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In vivo and in vitro studies into the immunological changes following iodine 131 therapy for Graves' disease

✍ Scribed by R. Wilson; J. H. McKillop; C. Jenkins; J. A. Thomson


Publisher
Springer
Year
1991
Tongue
English
Weight
377 KB
Volume
18
Category
Article
ISSN
0340-6997

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✦ Synopsis


Radio-iodine therapy for Graves' disease is followed by immunological changes in addition to effects on thyroid hormone production. The present study examined these changes and the mechanisms responsible for them. Of the 15 patients enrolled in the study, 10 became hypothyroid in the first year after iodine 131 therapy. Patients who became hypothyroid had a tendency to show a rise in serum thyrotropin receptor antibody levels (30 +/- 14 to 40 +/- 9 units; NS) and a significant rise in immunoglobulin production (324 +/- 153 to 740 +/- 200 ng/ml; P less than 0.0005) from mitogen-stimulated peripheral blood lymphocytes (a measure of B-cell activity) 2 months after iodine 131 therapy. The increases were not seen in the patients who remained euthyroid at 1 year. In vitro studies suggested that the rise in B-cell activity is due to a fall in suppressor T cell numbers, a change shown to occur following iodine 131 therapy in previous studies. Our results indicate that immunological changes do arise after iodine 131 therapy for Graves' disease but appear to be confined to patients who subsequently became hypothyroid. It is not possible from this study to determine whether the immunological changes appear as a consequence of thyroidal destruction leading to hypothyroidism or whether they contribute directly to it.