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      Euthyroid hyperthyroxinemia.

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      Annals of internal medicine

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          Abstract

          An increasing number of disorders that may cause hyperthyroxinemia without thyrotoxicosis have been recognized in recent years. These include acquired and inherited abnormalities of serum thyroid-hormone-binding proteins, peripheral resistance to thyroid hormones, acute nonthyroidal illness, acute psychiatric illness, and some drug-induced conditions associated with nonthyrotoxic elevations of serum thyroxine. In addition to the laboratory finding of elevated serum thyroxine levels, many of these syndromes are also accompanied by abnormalities in triiodothyronine and free thyroid hormone levels, as well as unresponsiveness of thyroid-stimulating hormone to thyrotropin-releasing hormone, all of which further erroneously indicate a diagnosis of thyrotoxicosis. An awareness of these syndromes and alterations in the results of thyroid function tests that accompany them is important to prevent a misdiagnosis of hyperthyroidism and inappropriate therapy.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Ann. Intern. Med.
          Annals of internal medicine
          0003-4819
          0003-4819
          Mar 1983
          : 98
          : 3
          Article
          10.7326/0003-4819-98-3-366
          6187257
          122a50f4-8fae-49aa-968c-58483ea28d5e
          History

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