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Hyperthyroxinemia of acute psychiatric illness
Annals of Saudi Medicine. 1990; 10 (6): 650-2
Dans Anglais | IMEMR | ID: emr-121811
ABSTRACT
The present study was undertaken to determine the frequency of abnormal thyroid function tests in patients admitted with acute psychiatric illness. Elevated thyroxine [T4] levels were noted in ten [11.4%] of 88 psychiatric patients during short-term admissions and these levels retuned to normal by three weeks after admission [P< 0.0001]. None of the patients had schizophrenia. There were no patients with hypertriiodothyroninemia. Hypothyroidism was not observed in any of the patients studied. High normal T4 levels were noted on admission in 32 patients [mean T4, 117.46 +/- 19.18I/L], and decreased to a mean of 93.52 +/- 15.2 mmol/L three weeks later [P< 0.0001]. Fiver of the patients who showed hyperthyoxinemia on the previous admission were readmitted to the psychiatry unit during the study period because of relapse of their psychiatric illness, but none showed hyperthoxinemia on the second admission. Hyperthyroxinemia of acute psychiatric illness is a graded phenomenon. Its incidence is unpredicatable and may not be reproducible
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Indice: Méditerranée orientale Sujet Principal: Hyperthyroxinémie / Maladie aigüe langue: Anglais Texte intégral: Ann. Saudi Med. Année: 1990

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Indice: Méditerranée orientale Sujet Principal: Hyperthyroxinémie / Maladie aigüe langue: Anglais Texte intégral: Ann. Saudi Med. Année: 1990