Thyroid Pathology Flashcards

1
Q

What are the mechanical and functional consequences of thyroid disease?

A

Mechanical:

  • Goitre
  • Compression effects (airway, oesophagus, large vessels)

Functional:

  • Hyperthyroidism
  • Hypothyroidism
  • EUthyroidism
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2
Q

What is the most common cause of hypothyroidism in infacy/early childhood?

What cna it cause?

A

Usually caused yb dietary iodine deficiency.

Causes impaired development of skeleton and CNS (short statue, mental impairment)

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3
Q

What are the major causes of hypothyroidism for adults?

A

Primary problem with the thyroid:

  • Inflammatory thyroiditis
  • Autoimmune thyroiditis (Hashimoto’s)
  • Primary iodine deficiency
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4
Q

In which demographics does hypothyroidism most frequently occur

A
  • >60y.o.
  • Women (Autoimmune thyroiditis is far more common in women)
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5
Q

What is the consequence of chronic hypothyroidism?

A

Myxedema - slowing of mental and physical activity

  • Fatigue
  • Cold intolerance
  • Overweight
  • Decreased cardiac output
  • Decreased sympathetic activity
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6
Q

What is Hashimoto’s thyroiditis?

What are the pathological findings?

A

Autoimmune disease - loss of self-tolerance to thyroid antigens

  • Female predominance

Patholigical findings:

  • Apoptosis of epithelial cells
  • Atrophy
  • Fibrosis
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7
Q

What is thyrotoxicosis?

A

Hyperthyroidism

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8
Q

What are the symptoms of thyrotoxicosis for younger and older patients?

A

Young patients tend to exnhibit symptoms of sympathetic activation, older patients have more cardiovascular symptoms:

  • Nervousness, anxiety, hyperactivity
  • Heat intolerance
  • Palpitations
  • Tachycardia, hypertension
  • Muscle weakness
  • Weight loss despite increased appetite
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9
Q

What are the three most common causes of hyperthyroidism?

A
  • Diffuse hyperplasia (Graves disease)
  • Hyperfunctional multionodular goitre
  • Hyperfunctiona thyroid adenoma
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10
Q

Are most carcinomas functional or non-functional?

A

Most are non-functional.

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11
Q

What is Grave’s disease?

A

Autoantibodies against TSH receptor and other thyroid antibodies.

Thyroid can become very large, with functional symptoms.

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12
Q

What are the symptoms characteristic of Grave’s disease?

A
  • Pretibial myxedema
  • Opthalmopathy (periorbital oedema, lid lag)
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13
Q

What is nodular colloid goitre and what does it cause?

A

Iodine deficiency = reduced hormone production.

Thyroid follicles are stimulated to work harder, inducing hyperplasia.

Cycles of hyperplasia lead to nodule formation - multinodular colloid goitre.

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14
Q

How do most nodular colloid goitres present in terms of thyroid hormone production?

A

Euthyroid

  • However, it is the most common cause of thyroidectomy in Australia as it can cause hyperthyroidism
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15
Q

Describe the pathological presentation of most thyroid neoplasms

A
  • Most present as solitary nodules
  • Most are non-functional
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16
Q

What are the two types of thyroid adenomas?

Which is more common?

A
  1. Follciular adenoma (most)
  2. Hurthle cell adenoma
17
Q

What are the path features of thyroid adenomas?

A
  • Solitary nodules
  • Well circumscribed and encapsulated
  • Normal background thyroid
  • No invasion
  • Majority are non-functional
18
Q

What is the treatment for thyroid adenomas?

A

Hemithyroidectomy.

19
Q

What are the 4 types of thyroid carcinomas and their prevalence?

A
  1. Papillary (80%)
  2. Follicular (15%)
  3. Anaplastic (2%)
  4. Medullary neuroendocrine (3%)
20
Q

How does follicular carcinoma typically look like?

A

Similar to follicular adenoma:

  • Solitary nodule
  • Thickly encapsulated

However:

  • Capsular invasion
  • Lymphovascular invasion
  • Extrathyroidal extension
21
Q

Is papillary carcinoma usually multifocal or solitary nodule?

A

Multifocal

22
Q

Prognosis of papillary and follicular carcinoma?

Treatment?

A

Good.

Treatment = complete thyroidectomy

23
Q

Which is the most aggressive form of thyroid cancer with a very poor prognosis?

A

Anaplastic thyroid carcinoma

  • Aggressive
  • Often preceded by follicular or papillary carcinoma
  • Multifocal