Jackson I M
Division of Endocrinology, Rhode Island Hospital, Brown University School of Medicine, Providence 02903, USA.
Thyroid. 1998 Oct;8(10):951-6. doi: 10.1089/thy.1998.8.951.
Hypothyroidism may give rise to frank depression that usually responds to thyroxine therapy. Depressed subjects with subclinical hypothyroidism and/or autoimmune thyroiditis should probably also be treated similarly. Most patients with depression, although generally viewed as chemically euthyroid, have alterations in their thyroid function including slight elevation of the serum thyroxine (T4), blunted thyrotropin (TSH) response to thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH) stimulation, and loss of the nocturnal TSH rise. These changes are generally reversed following alleviation of the depression. The role of adjuvant triiodothyronine (T3) treatment in resistant depression has not been established, but the data suggest that it will be beneficial in about 25% of cases. However, controlled trials to establish this approach are needed. The underlying mechanism leading to the beneficial response from T3 is unknown, but may reflect brain hypothyroidism in the context of systemic euthyroidism. The hypothalamus in culture, which is analogous to a deafferentated hypothalamus in vivo, shows a paradoxic increase in TRH production after glucocorticoid stimulation. It is known that in human depression there is a functional disconnection of the hypothalamus with impairment of the inhibitory glucocorticoid feedback pathway from the hippocampus to the hypothalamus that results in the typical elevated cortisol levels and impaired dexamethasone suppression. It is postulated that a similar situation prevails with regards to the thyroid axis and that the increased T4 in depression, as well as the blunted TSH response to exogenous TRH, reflects glucocorticoid activation of the TRH neuron leading to increased TRH secretion with resultant down regulation of the TRH receptor on the thyrotrope. Normalization of thyroid function after treatment may result in part from an inhibitory response of the TRH neuron to antidepressant medication, although other effects may also be responsible.
甲状腺功能减退可能导致明显的抑郁,这种抑郁通常对甲状腺素治疗有反应。患有亚临床甲状腺功能减退和/或自身免疫性甲状腺炎的抑郁患者可能也应接受类似治疗。大多数抑郁症患者,尽管通常被视为甲状腺功能正常,但他们的甲状腺功能存在改变,包括血清甲状腺素(T4)略有升高、促甲状腺激素(TSH)对促甲状腺激素释放激素(TRH)刺激的反应迟钝以及夜间TSH升高消失。这些变化在抑郁缓解后通常会逆转。辅助使用三碘甲状腺原氨酸(T3)治疗难治性抑郁症的作用尚未确立,但数据表明约25%的病例会从中受益。然而,需要进行对照试验来确定这种方法。T3产生有益反应的潜在机制尚不清楚,但可能反映了全身甲状腺功能正常情况下的脑甲状腺功能减退。培养中的下丘脑类似于体内去传入神经的下丘脑,在糖皮质激素刺激后TRH产生呈反常增加。已知在人类抑郁症中,下丘脑存在功能脱节,海马体至下丘脑的抑制性糖皮质激素反馈途径受损,导致典型的皮质醇水平升高和地塞米松抑制受损。据推测,甲状腺轴也存在类似情况,抑郁症中T4升高以及TSH对外源性TRH反应迟钝反映了糖皮质激素对TRH神经元的激活,导致TRH分泌增加,进而使促甲状腺细胞上的TRH受体下调。治疗后甲状腺功能的正常化可能部分源于TRH神经元对抗抑郁药物的抑制反应,尽管其他影响也可能起作用。