Vitamin D Directly Affects Thyroid Function in Mice Publish date: Oct 31, 2008 ![]() FRIDAY, Oct. 31 (HealthDay News) -- Vitamin D may directly affect thyroid function, according to research in a preclinical
animal model published online Oct. 16 in Endocrinology. Alexander Misharin of the UCLA School of Medicine in Los Angeles and colleagues tested the role of vitamin D in a mouse
model of Graves' disease, in which hyperthyroidism is induced by immunization with an adenovirus encoding the thyrotropin
receptor. Because it was previously established that vitamin D enhances regulatory T cells, the authors hypothesized that
decreasing vitamin D through a controlled diet would intensify the severity of Graves' disease in the model. Vitamin D deficiency induced only small immunological changes. Unexpectedly, the vitamin D-deprived mice developed persistent
hyperthyroidism following immunization, unlike their vitamin D-sufficient matched controls. This disparity was not explained
by any immunological difference, and the authors speculated that the persistent hyperthyroidism was instead caused by an increased
sensitivity of the thyroid to the antibodies directed against thyrotropin. "Rather than affecting the immune response, the most important effect of vitamin D deficiency was on the thyroid," the
authors write, providing evidence for the role of an environmental factor, vitamin D, on thyroid function. Copyright © 2008 ScoutNews, LLC. All rights reserved. | Coding Counselor Simple and accurate ICD-9 code search. Start Here Patient Education Print customized patient education handouts. Start Here Dermatology Diagnosis Identify skin diseases by age, gender, location. Start Here AHRQ Clinical Guidelines Objective findings on medical interventions. Start Here ![]() ![]()
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