UGC Approved Journal no 63975(19)
New UGC Peer-Reviewed Rules

ISSN: 2349-5162 | ESTD Year : 2014
Volume 12 | Issue 10 | October 2025

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Published in:

Volume 11 Issue 12
December-2024
eISSN: 2349-5162

UGC and ISSN approved 7.95 impact factor UGC Approved Journal no 63975

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Published Paper ID:
JETIR2412682


Registration ID:
553055

Page Number

g743-g748

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Title

UNRAVELING THE STUDY OF DYSLIPEDEMIA IN HYPOTHYRODISM

Abstract

Background: Thyroid hormone regulates a wide range of genes after its activation from the prohormone, thyroxine (T4), to the active form, triiodothyronine (T3). The signaling pathway is complex and highly regulated due to the expression of cell and tissue-specific thyroid hormone transporters, multiple thyroid hormone receptor (TR) isoforms, and interactions with corepressors and coactivators. Furthermore, in many cases, thyroid signals are involved in cross-talk with a range of other signaling pathways. Materials & Methods: The study conducted on a total of 20 participants in which, 10 samples were healthy and 10 samples were lies in male category and 10 samples were lies in female category. The lipid profile was assessed using standard methodologies. Statistical analysis was performed using the GraphPad Prism9 stat® Software. Analysis of data was done using one-way ANOVA employing Tukey’s test, after analysis. p<0.05 was found to be statistically significant. Results: In our study population 45% belonged to Grade I obesity, while 19% Grade II obesity and the remaining 36% were found to be non- obese. A statistically significant difference was observed in Triglyceride and HDL cholesterol levels (p <0.05). Conclusion: The present study revealed that the Cholesterol level was observed significantly higher in Hypothyroid Males as compared to Hypothyroid Females. The prevalence of LDL, TG, and VLDL were seen higher in Hypothyroid Females in comparison to Hypothyroid Males. Increase in prevalence of the Metabolic Syndrome was higher in women than in men. This might be driven by the constant rise in Obesity in women. Thyroid Hormone might affect lipid metabolism and numerous studies have found that lipid levels increase as TSH levels increase

Key Words

Thyroxine, Triiodothyronine, Thyroid Hormone.

Cite This Article

"UNRAVELING THE STUDY OF DYSLIPEDEMIA IN HYPOTHYRODISM", International Journal of Emerging Technologies and Innovative Research (www.jetir.org), ISSN:2349-5162, Vol.11, Issue 12, page no.g743-g748, December-2024, Available :http://www.jetir.org/papers/JETIR2412682.pdf

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2349-5162 | Impact Factor 7.95 Calculate by Google Scholar

An International Scholarly Open Access Journal, Peer-Reviewed, Refereed Journal Impact Factor 7.95 Calculate by Google Scholar and Semantic Scholar | AI-Powered Research Tool, Multidisciplinary, Monthly, Multilanguage Journal Indexing in All Major Database & Metadata, Citation Generator

Cite This Article

"UNRAVELING THE STUDY OF DYSLIPEDEMIA IN HYPOTHYRODISM", International Journal of Emerging Technologies and Innovative Research (www.jetir.org | UGC and issn Approved), ISSN:2349-5162, Vol.11, Issue 12, page no. ppg743-g748, December-2024, Available at : http://www.jetir.org/papers/JETIR2412682.pdf

Publication Details

Published Paper ID: JETIR2412682
Registration ID: 553055
Published In: Volume 11 | Issue 12 | Year December-2024
DOI (Digital Object Identifier):
Page No: g743-g748
Country: Amritsar, Punjab, India .
Area: Science & Technology
ISSN Number: 2349-5162
Publisher: IJ Publication


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