Abstract: | 27 hypothyroid infants of children, with a low iodine uptake in spite of a thyroid gland or thyroid tissue in normal pretracheal place, have been studied. 21 cases are related to primary thyroid involvement leading to vanishing iodine or technetium uptake. In 8 of these cases, clinical onset in late childhood, high frequency of antithyroid antibodies and of familial thyroid dysfunction were similar to those found in childhood's thyroiditis. 8 other cases had a precocious onset (first months in 6, first year in 1, second year in 1) with some pretracheal iodine uptake when first studied and no uptake at further examinations, 1 patient having received no treatment from first to second study, the others being without treatment from more than two months and certain of them receiving injections of TSH. The last 5 cases of this group were those of children born to 2 mothers with treated hypothyroidism, with low iodine uptake in pretracheal place. The role of genetic factors and auto-immunity in theses cases is discussed. The 6 other patients had clinically isolated hypothyroidism secondary to TSH deficiency, eventually associated to clinically inapparent GH or ACTH deficiencies, most of them by hypothalamic defect with normal response to TRH. |