Cowdry R W, Wehr T A, Zis A P, Goodwin F K
Arch Gen Psychiatry. 1983 Apr;40(4):414-20. doi: 10.1001/archpsyc.1983.01790040068010.
Bipolar patients taking lithium carbonate were classified as rapid-cycling or non-rapid-cycling based on whether they had ever experienced four or more affective episodes in a 12-month period. Overt hypothyroidism was found in 12 (50.7%) of the 24 rapid-cycling patients and in none of the 19 non-rapid-cycling patients. Elevated thyroid-stimulating hormone levels were present in 92% of the rapid-cycling group v 32% of the non-rapid-cycling group. Abnormalities of the hypothalamic-pituitary-thyroid axis, some of which may become apparent only during treatment with lithium carbonate, appear to interact with a predisposition to bipolar illness to produce rapid-cycling. These overt and covert abnormalities may help explain the reported efficacy of thyroid in treating "periodic catatonia" and rapid-cycling.