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Clinical Chemistry 30: 903-905, 1984;
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Clinical Chemistry, Vol 30, 903-905, Copyright © 1984 by American Association for Clinical Chemistry

Free thyroxin index and direct measurements of free thyroxin compared for evaluating postpartum autoimmune thyroid dysfunction

R Jansson, R Forberg and K Levin

Measurement of free thyroxin (FT4) by a recently introduced commercial assay (Amerlex Free T4 RIA) was compared with the calculated free thyroxin index (FT4I) for serum from 104 postpartum women. Of these, 63 had transient thyroid dysfunction due to autoimmune thyroiditis, six had transient Graves' thyrotoxicosis, and 35 were euthyroid with no signs of autoimmune thyroid disease. The correlation between results for FT4 and the calculated FTI for 95 serum samples from women with no signs of autoimmune thyroiditis (r = 0.941; p = 0.0001) was almost identical to that for 270 serum samples from women with thyroid microsomal autoantibodies characteristic of autoimmune thyroiditis (r = 0.937; p = 0.0001). Furthermore, we observed no difference when the autoimmune group was subdivided according to low or high titers of thyroid microsomal antibodies. In no case did autoantibodies to thyroxin interfere with the FT4 assay. However, one woman had a spuriously low value for FT4I owing to interference by autoantibodies to triiodothyronine with the triiodothyronine resin uptake test. We conclude that the FT4 RIA assay provided diagnostic information in this group of postpartum women equivalent to that of the more elaborate procedure of determining FT4I.





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Copyright © 1984 by the American Association for Clinical Chemistry.