Homeostasis and Allostasis of Thyroid Function

The discovery of the negative feedback of thyroid hormones on pituitary thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) secretion, a classical endocrine feedback control system, has shaped diagnosis and treatment of thyroid disease for the last decades. Based on this concept, a unique diagnostic category of subcl...

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Autori principali: Rudolf Hoermann, John E. M. Midgley, Johannes W. Dietrich
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Lingua:inglese
Pubblicazione: Frontiers Media SA 2021
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author Rudolf Hoermann
John E. M. Midgley
Johannes W. Dietrich
author_browse Johannes W. Dietrich
John E. M. Midgley
Rudolf Hoermann
author_facet Rudolf Hoermann
John E. M. Midgley
Johannes W. Dietrich
author_sort Rudolf Hoermann
collection Directory of Open Access Books
description The discovery of the negative feedback of thyroid hormones on pituitary thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) secretion, a classical endocrine feedback control system, has shaped diagnosis and treatment of thyroid disease for the last decades. Based on this concept, a unique diagnostic category of subclinical thyroid disorders was introduced, being defined exclusively by an abnormal TSH response in the presence of thyroid hormone concentrations within the reference range. Although this approach was able to deliver a conceptually straightforward disease definition problems surfaced in clinical practice as neither the diagnostic reference range nor the appropriate threshold for initiating substitution treatment are universally agreed upon for subclinical thyroid disorders. The situation is further aggravated by the so-called syndrome T, which comprises a substantial but heterogeneous group of L-T4 treated patients with hypothyroidism with reduced quality of life despite “normal” TSH values.</p><p>A limited understanding of the physiological relationships between TSH and thyroid hormones may be a main reason for clinical difficulties in dealing with the causes of syndrome T and tailoring substitution therapy for hypothyroid patients with subclinical thyroid disorders. </p><p>Feedback regulation has recently been shown to be much more complex than previously assumed. The concept of homeostatic control has also been extended to include the lesser known but equally important allostatic thyroid regulation.The latter aims at adaptive homeostasis or stability through changing setpoints and modulating structural parameters of feedback control, as may be appropriate to adapt to a vast array of conditions spanning from fetal life, aging, pregnancy, exercise, starvation, obesity, psychiatric disorders to the severe non-thyroidal illness syndrome.</p><p>A better understanding of homeostatic and allostatic mechanisms, which govern the behaviour of pituitary-thyroid feedback control, is on the horizon. This promises to improve the diagnostic utility of laboratory methods, laying the foundation for personalised methods to optimise dosage and modality of substitution therapy. The emerging new world of thyroid physiology is reflected on the side of clinical medicine in a new, relational paradigm for diagnosis and treatment.</p><p>Considerable progress has been made in this respect in the following key areas:</p><p>• the significance of complementary information processing structures within the feedback loop, in particular ultrashort feedback of TSH on its own secretion and the action of a TSH-T3 shunt unburdening the thyroid from T4 synthesis in imminent thyroid failure,</p><p>• the unravelling of spatio-temporal dynamics of hormone concentrations ranging from ultradian to circannual rhythms and including hysteresis effects,</p><p>• the emergence of “non-canonical” mechanisms of thyroid hormone signalling beyond transcriptional control of gene expression,</p><p>• the physiological actions of thyronine metabolites, which have been previously regarded as biologically inactive, such as thyronamines and iodothyroacetates,</p><p>• the characterisation of distinct patterns in the adaptive processes to stress and strain and their conclusive explanation through reactions to type 1 and type 2 allostatic load.</p><p>This collective volume contains the contributions to the Research Topic “Homeostasis and Allostasis of Thyroid Function”, which was originally published by the journal Frontiers in Endocrinology. Authored by an international team of experts from three continents ,the book provides a comprehensive overview on thyroid control from recent research in basic, computational and clinical thyroidology. Many aspects addressed here can be expected to stimulate future research. A more comprehensive view and better integration of in-vitro, in-silico and in-vivo investigations will be invaluable in paving the way to this new world of thyroidology.
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spelling doab-20.500.12854ir-495182024-03-31T13:08:54Z Homeostasis and Allostasis of Thyroid Function Rudolf Hoermann John E. M. Midgley Johannes W. Dietrich R5-920 RC648-665 relational stability Thyronamines TSH-T3 Shunt thyroid allostasis precision medicine Stratified Medicine 3-T1AM Hypothyroidism Thyroid homeostasis Hysteresis thema EDItEUR::M Medicine and Nursing The discovery of the negative feedback of thyroid hormones on pituitary thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) secretion, a classical endocrine feedback control system, has shaped diagnosis and treatment of thyroid disease for the last decades. Based on this concept, a unique diagnostic category of subclinical thyroid disorders was introduced, being defined exclusively by an abnormal TSH response in the presence of thyroid hormone concentrations within the reference range. Although this approach was able to deliver a conceptually straightforward disease definition problems surfaced in clinical practice as neither the diagnostic reference range nor the appropriate threshold for initiating substitution treatment are universally agreed upon for subclinical thyroid disorders. The situation is further aggravated by the so-called syndrome T, which comprises a substantial but heterogeneous group of L-T4 treated patients with hypothyroidism with reduced quality of life despite “normal” TSH values.</p><p>A limited understanding of the physiological relationships between TSH and thyroid hormones may be a main reason for clinical difficulties in dealing with the causes of syndrome T and tailoring substitution therapy for hypothyroid patients with subclinical thyroid disorders. </p><p>Feedback regulation has recently been shown to be much more complex than previously assumed. The concept of homeostatic control has also been extended to include the lesser known but equally important allostatic thyroid regulation.The latter aims at adaptive homeostasis or stability through changing setpoints and modulating structural parameters of feedback control, as may be appropriate to adapt to a vast array of conditions spanning from fetal life, aging, pregnancy, exercise, starvation, obesity, psychiatric disorders to the severe non-thyroidal illness syndrome.</p><p>A better understanding of homeostatic and allostatic mechanisms, which govern the behaviour of pituitary-thyroid feedback control, is on the horizon. This promises to improve the diagnostic utility of laboratory methods, laying the foundation for personalised methods to optimise dosage and modality of substitution therapy. The emerging new world of thyroid physiology is reflected on the side of clinical medicine in a new, relational paradigm for diagnosis and treatment.</p><p>Considerable progress has been made in this respect in the following key areas:</p><p>• the significance of complementary information processing structures within the feedback loop, in particular ultrashort feedback of TSH on its own secretion and the action of a TSH-T3 shunt unburdening the thyroid from T4 synthesis in imminent thyroid failure,</p><p>• the unravelling of spatio-temporal dynamics of hormone concentrations ranging from ultradian to circannual rhythms and including hysteresis effects,</p><p>• the emergence of “non-canonical” mechanisms of thyroid hormone signalling beyond transcriptional control of gene expression,</p><p>• the physiological actions of thyronine metabolites, which have been previously regarded as biologically inactive, such as thyronamines and iodothyroacetates,</p><p>• the characterisation of distinct patterns in the adaptive processes to stress and strain and their conclusive explanation through reactions to type 1 and type 2 allostatic load.</p><p>This collective volume contains the contributions to the Research Topic “Homeostasis and Allostasis of Thyroid Function”, which was originally published by the journal Frontiers in Endocrinology. Authored by an international team of experts from three continents ,the book provides a comprehensive overview on thyroid control from recent research in basic, computational and clinical thyroidology. Many aspects addressed here can be expected to stimulate future research. A more comprehensive view and better integration of in-vitro, in-silico and in-vivo investigations will be invaluable in paving the way to this new world of thyroidology. 2021-02-11T15:31:10Z 2021-02-11T15:31:10Z 2019-01-23 14:53:43 2018 book 31980 16648714 9782889455706 https://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/49518 eng Frontiers Research Topics image/jpeg Attribution 4.0 International https://www.frontiersin.org/research-topics/4262/homeostasis-and-allostasis-of-thyroid-function Frontiers Media SA 10.3389/978-2-88945-570-6 10.3389/978-2-88945-570-6 bf5ce210-e72e-4860-ba9b-c305640ff3ae 9782889455706 107 open access
spellingShingle R5-920
RC648-665
relational stability
Thyronamines
TSH-T3 Shunt
thyroid allostasis
precision medicine
Stratified Medicine
3-T1AM
Hypothyroidism
Thyroid homeostasis
Hysteresis
thema EDItEUR::M Medicine and Nursing
Rudolf Hoermann
John E. M. Midgley
Johannes W. Dietrich
Homeostasis and Allostasis of Thyroid Function
title Homeostasis and Allostasis of Thyroid Function
title_full Homeostasis and Allostasis of Thyroid Function
title_fullStr Homeostasis and Allostasis of Thyroid Function
title_full_unstemmed Homeostasis and Allostasis of Thyroid Function
title_short Homeostasis and Allostasis of Thyroid Function
title_sort homeostasis and allostasis of thyroid function
topic R5-920
RC648-665
relational stability
Thyronamines
TSH-T3 Shunt
thyroid allostasis
precision medicine
Stratified Medicine
3-T1AM
Hypothyroidism
Thyroid homeostasis
Hysteresis
thema EDItEUR::M Medicine and Nursing
topic_facet R5-920
RC648-665
relational stability
Thyronamines
TSH-T3 Shunt
thyroid allostasis
precision medicine
Stratified Medicine
3-T1AM
Hypothyroidism
Thyroid homeostasis
Hysteresis
thema EDItEUR::M Medicine and Nursing
url 31980
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