Peripheral metabolism of thyroid hormones: a review

Alternative Medicine Review : a Journal of Clinical Therapeutic, 5(4), 306-333, 2000

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Abstract

Peripheral metabolism of thyroid hormones is a critical component of the impact these hormones have on intracellular function. Thyroid hormones can be metabolized in peripheral tissue by deiodination, conjugation, deamination, and decarboxylation enzyme reactions. Therefore, alterations in these metabolic pathways might significantly impact the quantity of specific thyroid hormone metabolites influencing function at the cellular level. Available evidence also suggests that, under some circumstances, the activity of hepatic antioxidant enzyme systems and lipid peroxidation might influence the peripheral metabolism of thyroid hormones. Several syndromes, such as "euthyroid sick syndrome" and "low T3 syndrome," have been classified within the medical literature. The common feature of these disorders is a low level of circulating T3, with generally normal to slightly elevated blood T4 levels and either normal or slightly suppressed TSH levels. This pattern of altered thyroid hormone levels is generally agreed to be a result of impairment in extra-thyroidal peripheral metabolism. Hepatic and renal pathology, as well as catabolic states such as those induced subsequent to severe injury, illness, or trauma result in consistent shifts in the thyroid hormone profile, secondary to their impact on peripheral enzyme pathways. Lifestyle factors, such as stress, caloric restriction, and exercise, influence peripheral metabolism of thyroid hormones. Exposure to toxic metals, chemical poisons, and several drugs can also influence the peripheral fate of thyroid hormones. While the role of vitamins, minerals, and botanical extracts in thyroid hormone metabolism requires further elucidation, current evidence supports a role for selenium in the hepatic 5'-deiodination enzyme.

Topics

peripheral metabolism thyroid hormones deiodination conjugation, low T3 syndrome euthyroid sick syndrome pathophysiology, selenium role hepatic 5-deiodination thyroid enzyme, thyroid hormone conversion T4 to T3 impairment, Kelly GS thyroid peripheral metabolism review, hepatic antioxidant enzyme lipid peroxidation thyroid hormones, caloric restriction exercise stress thyroid hormone metabolism, toxic metals drugs influence thyroid hormone conversion, euthyroid sick syndrome low T3 normal TSH mechanism, vitamins minerals botanical extracts thyroid hormone metabolism, renal hepatic pathology altered thyroid hormone profile, deamination decarboxylation thyroid hormone metabolic pathways

Cite this article

Kelly, G. S. (2000). Peripheral metabolism of thyroid hormones: a review. *Alternative medicine review : a journal of clinical therapeutic*, *5*(4), 306-333.