Autoimmune thyroid injury:

disease. but are useful as ascreening test. Hypo-

Radiation-induced thyroid hypofunction.
diagnosed in fourteen exposed Rongelap individuals. was not found to be increased among
Japanese A-bomb survivors. This difference
retlects the larger dose absorbed by thyroids of
the Marshallese. a consequence of ingestion of
radioiodines. The question arises as to whether
thyroid hypofunction in the exposed Marshallese is a consequencenot only of direct radiation
injury, but also of immunologic damage. Immunologic studies by the Radiation Effects Research
Foundation found that Japanese A-bomb survivors greater than fifteen vears of age at exposure had a significant decrease in mixed lymphocyte culture response that was inversely

diagnose, and anv marker that might identify a —
popuiation at risk for subsequent hypothyroidism would be clinically useful. Therefore 231

thvroidism is often quite subtle and difficult to —

Marshallese sera collected in March 1987 were

tested for the presence of antithyroglobulin and
_antimicresomal antibodies in the laboratory of
Dr. Harry Maxon. Fifty-five sera were from the
Rongelap-ex posed. 94 were from Utirik-exposed,
and 82 were from the Comparison group. Two
persons had data consistent with the diagnosis
of autoimmune thyroid disease (Table 4), and
both were in the Comparison group. One was a
38-year-old woman who had Grave's disease

with hyperthyroidism diagnosed in 1980 that

was treated with 1311. Her serum contained

related to radiation dose ( Akivama et al.. 1987),

both types of antibodies in 1980 as well as in
1987. The other person, a 32-year-old woman,
had an antithyroglobulin antibody level of 35
U/). She has Sheehan’s syndrome,present since
1975 following postpartum hemorrhage. In .
addition, six persons had nondiagnostic but
slightly elevated levels of antithyrogiobulin
antibodies, two from Rongelap and four from
Utirik. None have clinical evidence of.autoimmune thyroid disease, although three have had
thyroid lobectomies for benign nodules. The lack
of evidence for an increase in autoimmune thyroid disease among the exposed Marshalleseis
consistent with the findings of Radiation Effects
Research Foundation studies. In a 30-year followup of personsless than 20 yearsof age at the
time of exposure to the atomic bomings in
Japan, no difference was detected in the preval-

and lvmphocyte responses to phytohemagglutinin decreased more rapidly with age in per-

sons who received more than 200 rad. However.
the immunological responsesof aging Japanese
A-bomb survivors do not appear to have been
affected by radiation exposure (Bloom et al.,
1988), nor does there appearto be an increase in
diseases associated with autoimmunity in the
exposed Japanese population.
Immunologic damage to the thyroid is
mediated, in part, by circulating autoantibodies
that are apparently cytotoxic. Antimicrosomal
antibodies are important in the diagnosis of
autoimmune thyroiditis. a disease process
commonly progressing to hypothyroidism (Frey,
1987). Antithyroglobulin antibodies are far less
specific an indicator of thyroid autoimmune

TABLE 4: ANTITHYROID ANTIBODIES IN THE DIFFERENT
RADIATION EXPOSURE GROUPS.
Elevated antithyroglobulin

Exposure group (n)
Rongelap (55)
Utirik (94)
Comparison (82)

antibodies”
2
4
2*°

*- The levels ranged between 6 and 1] U/1, with normal levels being = 5 U/1.

Percent elevated
4%
4%,
2%,

** One subject had elevated antimicrosomal antibodies (35 U/1) and a history of Grave's disease with

hyperthyroidism.

S004) 13

13

Select target paragraph3