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Depression and Anxiety in Different Thyroid Function States
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2004
Year
PsychiatryMood SymptomMedicineIodine Deficiency DisordersThyroid DiseaseParathyroid HormoneDepressionPsychologyThyroid PatientsThyroid DisordersHypothyroid SubjectsSocial SciencesParathyroid GlandMental HealthThyroid HormoneEndocrinologySerious Psychiatric SymptomsPsychopathology
Previous studies on hypothyroid subjects have indicated serious psychiatric symptoms affecting the patients' quality of life. The present prospective cross-sectional study's aim was to examine these symptoms in thyroid patients with different functional states. A total of 254 patients (age: 56 +/- 14 years [mean +/- standard deviation], 181 female, 73 male) referred to a hospital for radioiodine treatment of hyperthyroidism or for follow-up of differentiated thyroid cancer, respectively, were included. All patients underwent the twelve-item general health questionnaire, which is an instrument for detecting mood disturbances. Euthyroid and hyperthyroid patients did not differ significantly in their general health questionnaire score (11 +/- 5 vs. 11 +/- 7), nor did subclinical hyperthyroid (11 +/- 6) or subclinical hypothyroid subjects (12 +/- 5). In contrast, hypothyroid patients showed a significantly higher mean score (17 +/- 7, p < 0.001, ANOVA). Binary logistic regression revealed that hypothyroidism increases age and gender-adjusted risk for critical mood deterioration by seven-fold. Thus, hypothyroidism represents a widely underestimated functional condition that may severely affect mental health.