Investigation of choice for diagnosing primary hypothyroidism: March 2007, September 2009
Correct Answer: Elevated TSH
Description: Ans. C: Elevated TSH Blood TSH, free T4, free T3 and anti-TPO antibodies should be tested. Firstly measure TSH, if found elevated measure unbound T4. Elevated TSH and low free T4 ours diagnosis of primary hypothyroidism. Patients with an enlarged thyroid and/or a positive anti-TPO antibody test and low free T4 with TSH> 4.0 mU/mL should be considered to have autoimmune hypothyroidism. Patients without an enlarged thyroid and without a positive anti-TPO antibody test but with a TSH> 7.5 mU/mL should also be considered to have primary hypothyroidism. Patients with a free T4 of < 0.9 mg/ dL and a normal TSH are likely to have central hypothyroidism/drug effects/sick euthyroid syndrome. Patients with symptoms of hypothyroidism but who do not meet these criterion should be watched and retested in 6 months.
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