Women who may be at greater risk of pregnancy complications from thyroid disorders include those with histories of miscarriage and premature birth, women with type 1 diabetes or other autoimmune disorders and anyone with family histories of those disorders. Current guidelines recommend testing only these high-risk women. Stagnaro-Green indicated that those high-risk women should be routinely screened for thyroid antibodies in their blood, which may indicate hyperthyroidism. "Just by having antibodies, their risk of miscarriage doubles," Stagnaro-Green said in a press release.
Stagnaro-Green also contends that many women may have thyroid problems but exhibit no symptoms and have normal thyroid functioning. An obstetrician may not order thyroid testing for these women even though they may be at greater risk of miscarriage and preterm births.
A separate study in the United Kingdom found that limiting thyroid testing to only high-risk women could miss about one-third of women with hypothyroidism. The researchers studied 1,560 pregnant women and conducted thyroid tests early in their pregnancies (at about 9 weeks of gestation).
The study tested levels of thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH), which would be elevated in people experiencing hypothyroidism. Only 26.5 percent of the women were considered high-risk, with either personal or family histories of thyroid disorders. However, 30 percent of the women with elevated TSH levels came from the low-risk group.
The study on TSH testing was published in the January issue of the Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism.
Copyright 2007 iVillage Total Health.