DEVELOPMENT OF HYPERTHYROIDISM FOLLOWING PRIMARY HYPOTHYROIDISM: A CASE REPORT WITH CHANGES IN THYROID‐RELATED ANTIBODIES

Abstract
SUMMARY: We report a 48‐year‐old woman who developed hyperthyroidism following primary hypothyroidism. The serum T4 level was initially low and serum TSH level was high with clinical signs of hypothyroidism. The thyroid gland was not enlarged. Therapy with L‐T4 was started. Three years later she developed hyperthyroidism; serum free T4 increased to 29–1 pmol/l after cessation of L‐T4 therapy. The 123I thyroid uptake was increased with no suppression by exogenous T3. When she was hypothyroid, the activity of thyroid stimulating antibodies (TSAb) in serum measured by cyclic AMP production in cultured porcine thyroid cells were negative at 93.4% (normal < 140%), while thyroid stimulation‐blocking antibodies (TSBAb) determined by inhibition of TSH‐induced cyclic AMP increase were positive at 96.1% (normal < 40%). When hyperthyroidism subsequently occurred, TSBAb became negative (30.%), while TSAb became positive (163.3%). The findings indicate that hypothyroidism due to the potent TSBAb activity is not always persistent, but can be changed when various types of thyroid‐relating antibodies change in the course of the disease.