What is T4?
Thyroxine (T4) is the predominant hormone secreted by the thyroid gland. It serves primarily as a prohormone, being converted to the more active triiodothyronine (T3) in peripheral tissues by deiodinase enzymes.
T4 Physiology
- Production: ~100% from thyroid gland (vs T3 which is 80% from peripheral conversion)
- Protein binding: ~99.97% bound to TBG (70%), transthyretin (20%), and albumin (10%)
- Free T4: Only ~0.03% is unbound and biologically active
- Half-life: ~7 days (provides stable circulating levels)
- Function: Serves as reservoir and prohormone for T3
Total T4 vs Free T4
| Feature | Total T4 | Free T4 |
|---|---|---|
| Measures | Bound + unbound T4 | Only unbound (active) T4 |
| Affected by TBG changes | Yes - significantly | No - more reliable |
| Preferred test | No (historical use) | Yes (current standard) |
| Cost | Slightly lower | Slightly higher |