Weight increase of the thyroid gland as a tentative screening parameter to detect the illegal use of thyreostatic compounds in slaughter cattle
Open Access
- 1 January 1982
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Veterinary Quarterly
- Vol. 4 (1) , 1-4
- https://doi.org/10.1080/01652176.1982.9693830
Abstract
A total of 45 normal or enlarged thyroid glands of adult slaughter cattle were weighed and analyzed by thin‐layer chromatography for the presence of residues of the following thyreostatic compounds: thiouracil, methylthiouracil, propylthiouracil, phenylthiouracil, and methimazole. In 21 glands, mostly from imported animals, residues of methylthiouracil or methimazole were detected. These thyroids ranged in weight from 68–245 g (mean value 118 g). Glands in which no residues were found, varied in weight between 20 and 124 g (mean value 42 g). Taking an upper limit of 60 g as normal, 4 out of 22 were ‘false‐positive’ with respect to the 5 thyreostatic compounds screened for, while no false‐negative cases were scored. On the basis of these results the weight increase of the thyroid gland is proposed as a simple indirect parameter in the screening for the illegal use of thyreostatic compounds in slaughter cattle.This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- Detection of antithyroid residues in meat and some organs of slaughtered animalsJournal of Chromatography A, 1975
- Der Stoffansatz bei Ochsen unter dem Einfluß von MethylthiouracilZeitschrift für Tierphysiologie Tierernährung und Futtermittelkunde, 1966
- FURTHER STUDIES ON THE CHEMICAL NATURE OF COMPOUNDS WHICH INHIBIT THE FUNCTION OF THE THYROID GLAND11Endocrinology, 1945