• Title/Summary/Keyword: Nonautoimmune

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Nonautoimmune congenital hyperthyroidism due to p.Asp633Glu mutation in the TSHR gene

  • Cho, Won Kyoung;Ahn, Moon-Bae;Jang, Woori;Chae, Hyojin;Kim, Myungshin;Suh, Byung-Kyu
    • Annals of Pediatric Endocrinology and Metabolism
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    • v.23 no.4
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    • pp.235-239
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    • 2018
  • Most cases of congenital hyperthyroidism are autoimmune forms caused by maternal thyroid stimulating antibodies. Nonautoimmune forms of congenital hyperthyroidism caused by activating mutations of the thyrotropin receptor (TSHR) gene are rare. A woman gave birth to a boy during an emergency cesarean section at 33 weeks of gestation due to fetal tachycardia. On the 24th day of life, thyroid function tests were performed due to persistent tachycardia, and hyperthyroidism was confirmed. Auto-antibodies to TSHR, thyroid peroxidase, and thyroglobulin were not found. The patient was treated with propylthiouracil and propranolol, but hyperthyroidism was not well controlled. At 3 months of age, the patient had craniosynostosis and hydrocephalus, and underwent a ventriculoperitoneal shunt operation. Direct sequencing of the TSHR gene showed a heterozygous mutation of c.1899C>A (p.Asp633Glu) in exon 10. No mutations were discovered in any of the parents in a familial genetic study. We have reported a case of sporadic nonautoimmune congenital hyperthyroidism, by a missense mutation of the TSHR gene, for the first time in South Korea.

Hyperthyroidism Caused by a Mutation in the Thyrotropin Receptor Gene in Two Brothers (형제에서 발생한 갑상선 자극호르몬 수용체 유전자 돌연변이에 의한 갑상선 항진증 2례)

  • Kim, Jae Hyun;Lee, Sung Soo;Lim, Jung Sup;Shin, Choong Ho;Yang, Sei Won
    • Clinical and Experimental Pediatrics
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    • v.48 no.3
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    • pp.337-341
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    • 2005
  • Thyrotropin receptor(TSHR) mutations must be considered when congenital hyperthyroidism has persisted, but there has been no evidence for autoimmunity. TSHR mutations leading to constitutive activation of the thyroid gland were identified as the molecular cause of autosomal dominant nonautoimmune hyperthyroidism and sporadic congenital hyperthyroidism. We report two cases of hyperthyroidism caused by germline TSHR mutation who presented with exessive sweating and no evidence of autoimmune thyroid disease. They were brothers and their mother had undergone thyroidectomy because of hyperthyroidism. Direct sequencing of the polymerase chain reaction-amplified exon 10 of the TSHR genomic DNA revealed a transition of GCT to GTT, resulting in an exchange of alanine 627 to valine in the patients and their mother. This might be a novel mutation or polymorphism, but we did not perform any functional gene study. But considering the clinical profiles, we can conclude that hyperthyroidism of these two brothers might come from the point mutation described above.