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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Safety of daily levothyroxine tablets in healthy Beagle dogs

By Hare, J E et al.·Published in Journal of veterinary pharmacology and therapeutics·2018·Kingfisher International, Canada·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Safety of orally administered, USP-compliant levothyroxine sodium tablets in dogs.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of healthy Beagle dogs was given varying doses of levothyroxine sodium tablets, a medication used to treat thyroid issues, to see how safe it was. The dogs received doses up to ten times the usual starting amount for 182 days. While some dogs showed mild signs of increased thyroid hormone levels, like excitement and faster breathing or heart rates, these symptoms were not consistent and did not seem to be related to the dose. Overall, the study found that even at higher doses, levothyroxine was well tolerated by the dogs without serious side effects.

People also search for: dog thyroid medication safety · levothyroxine side effects in dogs · Beagle thyroid treatment

Abstract

The safety of synthetic levothyroxine sodium tablets (Thyro-Tabs® Canine; LLOYD, Inc.) in dogs was evaluated in a randomized, sham-dose controlled, parallel-group study. Young, healthy, euthyroid Beagle dogs were randomized into four groups (four females and four males per group) and received single daily doses of 0×, 2× (0.044 mg/kg), 6× (0.132 mg/kg), or 10× (0.22 mg/kg) the labeled starting dose of 0.022 mg kg dayfor 182 days. Every 2 weeks, physical examinations, electrocardiology examinations, and sample collections for thyroid panel, hematology, serum biochemistry, coagulation panel, and urinalysis were performed. At the end of the study, the dogs were euthanized and full necropsies performed. The most overt finding was the expected dose-dependent increase in serum concentrations of total and free thyroxine with dose-dependent suppression of the hypothalamic-pituitary-thyroid axis as evidenced by decreased serum thyroid-stimulating hormone concentrations, decreased thyroid+parathyroid/body weight ratios, and a trend for decreased pituitary weight/brain weight ratios. Clinical signs of thyrotoxicosis (excitation, tachypnea, tachycardia) in the treated dogs were sporadic with no dose-response relationship. Other findings statistically associated with levothyroxine treatment were generally mild and not clinically important. In summary, doses of levothyroxine sodium up to 10× the labeled starting dose were well tolerated in healthy dogs.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/29139142/