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Iodine Intake and the Pattern of Thyroid Disorders: A Comparative Epidemiological Study of Thyroid Abnormalities in the Elderly in Iceland and in Jutland, Denmark
Thyroid abnormalities are common in all populations, but it is difficult to compare results of epidemiological studies, because different methods have been used for evaluation. We studied the importance of the population iodine intake level for the prevalence rate of various thyroid abnormalities in...
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Published in: | The journal of clinical endocrinology and metabolism 1998-03, Vol.83 (3), p.765-769 |
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Main Authors: | , , , , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Citations: | Items that this one cites Items that cite this one |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | Thyroid abnormalities are common in all populations, but it is
difficult to compare results of epidemiological studies, because
different methods have been used for evaluation. We studied the
importance of the population iodine intake level for the prevalence
rate of various thyroid abnormalities in elderly subjects.
Random samples of elderly subjects (68 yr) were selected from the
central person registers in Jutland, Denmark, with low (n = 423)
and, in Iceland, with longstanding relatively high (n = 100)
iodine intake.
Females from Jutland had a high prevalence of goiter or previous goiter
surgery (12.2%), compared with males from Jutland (3.2%) and females
(1.9%) and males (2.2%) from Iceland. Abnormal thyroid function was
very common in both areas, with serum TSH outside the reference range
in 13.5% of subjects from Jutland and 19% of those from Iceland. In
Jutland, it was mainly thyroid hyperfunction (9.7% had low, 3.8% had
high serum TSH), whereas in Iceland, it was impaired thyroid function
(1% had low, 18% had high serum TSH). All subjects with serum TSH
more than 10 mU/L had autoantibodies in serum, but antibodies were, in
general, more common in Jutland than in Iceland.
Thus, thyroid abnormalities in populations with low iodine intake and
those with high iodine intake develop in opposite directions: goiter
and thyroid hyperfunction when iodine intake is relatively low, and
impaired thyroid function when iodine intake is relatively high.
Probably, mild iodine deficiency partly protects against autoimmune
thyroid disease. Thyroid autoantibodies may be markers of an autoimmune
process in the thyroid or secondary to the development of goiter. |
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ISSN: | 0021-972X 1945-7197 |
DOI: | 10.1210/jcem.83.3.4624 |