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Mode of action: Developmental thyroid hormone insufficiency - Neurological abnormalities resulting from exposure to propylthiouracil

Journal

CRITICAL REVIEWS IN TOXICOLOGY
Volume 35, Issue 8-9, Pages 771-781

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/10408440591007313

Keywords

brain development; human relevance; propylthiouracil; thyroid hormone

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Because thyroid hormone is essential for normal brain development before and after birth, environmental chemicals that interfere with thyroid hormone signaling can adversely affect brain development. Adverse consequences of thyroid hormone insufficiency depend both on severity and developmental timing, indicating that environmental antithyroid factors may produce different effects at different developmental windows of exposure. Mechanistic studies can provide important insight into the potential impact of chemicals on human thyroid function, but relevance to humans must be systematically evaluated. This kind of analysis depends on data sets that include information about animals and humans. The drug 6-n-propyl-2-thiouracil (PTU) is used in animals to experimentally manipulate serum thyroid hormone levels, and in humans to treat patients, including pregnant women, with Graves' disease. A systematic analysis of the mode of action (MOA) of PTU in rats and in humans discloses similar modes of action. While the analysis predicts that PTU doses that produce thyroid hormone insufficiency in humans would adversely affect the developing brain, careful monitoring of PTU administration in pregnant and lactating humans keeps infant serum thyroid hormone levels within the normal range.

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