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Inflammatory bowel disease severity and activity are correlated to thyroid gland nodularity, chronic nonthyroidal illness, and thyroid autoantibodies but not thyroid dysfunction

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Last updated: 21 Dec 2024

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Abstract

Introduction
An association between inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) and autoimmune thyroid disease (AITD) exists. The aim of the present study was to evaluate thyroid nodules, function, and antibodies in patients with IBD.
Patients and materials
The study included 50 patients with established diagnosis of IBD either ulcerative colitis (UC) or Crohn’s disease and 25 healthy controls. They were classified into two groups: group I included 25 patients with UC, and group II included 25 patients with Crohn’s disease; the control group included 25 healthy individuals. They were subjected to history taking, complete physical examination, and laboratory investigations that included evaluation of erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR), C-reactive protein, fecal calprotectin, free T3, free T4, thyroid-stimulating hormone, antithyroid peroxidase (TPO), antithyroglobulin (TG), and TSH receptor antibodies. Ileocolonoscopic and histopathological examination with assessment of IBD activity and thyroid ultrasonography were carried out.
Results
There were no statistically significant differences between the three groups as regards anti-TG antibodies (P=0.075), anti-TPO (P=0.190), AITD assessed serologically or by means of ultrasound (P=1.000), or as regards thyroid status (P=0.528). IBD patients had significantly more thyroid nodules compared with controls (P<0.001), and there was a positive correlation between IBD markers of activity (ESR and fecal calprotectin) and the presence of nodules. A significant negative correlation existed between free T3 and fecal calprotectin, ESR, and C-reactive protein, as well as between free T4 and ESR and fecal calprotectin. A significant positive correlation between anti-TG antibodies and fecal calprotectin as well as between anti-TPO antibodies and histological activity assessment of UC patients also existed. We found a significant negative correlation between free T3 and free T4 and several indices of IBD activity/severity.
Conclusion
AITD and altered thyroid function were the same among IBD patients and controls. However, IBD patients had significantly more nodules; indices of activity/severity of IBD correlated negatively with free T3 and T4, and positively with anti-TPO, anti-TG, and nodularity.

DOI

10.4103/2356-8062.197574

Keywords

Autoimmune Thyroid Disease, chronic nonthyroidal illness, inflammatory bowel disease, Thyroid dysfunction, Thyroid nodules

Authors

First Name

Mohamed K.

Last Name

Ghitany

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Orcid

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First Name

Hanan

Last Name

Nouh

MiddleName

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Affiliation

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First Name

Tamer M.

Last Name

Elsherbiny

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Affiliation

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Email

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Orcid

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First Name

Reham I.

Last Name

Elsayed

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Affiliation

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Orcid

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Volume

2

Article Issue

2

Related Issue

48414

Issue Date

2016-05-01

Receive Date

2016-05-27

Publish Date

2016-05-01

Print ISSN

2356-8062

Online ISSN

2356-9409

Link

https://ejode.journals.ekb.eg/article_359810.html

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https://ejode.journals.ekb.eg/service?article_code=359810

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359,810

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Journal

Publication Title

​​Egyptian Journal of Obesity, Diabetes and Endocrinology

Publication Link

https://ejode.journals.ekb.eg/

MainTitle

Inflammatory bowel disease severity and activity are correlated to thyroid gland nodularity, chronic nonthyroidal illness, and thyroid autoantibodies but not thyroid dysfunction

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Article

Created At

21 Dec 2024