©@

1769

ADULT HYPERTHYROIDISM

December 1967

TABLE 3. Genes in common (30)
Proportion of
genes in
common

Relationship to a given subject

;
totale

Identical twin
Parent, child, sib
Fraternal twin

which LATSis but one. There is no doubt

(31, 32) that there are many auto-immune
phenomena associated with Graves’ disease on a familial or inherited basis.

re)
Ch opwin

Grandparent, grandchild, uncle,
aunt, nephew, niece, half-sib

|

First cousin
Second cousin

been similar to that of Dr. Kriss in this
regard.
It seems that the genetic abnormality is
the inheritance of a predisposition to the
formation of auto-immune antibodies, of

have Graves’ disease, on the basis of a
multifactorial concept? Would one expect
negative LATS titers, or would one expect
a fair numberof positive titers?

@

DR. HSIA: If one is dealing with something that is probably close to the primary
gene effect, then one would expectrelatives
to show such changes. I don’t know of any
data on this subject. However, I would
think that if LATS represents a fairly
remote effect, then one would probably not
be able to detect any such chemical consequence. It is not necessary that it appear.
DR.

WERNER:

Dr.

McKenzie

and

Dr. Kriss, have you any information about
relatives and LATS?
DR.

JOSEPH

KRISS,

DR.

McKENZIE:

Department

of

Radiclogy, Standford University School
of Medicine, Palo Alto: We have not done
an extensive study of this point. On occasion, when we have had a LATS-positive patient, we have examined the euthyroid relatives and have not. yet found a
positive test in any of them.
Our experience has

DR. SIDNEY H. INGBAR, Department
of Medicine and Thorndike Memorial
Laboratory, Boston City Hospital, Boston:
In relation to the LATS problem and the
genetic implications of some unpublished
observations that Dr. Freinkel and I made
a number of years ago, one thing that
confuses me is that, in studying the thy-

roid function in a group of relatives of
patients with active diffuse toxic goiters,
we found about 20% with elevated thyroidal uptakes of '#I. When we analyzed
the nature of the relationship of increased
uptake relative to the patient, the result
was much the same as Dr. Hsia suggested
it might be. Siblings showed a higherincidence of abnormal uptakes. However,
virtually all of these patients showed
suppressible thyroid function with exogenous hormone. I am not quite sure we can
equate the presence of LATS with lack of
suppression, but possibly we can. I would
like to think that might be the case, and
therefore we asked ourselves why the
uptakes were elevated in this 20% of relatives, in the absence of LATS.
The other surprisingly frequent finding
was that there was some disturbance of
turnover of thyroxine peripherally. Many
of the relatives had an accelerated turnover rate with half-times of 42 to five days,

TABLE 4. Fingerprint ridge counts: resemblances between relatives (30)
Relationship
Identical twins

Fraternal twins

@:2

~ Parent-child
Husband-wife

No.of

Observed

pairs

correlation

80

0.95 40.01

642

0.49 +0.04

92

602
149

0.49 +0.08
0.50 +0.03
0.05 +0.08

Theoretical
correlation
+1.0

+0.5

+0.5

+0.5
0

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