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UnknownNCT02620085

Thyroid Disease and Personality Study

Bio-psycho-social Correlates of Psychological Distress in Patients With Graves' Disease in Euthyroid Status

Status
Unknown
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
500 (estimated)
Sponsor
National Taiwan University Hospital · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
20 Years – 85 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Observe the relationship between thyroid function and personality traits

Detailed description

Thyrotoxicosis was the biochemical and physiological manifestations of excess thyroid hormone. The clinical manifestation was palpitation, heat intolerance, hand tremor, and weight loss. The clinical manifestation also included nervous system, including anxiety, tension, irritability, hyperactivity, fatigue, and insomnia. Where tensions features include restless, short attention span, and the impulse to want to move around. Some patients will progress to a non-specific psychiatric disorders. According to the study, about 10% of patients will occur very frank psychosis, 3, 31% to 69% of patients with depressive symptoms, 61% to 62% of patients with symptoms of anxiety. Some studies using reliable evaluation tool to evaluate behavioral changes in patients with thyrotoxicosis, such as Clyde emotional scale, multi-faceted personality assessment table (Multiphasic Personality Inventory (MMPI)), or observation of a response time to visual or audio stimulation. After treatment of thyrotoxicosis, most of these indicators have improved, but some indicators were still abnormal after treatment of thyrotoxicosis, such as MMPI and voice response time. The physiological causes of the changes of these nervous system is not clear. The symptoms was improved after the use of sympathetic inhibitors, so presumably this may correlated with autonomic nervous system disorders. Thyroid hormone receptors are widely distributed in the brain may also be one of the cause. But there still some other reasons for the changes of neurological symptoms because neurological symptoms may not be back to normal even after thyroid function returned to normal. Autoimmune dysfunction affect brain function may be the most possible reason. Graves' disease is the most common cause of thyrotoxicosis and it is related to autoimmune thyroid antibodies. Clinically, some patients of Graves' disease may combined with other autoimmune disease, such as Sicca syndrome. The patient may still have nervous personality traits despite normalized thyroid function. Some patients even need long-term use of anti-anxiety medication. In this study, investigators hope to analyze the personality traits of patients with hyperthyroidism,especially patients of Graves' disease, in Taiwan and to observe the changes during treatment. Investigators also hope to observe the statistical change of other non-thyroid-specific autoimmune index in this thyrotoxicosis patient. After obtaining these results, investigators will evaluate whether to continue to study the hypothesis of affection of brain of thyrotoxic patients by the abnormal autoimmune system.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
PROCEDUREblood samplingblood sampling

Timeline

Start date
2011-07-01
Primary completion
2021-07-01
Completion
2021-07-01
First posted
2015-12-02
Last updated
2015-12-02

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Taiwan

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT02620085. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.