Dynamics of thyroid diseases and thyroid‐axis gland masses

Medicine (General) Thyroid Hormones 0303 health sciences QH301-705.5 HPT Thyrotropin systems biology Articles pituitary Thyroid Diseases Graves Disease 3. Good health thyroid disorders 03 medical and health sciences R5-920 hysteresis Humans Biology (General)
DOI: 10.15252/msb.202210919 Publication Date: 2022-08-08T07:45:17Z
ABSTRACT
Thyroid disorders are common and often require lifelong hormone replacement. Treating thyroid disorders involves a fascinating and troublesome delay, in which it takes many weeks for serum thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) concentration to normalize after thyroid hormones return to normal. This delay challenges attempts to stabilize thyroid hormones in millions of patients. Despite its importance, the physiological mechanism for the delay is unclear. Here, we present data on hormone delays from Israeli medical records spanning 46 million life-years and develop a mathematical model for dynamic compensation in the thyroid axis, which explains the delays. The delays are due to a feedback mechanism in which peripheral thyroid hormones and TSH control the growth of the thyroid and pituitary glands; enlarged or atrophied glands take many weeks to recover upon treatment due to the slow turnover of the tissues. The model explains why thyroid disorders such as Hashimoto's thyroiditis and Graves' disease have both subclinical and clinical states and explains the complex inverse relation between TSH and thyroid hormones. The present model may guide approaches to dynamically adjust the treatment of thyroid disorders.
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