Objectives:-To detect
prevalence of subclinical hypothyroidism (SCH) among acute coronary syndrome
patients and to assess its association with both in hospital morbidity and
mortality. Methods:- The study included 300 patients admitted with the
diagnosis of acute coronary syndrome (either STEMI or NSTEMI or UA) with close
follow up during the in hospital stay to detect any morbidity or mortality. All
subjects underwent complete lipid profile (TC-TG-LDL-C-HDL-C-VLDL-C) and
thyroid profile (free T3-free T4-TSH). Results:-SCH was associated with
hypercholesterolemia (in 83.1 % of patients), hypertriglyceridemia (in 80% of
patients), increased LDL-C (in 83.3% of patients), decreased HDL-C (in 85.7% of
patients) and increased VLDL-C (in 86.6% of patients).The prevalence of SCH
among ACS patients was 5%. Morbidity was 34.6% in ACS patients with normal
thyroidprofile (euthyroid) vs. 20% in those with SCH (pvalue0.7). Mortality was
2.5% in ACS patients with normal thyroidprofile (euthyroid) vs. 0% in those
with SCH (pvalue more than 0.05). Conclusion:-Prevalence of SCH is 5% in ACS
patients and it has no association with in hospital morbidity and mortality. -
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