Postpartum thyroiditis laboratory findings: Difference between revisions
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*Some patients with PPT may have elevated concentration of Serum Anti-TPO abs, which is usually suggestive of future hypothyroidism. | *Some patients with PPT may have elevated concentration of Serum Anti-TPO abs, which is usually suggestive of future hypothyroidism. | ||
==References== | ==References== |
Revision as of 03:19, 1 October 2017
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Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1]; Associate Editor(s)-in-Chief:
Overview
Laboratory Findings
- Laboratory findings consistent with the diagnosis of PPT depend on the phase of disease and include:
- {| class="wikitable" !lab values !Hyperthyroid phase !Hypothyroid phase |- |Serum TSH |less than 3.5 |more than 3.5 |- |Serum free T4 |elevated but may be normal |decreased |- |Serum free T3 |elevated or normal |decreased |- |Serum Anti-TPO abs |postive |postive |- |Serum TSH-receptor abs |negative or positive with coexisting grave's disease |negative |- |Serum ESR |normal |normal |- |Serum thyroglobulin Tg |elevated in early phase of destruction of follicles |elevated in early phase of destruction of follicles |- |Radio-iodine uptake |decreased |decreased |}
- Some patients with PPT may have elevated concentration of Serum Anti-TPO abs, which is usually suggestive of future hypothyroidism.