Abstract
Male Sprague-Dawley rats were given graded doses of methylmercaptoimidazole (MMI), propylthiouracil (PTU), KClO4 or KI in drinking water for 4 days, or the lowest effective dose of each drug for various times. The rats were sacrificed at 1–2 p. m. and serum T3, T4 and TSH concentrations were measured by radioimmunoassays. It was found that administration of 5 mg/l of MMI, 10 mg/l of PTU and 100 mg/l of KClO4 for 4–14 days induced a transient rise in serum TSH and a fall in serum T3 or T4 or in both. The effects of KI were not consistent. In another series of experiments, PTU (10 mg/l) was given in drinking water for 4 days, and then graded doses of T3 or T4 were given iv, or 100 ng of TRH was injected into a tail vein, or the animals were exposed to 4°C for 30 min. The initial high TSH levels were further increased by TRH and cold and decreased by T3 and T4. The PTU-treated animals had goitres after 4 days. We infer that low doses, that is to say 10–100 times lower than previously described, of antithyroid drugs induce a hypothyroidism characterized by an increased TSH level and a decreased serum T3 or T4 level or both. A 4 days' treatment with PTU (10 mg/l in tap water) is a suitable tool for studying the effect of various conditions on TSH secretion.