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Query: UNIPROT:P05231 (
interleukin-6
)
23,907
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Variations in the serum concentration of
interleukin-6
(
IL-6
) have been reported concomitantly with thyroid dysfunction: increased serum
IL-6
levels have been found in patients with thyroidal destructive processes, such as
subacute thyroiditis
, some forms of amiodarone-induced thyrotoxicosis, or after percutaneous ethanol injection into "hot" thyroid nodules, as a result of the cytokine release from the damaged thyrocyte. In addition, recent in vitro evidence suggests that
IL-6
might account, at least in part, for changes of thyroid economy found in nonthyroidal illness (NTI). In this cross-sectional study we addressed this problem by measuring serum
IL-6
levels in 71 patients with NTI, due to neoplasia (n = 25), chronic liver disease (n = 9), chronic renal failure (n = 28), or other chronic nonthyroidal disorders (n = 9). These patients had reduced mean serum total T3 (TT3) and free T3 (FT3) concentrations, normal total and free T4 levels, normal TSH values, and increased serum reverse T3 (rT3) concentration (with the exception of chronic renal failure patients, who had normal rT3 levels). Serum
IL-6
concentration was increased above normal (i.e. > 100 fmol/L) in almost all NTI patients, especially in those with low T3 values (median value: 258 fmol/L, range 73-3210, vs 152 fmol/L, range < 12.5-460, in patients with normal TT3 values, p < 0.001). Serum
IL-6
values in NTI patients were negatively correlated with serum FT3 values (r = 0.56, p < 0.001), and positively correlated with serum rT3 values (r = 0.78, p < 0.001).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Relationship of the increased serum interleukin-6 concentration to changes of thyroid function in nonthyroidal illness. 793 Mar 79
Increased serum
interleukin-6
(
IL-6
) concentrations have recently been reported in patients with
subacute thyroiditis
and in some patients with amiodarone-induced thyrotoxicosis, possibly because of cytokine release from damaged thyroid cells. In this study, serum
IL-6
levels were determined by an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay method in 18 patients given percutaneous intranodular ethanol injection (PIEI) for autonomously functioning thyroid nodule, 12 patients treated with radioactive iodine (RAI) for Graves' disease or toxic adenoma, and 23 patients submitted to fine needle aspiration (FNA) for nonfunctioning thyroid nodules. Baseline serum
IL-6
levels did not differ in the 3 groups. PIEI was followed by a dramatic increase in median
IL-6
values from 42 fmol/L (range, < 25 to 84) to 381 fmol/L (range, 61-9870; P < 0.0001); the peak value was attained as little as 10 min after injection. RAI was also followed by a significant (P < 0.0001) increase in
IL-6
from 52 fmol/L (range, < 25 to 84) to 189 fmol/L (range, 119-1417 fmol/L); the increase after RAI was lower than that after PIEI (P < 0.05), and the peak value was attained later (after 24 h). FNA was also followed by a slight, but significant, increase in the serum
IL-6
concentration from 21 fmol/L (range, < 25 to 103) to 109 fmol/L (range, < 25 to 360; P < 0.0001 vs. baseline). The increase in
IL-6
was correlated with the size of nodule or goiter (P < 0.0001), but not with the amount of injected ethanol or the dose of radioiodine delivered to the thyroid. Serum thyroglobulin also increased after PIEI, RAI, or FNA, but no significant correlation could be demonstrated with the increase in
IL-6
. The results of this study support the concept that in the absence of nonthyroidal illnesses, which are often associated with increased serum concentrations of the cytokine,
IL-6
can be regarded as a useful marker of thyroid-destructive processes.
...
PMID:Interleukin-6: a marker of thyroid-destructive processes? 796 38
Amiodarone, an iodine-rich cardiac drug, may induce thyrotoxicosis (AIT), which can occur in patients with preexisting thyroid abnormalities and in subjects with apparently normal thyroid glands. The pathogenesis of AIT is often due to iodine-induced excessive thyroid hormone synthesis, especially in patients with underlying thyroid disease. In some instances, however, AIT may be related to a destructive process due to amiodarone-induced thyroiditis, resulting in thyroid cell damage and thyroid hormone release into the circulation. Another thyroid inflammatory process,
subacute thyroiditis
, has been recently reported to be associated with markedly increased serum
interleukin-6
(
IL-6
) levels. To investigate the significance of serum
IL-6
levels in AIT, we evaluated in a cross-sectional study the following subjects: 27 AIT patients, 15 with no apparent thyroid abnormalities (AIT-) and 12 with nodular goiter and/or thyroid autoimmune disease (AIT+); 14 euthyroid patients receiving chronic amiodarone therapy; 10 patients with amiodarone-induced hypothyroidism; 56 patients with spontaneous hyperthyroidism due to Graves' disease (n = 35) or toxic adenoma/nodular goiter (n = 21); 20 subjects with nontoxic goiter; and 50 healthy controls. Serum free thyroid hormone concentrations did not differ in patients with amiodarone-induced or spontaneous hyperthyroidism. Mean (+/- SE) serum
IL-6
values were as follows: AIT-, 573.5 +/- 78.7 fmol/L (range, 149.4-1145.1); AIT+, 152.7 +/- 46.3 fmol/L (range, < 25-505.6); euthyroid patients receiving chronic amiodarone therapy, 51.4 +/- 10.0 fmol/L (range, < 25-122.5); amiodarone-induced hypothyroidism, 43.8 +/- 8.4 fmol/L (range, < 25-84.3); Graves' disease, 108.2 +/- 18.2 fmol/L (range, < 25-250); toxic adenoma/nodular goiter, 97.6 +/- 10.3 fmol/L (range, < 25-168.9); nontoxic goiter, 47.3 +/- 7.1 fmol/L (range, < 25-106.6); and controls, 37.8 +/- 6.2 fmol/L (range, < 25-99.4). Serum
IL-6
values in AIT- patients were markedly higher (P < 0.0001) than those in all other groups. Values in AIT+, although slightly higher, did not significantly differ from those in patients with spontaneous hyperthyroidism. AIT- patients had low 24-h thyroidal radioiodine uptake (RAIU), whereas AIT+ had inappropriately low normal to high (9-58%) RAIU values in the presence of excess iodine. The presence of markedly elevated serum
IL-6
concentrations and low thyroidal RAIU values in patients with AIT without underlying thyroid disease suggests the presence of amiodarone-induced thyroiditis as the etiology of thyrotoxicosis. Treatment of 2 such patients with prednisone was associated with a dramatic reduction and prompt normalization of
IL-6
and thyroid hormone values.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Serum interleukin-6 in amiodarone-induced thyrotoxicosis. 810 31
Interleukin-6
(
IL-6
) is the main mediator of the acute phase response. Increased serum concentrations of the cytokine have been found in patients with nonthyroidal inflammatory disorders and infections. In 18 patients with
subacute thyroiditis
(
SAT
) evaluated within 1-2 weeks after the onset of the disease, serum
IL-6
values, as assessed by an ELISA method having a limit of detection of 25 fmol/L, ranged 139.2-543.9 fmol/L (mean +/- SE, 287.2 +/- 28.2 fmol/L). These values were significantly higher than those of 25 normal healthy controls (mean +/- SE, 26.2 +/- 5.5 fmol/L, range < 25-99.4), 18 of whom had serum
IL-6
values below the detection limit. The increase in serum
IL-6
levels in
SAT
patients appeared to be related to the inflammatory disorder and not to thyrotoxicosis, because 18 Graves' disease patients and 13 patients with toxic adenoma or toxic multinodular goiter had significantly lower serum
IL-6
concentrations (101.7 +/- 35.2 fmol/L, range < 25-251, for Graves' disease, 79.6 +/- 41.4 fmol/L, range < 25-168.5, for toxic adenoma, p < 0.001 vs
SAT
for both groups) despite the markedly higher levels of total and free thyroid hormones. Neither free T4 nor free T3 values were correlated with serum
IL-6
levels both in
SAT
and Graves' patients. Twelve
SAT
patients were reevaluated 3-4 months later, after remission of the disease and at least one month after glucocorticoid withdrawal. At the final observation, all
SAT
patients showed a normalization of
IL-6
concentration, which was undetectable in 8/12 (mean +/- SE, 22.8 +/- 5.4 fmol/L, p < 0.001 vs acute phase values).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Increased serum interleukin-6 concentration in patients with subacute thyroiditis: relationship with concomitant changes in serum T4-binding globulin concentration. 851 77
Increased serum
interleukin-6
(
IL-6
) concentrations have recently been reported in patients with
subacute thyroiditis
, possibly because of cytokine release from damaged thyroid cells. To investigate the changes in serum
IL-6
concentrations in
subacute thyroiditis
during treatment with corticosteroid, serum
IL-6
concentrations were determined by an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay method in five patients with
subacute thyroiditis
. Serum
IL-6
concentrations were increased moderately, and simultaneously, serum levels of T4, thyroglobulin, and C-reactive protein and erythrocyte sedimentation rate were increased markedly. The treatment with prednisolone rapidly and progressively decreased serum levels of thyroglobulin, T4, and C-reactive protein and the erythrocyte sedimentation rate. In contrast, serum
IL-6
concentrations increased markedly 7 days after the treatment with prednisolone in all five patients and two of five patients showed further increases in serum
IL-6
concentration on the 17th day. The rise in serum
IL-6
levels in untreated patients with
subacute thyroiditis
in this study is compatible with previous reports. The rise in serum
IL-6
levels after treatment with corticosteroid in
subacute thyroiditis
may reflect the dissociation between the persistent release of
IL-6
from the damaged thyroid cells, immediate inhibition of secondary inflammatory reactions by corticosteroid, and the release of thyroglobulin and T4 from performed colloid stores in follicular lumen destroyed by
subacute thyroiditis
.
...
PMID:Dissociation between serum interleukin-6 rise and other parameters of disease activity in subacute thyroiditis during treatment with corticosteroid. 863 70
Amiodarone-induced thyrotoxicosis (AIT) occurs both in abnormal thyroid glands (nodular goiter, latent Graves' disease) (type I AIT) or in apparently normal thyroid glands (type II AIT). Differentiation of the two forms is crucial, because type I AIT responds well to methimazole and potassium perchlorate combined treatment, whereas type II AIT is effectively managed by glucocorticoids. Differential diagnosis is often difficult, although thyroid radioactive iodine uptake is usually low-to-normal in type I and low-suppressed in type II, and serum
interleukin-6
levels are normal/slightly elevated in type I, markedly elevated in type II. Color flow Doppler sonography (CFDS) is a technique that shows intrathyroidal blood flow and provides real-time information on thyroid morphology and hyperfunction. To investigate the usefulness of CFDS in differentiating the two types of AIT, 27 consecutive AIT patients, 11 type I and 16 type II, were evaluated by CFDS before starting antithyroid treatment. Gender, age, severity of thyrotoxicosis, and cumulative amiodarone dose were similar in the two groups. All type II AIT patients had a CFDS pattern 0 (ie, absent vascularity), in agreement with the pathogenesis of the disease, due to thyroid damage. Likewise, nine patients with
subacute thyroiditis
, another destructive process of the thyroid gland, also had a CFDS pattern 0. Eleven patients with type I AIT had a CFDS pattern ranging from pattern I (presence of parenchymal blood flow with patchy uneven distribution) (7 patients, 64%) to pattern II (ie, mild increase of color flow Doppler signal with patchy distribution) (1 patient, 9%) and pattern III (markedly increased color flow Doppler signal with diffuse homogeneous distribution)(3 patients, 27%), similar to that found in patients with untreated Graves' disease patients, thus indicating a hyper-functioning gland. Control subjects and euthyroid patients under long-term amiodarone treatment had absent thyroid hypervascularity and a CFDS pattern 0. These findings demonstrate that CFDS distinguishes type I and II AIT. Because of its rapidity and noninvasive features, CFDS represents a valuable tool for a quick differentiation between the two types of AIT. This can avoid any delay in initiating the appropriate treatment for a rapid control of thyrotoxicosis in patients whose tachyarrhythmias or other cardiac disorders make thyroid hormone excess extremely deleterious.
...
PMID:Color flow Doppler sonography rapidly differentiates type I and type II amiodarone-induced thyrotoxicosis. 929 40
Postpartum thyroid dysfunction (PPTD) is an autoimmune-mediated thyroid destructive process. Human
interleukin-6
(
IL-6
) is a cytokine found to be increased in
subacute thyroiditis
, amiodarone-induced thyrotoxicosis, Graves' disease, and other thyroid destructive processes. We report serum
IL-6
levels in PPTD in two independent studies. New York Study: In a previous prospective study we demonstrated that PPTD occurred in 25% (7/28) of women with type 1 diabetes mellitus.
IL-6
determinations were made on the frozen serum samples of these 28 women during each trimester of their pregnancy and at 1.5, 3, 6, 9, and 12 months postpartum.
IL-6
levels were found to be similar in women with PPTD compared with women without PPTD (mean 3.06+/-2.25 vs. 2.51+/-2.21 pg/mL; p = 0.15). No difference in
IL-6
levels was found between the pre- and the postpartum periods (mean 2.67+/-1.82 vs. 3.04+/-2.44 pg/mL; p = 0.30) in all 28 women. Cardiff Study: Serum
IL-6
levels were measured on frozen serum samples of 30 women with PPTD.
IL-6
levels were below the detection limit (25 fmol/L or 0.65 pg/mL) in 94 (67%) of these samples. No significant difference in the mean serum
IL-6
levels were found between any time points in the study. There was no correlation between serum
IL-6
levels, thyroid peroxidase (TPO)- antibodies and serum thyrotropin (TSH) levels at any time point.
IL-6
levels during pregnancy or postpartum were not found to be significantly different in women with PPTD compared with women without PPTD.
...
PMID:Interleukin-6 levels are not increased in women with postpartum thyroid dysfunction. 962 26