DEAR DR. ROACH: If levothyroxine (the T4 hormone) has a long half-life (seven days), how does the pituitary gland provide fine control of the thyroid’s T4 hormone during a short time period (minutes, hours)? If there is such fine control between the pituitary and thyroid, manually trying to simulate that feedback mechanism by taking one pill a day (levothyroxine) seems impossible. If using liothyronine slow-release medication, how often in one day should it be taken to keep the T3 level stable? — J.R.

ANSWER: When a person is healthy, the thyroid produces T4, levothyroxine, which as you correctly say is slowly metabolized by the body at a rate of about 10% of the T4 in the body per day. Although the thyroid also produces a small amount of the more metabolically active form of thyroid hormone, triiodothyronine (T3), most T3 in the body is converted from T4 outside the thyroid. T3 is degraded much faster, about 75% per day.

Dr. Keith Roach

There is no fine control of thyroid hormone over minutes or hours the way there is with insulin, for example. The pituitary gland can stimulate the thyroid to make more hormone through thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH), but that process is slow both to turn on and shut off. Once-daily T4 is an effective way for most people to get their thyroid hormone. The active T3 will then be converted from the T4 the person is taking.

A few people have a poor ability to convert the active T3 from T4. In these situations, giving pharmacologic T3 is appropriate. However, the combination T3 and T4 preparations that are commercially available do not have the same ratio of hormones that humans have, because they’re made from pig thyroid. The ratio of T4 to T3 in desiccated thyroid extract from Armour and others is approximately 4:1, whereas in humans, it should be approximately 14:1. Using desiccated thyroid extract once daily leads to having excess T3 during part of the day (right after taking the medicine) and not enough T3 once the T3 has been metabolized.

Unfortunately, there is no commercially available, slow-release formulation of T3: the regular release formulation is also called liothyronine and sold under the brand name Cytomel. When T3 is prescribed along with T4, it is dosed twice daily, usually 2.5 to 5 micrograms, but the T4 component may be dosed once daily.

DEAR DR. ROACH: I have had two CT scans: one eight years ago of my pelvis and abdomen, and one this year of my brain, neck and chest. I am very worried this will cause me to get cancer. Do I need to be concerned about developing cancer due to these CT scans? — N.W.

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ANSWER: Generally, for an individual, the risk of cancer from a CT scan or two is very low.

Whether medical radiation increases the rate of cancer is debated, but most authorities feel that large amounts of radiation, especially when repeated, may increase the risk of developing certain cancers, especially leukemias. Published estimates for the risk of developing cancer from a CT scan range from 0.08% for a single CT scan (at age 45) to 1 in 500 (if done at age 20). Another study estimated a 1.9% increased risk of cancer from 30 years of annual CT scans starting at age 45.

Physicians ordering these CT scans must be aware that there is a cost to ordering them that goes beyond the financial cost.

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Dr. Roach regrets that he is unable to answer individual letters, but will incorporate them in the column whenever possible. Readers may email questions to ToYourGoodHealth@med.cornell.edu or send mail to 628 Virginia Dr., Orlando, FL 32803.

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