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Query: UNIPROT:Q9UIJ5 (
Rec
)
58,342
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
On a thoroughbred stud four foals were born with greatly enlarged thyroids and leg weakness. Two foals died within 18 hours of birth, the others subsequently recovered. An
enlarged thyroid
was also evident in one of the resident mares. The thyroids from the dead foals were hyperplastic. Feed analyses showed that the mares had an iodine intake of about 83 mg daily, 8-8 ppm of the dietary dry matter, due almost entirely to the high iodine content of a proprietary compound horse nut which had been fed at the daily rate of 12 lb per head. It was concluded from the histology of the thyroids, the high intake of iodine, the lack of response to treatment with potassium iodide and the elevated levels of serum protein bound iodine that the condition of the foals on the stud was caused by an excess of iodine fed to the mares during pregnancy.
Vet
Rec
1975 Aug 02
PMID:The effect of excess dietary iodine on pregnant mares and foals. 115 32
Congenital hypothyroidism was diagnosed in related Abyssinian cats. The disease appeared to be inherited as an autosomal recessive trait with affected homozygotes showing signs of reduced growth rate, shorter stature with kitten-like features, constipation and
goitre
. Hypothyroidism was confirmed by demonstrating low basal serum thyroxine levels which failed to increase after intravenous administration of thyroid stimulating hormone or thyrotropic releasing hormone. The radioiodide uptake of the thyroid glands was normal but a high proportion of the accumulated radioiodide was discharged after the administration of sodium perchlorate. It is concluded that the affected cats had a primary dyshormonogenesis: an organification (peroxidase) defect.
Vet
Rec
1992 Aug 15
PMID:Preliminary studies on congenital hypothyroidism in a family of Abyssinian cats. 132 5
The historical and clinical features and the haematological and biochemical changes in 126 cats with hyperthyroidism are described; 125 of the cats were domestic short- or longhaired, and one was a chinchilla. There were 62 males and 64 females with a mean age of 13.0 years. The duration of signs ranged from two days to two years with a mean of 5.4 months. The historical and clinical features were weight loss, polyphagia, polyuria/polydipsia, tachycardia, hyperactivity, diarrhoea, respiratory abnormalities, other cardiac abnormalities, skin lesions, vomiting, moderately raised temperature, decreased activity, decreased appetite, congestive cardiac failure, haematuria and intermittently decreased appetite.
Goitre
was palpable in 123 cats. The serum total thyroxine concentrations of the cats were more than three standard deviations above the mean of the reference range. Serum total tri-iodothyronine concentrations ranged from 0.78 to 14.96 nmol/litre and were within the reference range in 11 of the cats. Mild hyperthyroidism was a much commoner cause of high normal or marginally above normal thyroid hormone concentrations than severe, concurrent, non-thyroidal illness. Other common biochemical changes were increased of serum alanine aminotransferase, urea, aspartate aminotransferase, alkaline phosphatase and lactate dehydrogenase. There were minimal changes in the red cell parameters. Leucocyte changes showed two trends: a mature neutrophilia, either with or without an accompanying leucocytosis often in association with a lymphopenia, or an eosinophilia, either with or without a lymphocytosis.
Vet
Rec
1992 Sep 19
PMID:Historical, clinical and laboratory features of 126 hyperthyroid cats. 141 11
The following unusual diseases were diagnosed in birds submitted to the Veterinary Research Institute, Victoria, between 1978 and 1987: the viral diseases beak and feather disease of psittacines, infectious laryngotracheitis in peafowls, a papovavirus-like inclusion body disease in psittacines, and pox; chlamydiosis; the bacterial diseases actinomycosis, listeriosis and mycobacteriosis; the fungal diseases favus, yeast infections and systemic zygomycosis; the protozoan diseases cryptosporidiosis, hexamitiasis, suspected leucocytozoonosis, sarcosporidiosis, toxoplasmosis, trichomoniasis and an unidentified protozoan-like organism which caused pneumonia in ducks; a variety of parasites; the metabolic disorders curled-toe paralysis in pheasant poults, encephalomalacia and parenchymatous
goitre
; toxicity due to dimetridazole and the ingestion of the leaves of the tobacco tree; and other non-infectious conditions including asphyxiation, burns, cataracts, cerebellar degeneration and atrophy, cystic right oviducts and exertional rhabdomyolysis.
Vet
Rec
1992 Feb 29
PMID:Some unusual diseases in the birds of Victoria, Australia. 156 52
Two different proliferation assays have been used to measure the proliferative potential of IgG-fractions from 57 patients with nontoxic
goiter
of an iodine-deficient area: primary human thyroid epithelial cells (TEC) and the thouroughly investigated FRTL-5 cell line. IgG-fractions from patients with nontoxic
goiter
(n = 30), nontoxic recurrent
goiter
(n = 8), toxic-nodular
goiter
(n = 15) and carcinoma of the thyroid (n = 4) were highly purified on DEAE-Sepharose and additionally Protein A-Sepharose in some cases. The two proliferation assays gave contradictory results: primary cultures of human thyroid epithelial cells (TEC) could not be stimulated by any of the patient's IgG-fractions nor by bTSH. The FRTL-5 cells, however, were stimulated with 10 microU/ml bTSH by 326% +/- 96% (range: 222% - 497%, p less than 0.001). In one experimental series, 72% of all patients exceeded mean + 2 SD of normal controls, when the stimulation index was referred to the effect of bTSH (NTG: 77%,
Rec
. G.: 88%, Tox. G.: 53%, Ca. thyroid: 75%). With a different method of calculation - stimulation index referred to the basal value - the number of patients above mean + 2 SD of normal controls decreased to 30% (NTG: 33%,
Rec
. G.: 12.5%, Tox. G.: 33%, Ca. thyroid: 25%). Statistical analysis, however, of results of different patient groups compared to the normal control group failed to show any significance.
...
PMID:Thyroid growth stimulating activity in highly purified IgG-fractions of patients with nonimmune thyroid diseases. 257 26
A brief review of the literature on equine
goitre
is presented, together with a case of congenital
goitre
in a foal. This animal showed localised swelling of the neck, hyperextension of the lower limbs and initial difficulty in sucking. The
goitre
was removed surgically and the hyperextension successfully treated with surgical shoes and bandaging. The cause was probably iodine deficiency coupled with a goitrogen in the diet.
Vet
Rec
1983 Apr 23
PMID:Case of equine goitre. 619 25
A diagnosis of congenital
goitre
was confirmed histologically in piglets which were born hairless and swollen, and with significantly
enlarged thyroid
glands. The iodine content of the thyroid glands and the serum total thyroxine concentrations were very low. No evidence was found of iodine deficiency or significant goitrogenic activity in the diet fed to the sows. An investigation of the parentage of six affected litters revealed that they all had one or other of two boars as the sire, grandsire or great grandsire. The suspicion of an inherited disorder was confirmed when a test mating of a suspect carrier boar and sow resulted in the birth of two affected piglets. The ratio of the numbers of affected and unaffected piglets was statistically consistent with an autosomal recessive mode of inheritance.
Vet
Rec
1994 Dec 17
PMID:An inherited congenital goitre in pigs. 790 Feb 42
Previous studies on the rdw rat have suggested that its dwarfism is caused primarily by dysfunction of the thyroid gland. In this study, rat thyroid glands were analyzed endocrinologically and morphologically to clarify the primary cause of dwarfism in the rdw rat. The rdw rat showed lowered thyroid hormone (T4 and T3) levels but elevated TSH in serum. The rdw thyroid gland was almost proportional in size and it was not
goiter
in gross inspection. Our histological investigation produced three results that may lend important evidence in understanding the problem in the thyroid gland of rdw rats. First of all, secretory granules could not be detected in the follicular epithelial cells of the rdw. Secondly, thyroglobulin was found at very low levels in the follicular lumen by immunohistochemical analysis. In contrast, it could be detected in a substantial quantity inside the dilated rER and in the huge vacuoles that are formed by swelling of the rough endoplasmic reticulum (rER) at the basal side of the follicular epithelial cells. Additionally, the nucleus of the follicular epithelial cells was pressed to the luminal side by the enlarged rER. These morphological changes would indicate that the transport of thyroglobulin is stopped at or before the formation of the secretory granules and thyroglobulin is not secreted into the follicular lumen. The rdw characterization strongly supports that rdw dwarfism is induced by hypothyroidism due to some defect(s) in the thyroid gland.
Anat
Rec
2000 05 01
PMID:Missing secretory granules, dilated endoplasmic reticulum, and nuclear dislocation in the thyroid gland of rdw rats with hereditary dwarfism. 1076 Jul 44
In this paper, the etiological factors affecting infertility among the Azande tribe of Central Africa are reviewed. Of those factors reviewed, including venereal disease, leprosy, sleeping sickness, endemic
goitre
, nutrition, voluntary contraception, and malaria none is sufficient to account for a lowering in the fertility rate. The data collected is estimated to be accurate but very limited. The author, however, concludes that there is 1) a low child/adult ratio; 2) a marked female preponderance; and 3) a high infant and child mortality rate. Finally, the people of the tribe are reproducing themselves, though not so prolifically as their former preponderance in this region, or comparison with fertility levels in neighboring tribes, would lead one to expect.
Sudan Notes
Rec
1954 Jun
PMID:Dearth of children among the Azande: preliminary report. 1233 86
Failure of maternal colostral antibody transfer in lambsHypomagnesaemia in calvesHyperplastic
goitre
in a stillborn calfAbortion storm in a beef herd due to Salmonella MontevideoRickets in hogg lambsStaphylococcus hyicus isolated from piglets with joint ill These are among matters discussed in the disease surveillance report for March 2016 from SAC Consulting: Veterinary Services (SAC C VS).
Vet
Rec
2016 Jul 09
PMID:Failure of maternal colostral antibody transfer in lambs linked to excess dietary iodine. 2738 51
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