Apoptosis, a physiological process of cell death, may modulate the mass of the thyroid gland. We investigated the role of apoptosis and the possible involvement of Fas/Fas ligand (FasL) system in apoptosis during goiter formation and involution in a rat model of goiter. Rats were fed a low iodine diet and a goitrogen, 6-propyl-2-thiouracil, to induce goiter. Rats with goiter were then fed a high iodine diet to study the phase of involution. We examined the presence of apoptosis by electron microscopy (EM) and terminal deoxy-UTP nick end labeling (TUNEL). We also investigated the association between Fas and FasL expression and thyrocyte apoptosis using immunohistochemistry and Western blotting. To evaluate the proliferation of thyrocytes, proliferating cell nuclear antigen was examined immunohistochemically. The number of apoptotic cells increased during goiter formation and the early stage of involution, which were also associated with increased number of Fas-positive thyrocytes, and some of these cells contained TUNEL-positive nuclei. However, the expression of FasL was almost constant throughout the experiment. Proliferating cell nuclear antigen/TUNEL ratio markedly increased during goiter formation but decreased particularly during the late stage of goiter involution. Our results indicate that apoptosis of thyrocytes is a main factor of cell loss during goiter formation and involution and suggest that the Fas/FasL system is involved in the induction of apoptosis of these cells. Moreover, the delicate balance between apoptosis and cell proliferation may play an important role in the control of thyroid gland mass.
Abstract. Preoperative therapy with octreotide, a long-acting somatostatin analog, suppresses GH hypersecretion, shrinks GH-producing tumors and leads to an improvement in subsequent surgical remission in acromegalic patients.A continuous infusion of octreotide has demonstrated more persistent suppression of GH secretion than intermittent injections, and only a few studies were reported on the effect of the tumor shrinkage with a continuous infusion of a small dose of octreotide. We therefore investigated the preoperative effects of small doses of octreotide (120-240 jig/day) administered continuously (with a subcutaneous infusion pump) over a short period (2 or 4 weeks) in nine untreated acromegalic patients. Octreotide therapy resulted in suppression of serum GH and IGF-1 concentrations in 8 out of 9 patients and reduction in pituitary tumor size measured by MRI in all patients (by 7.9 to 38.5%). In particular, considerable reduction in tumor size (more than 20%) occurred in 6 of 9 patients. In three patients assessed serially throughout the preoperative period, reduction in tumor size was noted within only one week after the start of octreotide therapy and reduction rate more than 20% was obtained within the first two weeks. In one patient, suprasellar tumor expansion totally disappeared after such therapy. Our results indicate that short-term continuous subcutaneous infusion of a small dose of octreotide results in not only inhibition of GH hypersecretion but also shrinkage of tumor size prior to surgery.
Wereport a 50-year-old female who suffered from reversible hypothyroidism accompanied by isolated ACTHdeficiency. There were no findings indicating a complication of autoimmune thyroiditis.Replacement of maintenance dose of glucocorticoid not only led to improvement of thyroid function, but also caused a transient decrease in T3 and an increase in reverse T3, suggesting that chronic cortisol deficiency may impair thyroid function, and that the maintenance dose, as well as pharmacological doses ofglucocorticoids may influence T4 deiodination. The findings of this case suggest that thyroid function should be re-evaluated to avoid unnecessary replacement of thyroid hormone, a few months after glucocorticoid replacement.
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