Study Results
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Basic Information
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TERMINATED
100 participants
OBSERVATIONAL
2009-10-31
2012-10-31
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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Subclinical hypothyroidism \[SH\] is highly prevalent in elderly subjects, especially in women older than 50 years of age. Whether SH is related as a risk for premature CVD is controversial. Previously, we have demonstrated that SH in middle-aged women is associated with hypertension, hypertriglyceridemia, and elevated total cholesterol/HDL- cholesterol ratio.SH was associated with elevated plasma total cholesterol and LDL-cholesterol, decreased LDL-cholesterol/LDL-triglycerides due to decreased hepatic lipase activity. The influence of SH on lipids was directly proportional to the degree of TSH elevation.
Atherosclerosis is a diffuse disease formerly considered lipid storage disease, actually involves an ongoing inflammatory response. Elevated circulating levels of acute phase proteins, cytokines, and cell adhesion molecules indicate that inflammatory processes are occurring systematically. Metabolic syndrome is a collection of metabolic risk factors, probably of more than one cause, that appear to promote the development of atherosclerotic CVD. Hypertension, dyslipidemia and hyperglycemia are the most widely recognized characteristics of the metabolic syndrome. Individuals with metabolic syndrome manifest a prothrombotic state as well as a proinflammatory state. Insulin resistance is recognized as a chronic low-level inflammatory state. Insulin action is an important effector mechanism of the proinflammatory cytokines in CVD. Insulin resistance was proposed as the common preceding factor of hypertension, LDL and HDL-cholesterol, hypertriglyceridemia, abdominal obesity and altered glucose metabolism, linking all of these to the development of CVD. Thus, inflammation, metabolic syndrome and insulin resistance are strongly associated and play an important role in the pathogenesis of atherosclerosis. In a cross-sectional analysis, subjects with SH had a significantly higher prevalence of CVD than euthyroid subjects. There were more cardiovascular deaths in subjects with SH than in the euthyroid population. These data suggest that SH may be an independent risk factor for CVD. It is not clear yet whether patients with SH have cardiovascular risk, as do patients with overt hypothyroidism, and whether metabolic syndrome and insulin resistance already exist in untreated patients with SH.
This question was recently studied by our group. We evaluated untreated patients with SH. the percentage of MS in patients (41.5%) was significantly higher than in controls (12.2%; p=0.003\]. SH had significantly higher likelihood of cardiovascular risks \[odds ratio 6.26, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.6 - 4.49, p= 0.008 for MS\].
We conclude that SH is associated with greater probability of MS. Recent evidence suggests that the 'quality' rather than only the 'quantity' of LDL exerts a direct influence on the cardiovascular risk. LDL comprises multiple distinct subclasses that differ in size, density, physicochemical composition, metabolic behaviour and atherogenicity. There are at least four major subspecies of LDL (e.g. large LDL-I, medium LDL-II, small LDL-III, very small LDL-IV) and the predominance of small dense LDL has been accepted as an emerging cardiovascular risk factor.
Thus, the proposed study protocol is intended to evaluate lipoprotein phenotype and LDL size and subclasses in patients with subclinical Hypothyroidism.
Conditions
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Study Design
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CASE_ONLY
CROSS_SECTIONAL
Study Groups
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subclinical hypothyroidism
Patients with subclinical hypothyroidism
laboratory analysis
laboratory analysis
Interventions
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laboratory analysis
laboratory analysis
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
Exclusion Criteria
* Patients with known cardiovascular, cerebral or peripheral atherosclerotic disease.
18 Years
85 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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University of Palermo
OTHER
University of Zurich
OTHER
HaEmek Medical Center, Israel
OTHER
Responsible Party
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avraham ishay
MD
Principal Investigators
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Rafael Luboshitzky, MD
Role: STUDY_DIRECTOR
Endocrine Institute, Haemek Medical Center, Afula, Israel
Manfredi Rizzo, MD
Role: STUDY_CHAIR
University of Palermo
Giatgen Spinas, MD
Role: STUDY_CHAIR
University of Zurich
Kaspar Berneis, MD
Role: STUDY_CHAIR
University of Zurich
Locations
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Endocrine Institute, Haemek Medical Center
Afula, , Israel
Countries
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Other Identifiers
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0099.09EMC
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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