4.0 Article

Endogenous TSH in the diagnosis of hypothyroidism in dogs

Journal

SCHWEIZER ARCHIV FUR TIERHEILKUNDE
Volume 146, Issue 4, Pages 183-188

Publisher

GESELLSCHAFT SCHWEIZER TIERARZTINNEN & TIERARZTE
DOI: 10.1024/0036-7281.146.4.183

Keywords

thyrotropin; cTSH; thyroxine; hypothyroidism; dog

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To determine whether measurement of canine thyrotropin (cTSH) would aid in the diagnosis of hypothyroidism, serum samples of 65 dogs with clinical signs suggestive of hypothyroidism were evaluated. Diagnosis was confirmed in 26 dogs and excluded in 39 dogs based on TSH-stimulation testing. Total thyroxine (T-4) was significantly lower and cTSH significantly higher in hypothyroid dogs compared to euthyroid dogs. Canine TSH was above (> 0.6ng/ml) in 15 (57.7%) and below the upper limit of the reference range in 11 (42.3%) of the hypothyroid dogs. All of the euthyroid dogs had a cTSH < 0.6ng/ml. In all dogs with a cTSH above the upper limit of the reference range hypothyroidism could be confirmed. Therefore, our results show that measurement of cTSH has an excellent specificity (100%) and is a valuable tool in confirming canine hypothyroidism. However, due to the low sensitivity of cTSH assays (60%), it can not be recommended to exclude the disease.

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