patients with symptomatic CAD.
Thyroid hormone autoantibodies may lead to abnormal values of free triiodothyronine (FT3) and free thyroxine (FT4) by interference with the radio immunoassay (RIA). We examined thyroid function in six patients with known triiodothyronine-binding autoantibodies using a RIA and an electro-chemiluminescence immunoassay (ECLIA). FT3 values measured by RIA were spuriously high, ECLIA measurement of FT3 led to correct values according to the patients' thyroid status. We conclude from these results that in patients with triiodothyronine-binding autoantibodies FT3 measurement by ECLIA is more useful than measurement by RIA.
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