ChemPath 9: Thyroid Flashcards

1
Q

What controls the uptake of iodine by thyroid follicular cells in the thyroid gland? where is this made?

A

TSH from the pituitary gland

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2
Q

What needs to be done to iodine that is taken up in the GIT?

A

Needs to be converted to iodide as this is what is taken up by thyroid gland

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3
Q

Which channel is important for the transport of iodide across the cell membrane?

A

Iodide is actively taken up into thyrocytes via a Na+/K+/ATPase pump

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4
Q

How is thyroxine produced?

A

Thyroglobulin = protein in thyroid gland

Iodide that has been taken up is converted to iodine via thyroid peroxidase

Iodine + thyroglobulin -> MIT, DIT and eventually T3 and T4

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5
Q

Where is thyroxine stored once produced?

A

Once thyroxine (T4) is produced, it is stored inside the thyroid gland colloid

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6
Q

What percentage of thyroxine is free active T4?

A

0.03%

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7
Q

What does thyroxine bind to in the blood?

Which is main + when might it be low?

A

Thyroxine binding globulin (TBG) - 75% = MAIN (based on albumin synthesis hence if albumin is low -> TBG low)

Thyroxine-binding prealbumin (TBPA) = 20%

Albumin = 5%

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8
Q

Outline the hypothalamo-pituitary-thyroid axis

A

The hypothalamus produces TRH (thyrotrophin releasing hormone) which stimulates the release of TSH (thyroid stimulating hormone) from the anterior pituitary

TSH stimulates T3/T4 production

T4 feeds back to the hypothalamus and pituitary
(Good image on notion)

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9
Q

List some causes of hypothyroidism.

A

Hashimoto’s thyroiditis (autoimmune) = MOST COMMON CAUSE

Postpartum-thyroiditis

Atrophic thyroid gland

Iodine deficiency (CAUSE IN DEVELOPING WORLD)

Pituitary disease

Peripheral thyroid hormone resistance

Post-Graves’ disease (after treatment)

Drugs (e.g. amiodarone, lithium)

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10
Q

Outline the investigation findings that may be seen in hypothyroidism.

A

High TSH + Low T4 = Primary hypothyroid

Thyroid peroxidase antibodies (suggests autoimmune)

Look out for other autoimmune conditions (eg. pernicious anaemia, coelic and addisons)

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11
Q

Why do ECG in patients with suspected hyopothyroidism?

What should you do?

A

If someone with hypothyroidism has underlying cardiovascular disease, giving them thyroxine may induce ischaemia

NOTE: so you would start on a low dose of thyroxine and then escalate

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12
Q

How is hypothyroidism treated?

Risk of overtreatment?

A

Levothyroxine (T4 - 50-125-200 µg/day titrated to a normal TSH)

Overtreatment can cause osteopaenia & AF

Patients may want to take too much as it can help them lose weight

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13
Q

What is subclinical hypothyroidism? AKA?

When might these pts be more likely to develop hypothyroidism?

A

Normal T4 with high TSH
Sometimes referred to as compensated hypothyroidism

NOTE: if TPO antibodies are positive, the patient may go on to develop hypothyroidism

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14
Q

Why might there be some benefit to treating subclinical hypothyroidism?

A

Hypothyroidism is associated with hypercholesterolaemia

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15
Q

How does thyroid function changes in pregnancy?

A

hCG has a similar structure to TSH so high hCG levels can cause hyperthyroidism

Free T4 levels rise slightly

TBG level increase dramatically

NOTE: hCG level drops later on in pregnancy

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16
Q

How is neonatal hypothyroidism diagnosed? - What component is tested for?

What is the timing and why?

A

Guthrie test - Looking at TSH

It needs to be done at least 48-72 hours after birth to make sure maternal TSH is no longer in the baby

17
Q

What happens if neonatal hypothyroid is tested too early / too late?

A

Too early = ridiculously high due to maternal TSH

Too late = untreated hypothyroidism which can lead to intellectaual problems in later life

18
Q

What is sick euthyroid?

A

Alteration in the pituitary thyroid axis in non-thyroidal illness (can happen in any severe illness)

In other words, when you are very sick, your thyroid will shut down to try and reduce your basal metabolic rate

19
Q

Biochemical findings in sick euthyroid?

A

Low T4 and T3
Normal/high TSH

NOTE: these patients do not have symptoms of hypothyroidism + giving thyroxine will not improve their symptoms

20
Q

What are the three main causes of hyperthyroidism?

Others?

A
  1. Graves’ disease (40-60%)
  2. Toxic multinodular goitre / Plummers disease (30-50%)
  3. Single toxic adenoma (5%)

Others: subacute thyroiditis, post-partum thyroiditis,

21
Q

What is post-partum thyroiditis?

A

During pregnancy, the body may produce antibodies that stimulate the thyroid gland

After the child is born, the thyroid gland is attacked by these antibodies - → hyperthyroidism as stored thyroid hormone is released

Thyroid hormone stores used up → patient becomes hypothyroid → patient becomes euthyroid

22
Q

What is struma ovarii?

A

A rare form of ovarian tumour (usually a teratoma) that contains mostly thyroid tissue and produces thyroxine

23
Q

List some investigation findings of hyperthyroidism.

A

TFTs = Low TSH, High T4 and T3

Thyroid antibodies (thyroid microsomal antibodies =anti-TSH) - seen in graves

Technetium scan

24
Q

What is a technetium scan used for in thyroid disease?

Causes of high / low uptake?

A

A Technetium scan can be used to see which parts of the thyroid are producing excessive thyroid hormone

High:

  • Grave’s
  • Toxic multinodular goitre
  • Single toxic adenoma

Low:

  • Subacute thyroiditis
  • Post-partum thyroiditis
25
Q

Mx of hyperthyroidism?

A

Symptomatic:
B-blocker - tachycardia
ECG - ensure no fast AF
DEXA / bone mineral density scan - exclude osteoporosis / osteopaenia

Thionamides (Carbimazole, propylthiouracil) - can reduce T3 and T4 production

Radioiodine + surgical removal of gland - if persistently high despite thionamide use

26
Q

What is a major risk of radioiodine treatment for hyperthyroidism?

A

Can precipitate thyroid storm (release of thyroxine from gland)

Can result in hypothyroidism

27
Q

Features of Graves disease?

Why is there a need to be careful of radioiodine use?

A

Diffuse goitre
Thyroid-associated ophthalmopathy
Pretibial myxoedema
Thyroid acropachy - skeletal abnormality

NOTE: radioiodine can make Graves’ eye disease worse

28
Q

MoA of thionamides?

Examples?

A

Prevents the conversion of iodide to iodine by thyroid peroxidase

Carbimazole, propylthiouracil

29
Q

What is a rare but important side-effect of thionamides?

Mx re this?

A

Agranulocytosis

Patients should be advised to stop treatment if they develop a sore throat or fever

30
Q

What kind of dosing regimes can be used for thionamides?

A

Can be titrated to achieve normal T4 levels

Block and replace – high dose is given to block the thyroid gland and then given thyroxine replacement

31
Q

Which drug can be given to hyperthyroid patients prior to surgery?

Why is this given?

A

Potassium perchlorate

To prevent uptake of iodine into thyroid cells

32
Q

What are the different types of thyroiditis?

A

Subacute / viral thyroiditis / De Quervains thyroiditis

Post-partum thyroiditis

Silent thyroiditis - immune and amiodarone caused

33
Q

Pathophysiology of Subacute/ viral thyroiditis/ De Quervain’s Thyroiditis?

A

This is where someone has a thyroid illness

Virus attacks the thyroid gland → patient first presents with hyperthyroidism as stored thyroid hormone is released

Thyroid hormone stores used up → patient becomes hypothyroid

Once virus clears → patient becomes euthyroid

34
Q

What is the long-term treatment of thyroiditis?

A

Thyroxine replacement

35
Q

What are the two most common forms of thyroid cancer?

Tumour marker + what is this used for

A

Differentiated thyroid carcinoma:

  • Papillary thyroid cancer
  • Follicular thyroid cancer

Thyroglobulin - monitoring relapse following mx

36
Q

What is a rare but devastating thyroid cancer?

Which cells do they arise form? What condition can this be part of?

A

Medullary Thyroid Carcinoma

Calcitoning-producing C cells of the thyroid gland

Can be part of MEN2

37
Q

Mx of Differentiated thyroid carcinoma?

What can be given as adjuncts?

A

Total thyroidectomy

radioiodine treatment may also be given

high dose thyroxine may be given to suppress TSH levels to prevent TSH from stimulating any remaining cells

38
Q

Name two tumour markers used for medullary thyroid cancer?

A

Calcitonin

CEA

39
Q

Try cases on the notion

A

OKAY!