Physiology of Thyroid Hormone Production and Regulation

The thyroid gland is an endocrine organ located in the anterior neck, essential for regulating metabolism, thermogenesis, growth, and development through the production of thyroid hormones — thyroxine (T₄) and triiodothyronine (T₃).

 

🔷 1. Overview of Thyroid Hormones

Hormone

Secreted by

Circulating Form

Biologic Potency

Half-life

T (Thyroxine)

Thyroid gland

~90%

Low

~7 days

T (Triiodothyronine)

Thyroid gland & peripheral tissues (via deiodination of T)

~10%

High (3–4x more potent than T)

~1 day

Reverse T (rT)

Inactive metabolite

Peripheral tissues

Inactive

 

 

🔷 2. Synthesis of Thyroid Hormones

Occurs in the follicular cells of the thyroid gland and involves several key steps:

Step-by-step Mechanism:

Step

Description

1. Iodide Trapping

Active uptake of iodide (I) from blood via Na/I symporter (NIS) in the basal membrane of follicular cells

2. Oxidation

Iodide (I) is oxidized to iodine (I) by thyroid peroxidase (TPO) at the apical membrane

3. Organification

Iodine binds to tyrosine residues on thyroglobulin to form MIT (monoiodotyrosine) and DIT(diiodotyrosine)

4. Coupling

MIT + DIT T and DIT + DIT T, catalyzed by TPO

5. Storage

T and T remain bound to thyroglobulin in the colloid inside the follicular lumen

6. Release

On stimulation by TSH, colloid is endocytosed; proteolysis releases T and T into circulation

7. Peripheral Conversion

~80% of T is produced by 5’-deiodinase conversion of T in liver, kidney, and muscle

 

 

🔷 3. Regulation of Thyroid Hormone Secretion

The Hypothalamic-Pituitary-Thyroid (HPT) Axis governs thyroid function:

🔁 Feedback Loop:

  1. Hypothalamus releases Thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH)
  2. Anterior pituitary secretes Thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) in response to TRH
  3. Thyroid gland stimulated by TSH to produce T₄ and T₃
  4. Negative Feedback T₄ and T₃ inhibit TRH and TSH release

TSH Actions:

  • Stimulates NIS expression, TPO activity, thyroglobulin production
  • Increases iodide uptake, hormone synthesis and secretion
  • Promotes follicular cell growth and vascularity

 

🔷 4. Transport of Thyroid Hormones

Thyroid hormones are lipophilic and mostly protein-bound in plasma:

Binding Protein

% Bound

Affinity

Thyroxine-binding globulin (TBG)

~70%

High

Transthyretin (TTR)

~20%

Moderate

Albumin

~10%

Low

 

Only free T₃ and T₄ are biologically active and regulate feedback.

 

🔷 5. Physiological Actions of Thyroid Hormones

System

Effects

Metabolic

Basal metabolic rate, oxygen consumption, glucose and lipid metabolism

Cardiovascular

HR, contractility, cardiac output ( β-receptor sensitivity)

GI

Motility ( diarrhea in hyperthyroidism)

CNS

Essential for brain development, alertness, mood

Musculoskeletal

Growth, bone maturation, muscle strength

Thermoregulation

Heat production (calorigenesis)

Reproductive

Required for normal menstruation, fertility

 

 

🔷 6. Thyroid Function Tests (TFTs)

Test

Normal Range

Interpretation

TSH

0.5–4.5 mIU/L

Best screening test

Free T

0.8–1.8 ng/dL

Low in hypothyroid

Free T

2.3–4.2 pg/mL

More specific for hyperthyroidism

Total T / T

Affected by binding proteins

 

TBG

Useful if altered protein binding suspected

 

 

 

🔷 7. Factors Affecting Thyroid Function

TBG ( Total T)

TBG ( Total T)

Pregnancy

Liver failure

Estrogen therapy

Androgens

Hepatitis

Nephrotic syndrome

 

 

🔷 8. Relevance to Anesthesia

Condition

Implication

Hyperthyroidism

Risk of thyroid storm, tachyarrhythmia, heat intolerance; avoid sympathetic surges

Hypothyroidism

Bradycardia, hypotension, hypothermia, drug sensitivity, delayed recovery

TSH-producing adenoma

May cause thyrotoxicosis