[Amiodarone and the thyroid gland].
- 24 October 1981
- journal article
- abstracts
- Vol. 111 (43) , 1590-6
Abstract
In an estimated 5% of patients, antiarrhythmic therapy with amiodarone (Cordarone) may have side effects involving thyroid function. These unwanted effects on the thyroid gland can be classified into three entirely different categories. In addition, amiodarone invariably interferes in a characteristic way with the peripheral metabolism of thyroid hormones at the cellular level. These effects are reviewed. 1. Amiodarone contains 39% of iodine. Since its metabolism involves deiodination to inorganic iodide, classical iodine-induced thyrotoxicosis may occur in patients with nodular goiters containing autonomous follicles. 2. An entirely different form of thyrotoxicosis, resembling Graves' disease, may be induced by amiodarone in individuals with previously normal thyroid. The pathogenesis of this phenomenon is unknown. 3. In rare patients of the thyroid gland is unable to cope with pharmacological quantities of iodide, possibly due to genetic anomaly of thyroid metabolism. In these individuals amiodarone may induce hypothyroidism. 4. In contrast to the possible side effects of amiodarone involving the thyroid gland, the drug has an obligate impact on the metabolism of thyroid hormones at the level of the peripheral cells. It inhibits the peripheral conversion of thyroxin to triiodothyronine (T3) and favours the generation of reverse T3, which has no T3 activity. This and other arguments favour the assumption that the effects on the heart observed after prolonged amiodarone treatment are in fact due to selective local hypothyroidism.This publication has 0 references indexed in Scilit: