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Sympathetic nervous system activity in rat thyroid: potential role in goitrogenesis

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Publisher DOI
10.1152/ajpendo.00292.2004
PubMed ID
15585591
Description
The role of sympathetic innervation in regulation of thyroid function is incompletely understood. We, therefore, carried out studies in rats utilizing techniques of norepinephrine turnover to assess thyroid sympathetic activity in vivo. Thyroidal sympathetic activity was increased 95% by exposure to cold (4 degrees C), 42% by chronic ingestion of an iodine-deficient diet, and 32% in rats fed a goitrogenic diet (low-iodine diet supplemented with propylthiouracil). In addition, fasting for 2 days reduced sympathetic nervous system activity in thyroid by 38%. Thyroid growth and 125I uptake were also compared in intact and decentralized hemithyroids obtained from animals subjected to unilateral superior cervical ganglion decentralization. Unilateral superior cervical ganglion decentralization led to a reduction in thyroid weight, in 125I uptake by thyroid tissue, and in TSH-induced stimulation of 125I uptake in decentralized hemithyroids. These results suggest that sympathetic activity in thyroid contributes to gland enlargement and may modulate tissue responsiveness to TSH.
Date of Publication
2005
Publication Type
Article
Language(s)
en
Contributor(s)
Young, JB
Bürgi-Saville, ME
Bürgi, Ulrich
Universitätsklinik für Allgemeine Innere Medizin
Landsberg, L
Additional Credits
Universitätsklinik für Allgemeine Innere Medizin
Series
American journal of physiology - endocrinology and metabolism
Publisher
American Physiological Society
ISSN
0193-1849
ISBN
15585591
Access(Rights)
metadata.only
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