1B hyperthyroidism Flashcards

1
Q

How do we control thyroid replacement?

A

Monitor TSH level and increase thyroid replacement dose till TSH falls to normal

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1
Q

What happens in Graves’ disease?

A
  • Autoimmune disease where antibodies bind to and stimulate the TSH receptor in the thyroid
  • Causes smooth goitre and hyperthyroidism
  • Other antibodies bind to muscles behind the eye and cause exophthalmos
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2
Q

What is pretibial myxoedema?

A

Other antibodies cause pretibial myxoedema (hypertrophy) which is growth of soft tissue

Pretibial- in front of tibia

Myxoedema- swelling of lower limb

The swelling is non-pitting as it is solid

Not to be confused with myxoedema → hypothyroidism

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3
Q

What are the symptoms of Graves’?

A
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4
Q

What does the thyroid and its scan look like in Graves’?

A
  • Diffuse goitre of moderate size and uniform radioiodine uptake
  • Diffuse enlargement and engorgement of thyroid gland (broken line shows normal size)
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5
Q

What is toxic nodular goitre (Plummer’s disease)

A
  • Not autoimmune, so:
    • No pretibial myxoedema
    • No exophthalmos
  • Benign adenoma that is overactive at making thyroxine
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6
Q

What does the thyroid look like in Plummer’s disease and why?

A
  • One cell has grown a lot on one side of the thyroid so that side is large
  • This makes a lot of thyroxine which suppresses TSH and lack of TSH means the normal side of the gland atrophies and gets smaller
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7
Q

What is the first line investigation for Graves’ disease?

A

TSH receptor antibody (TRAb) (against the TSH receptor) measured in the bloodstream, positive in Graves’ disease.

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8
Q

How does the thyroid in Plummer’s disease look like on a radiograph?

A

taken up all the iodine

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9
Q

What are the effects of thyroxine on the sympathetic nervous system?

A
  • Sensitises beta adrenoceptors to ambient levels of adrenaline and noradrenaline
  • Thus there is apparent sympathetic activation
  • Causes tachycardia, palpitations, tremor in hands, lid lag
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10
Q

What are the symptoms for hyperthyroidism?

A
  • Weight loss despite increased appetite
  • Breathlessness
  • Palpitations, tachycardia
  • Sweating
  • Heat intolerance- feel hot in winter
  • Diarrhoea
  • Lid lag and other sympathetic features
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11
Q

What is a thyroid storm?

A
  • Medical emergency- 50% mortality untreated
  • Blood results confirm hyperthyroidism
  • Need aggressive treatment
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12
Q

What is the criteria for thyroid storm?

A

When someone with hyperthyroidism has 2 or more of these features:

  • Hyperpyrexia >41°C
  • Accelerated tachycardia/arrhythmia
  • Cardiac failure
  • Delirium/frank psychosis
  • Hepatocellular dysfunction; jaundice
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13
Q

What treatment options are there for Plummer’s disease?

A
  • drugs
  • radioiodine
  • surgery (thyroidectomy)
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14
Q

What drugs are given for hyperthyroidism?

A
  • Beta blockers
  • Thionamides (thiourylenes; anti-thyroid drugs)
  • Potassium iodide
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15
Q

What do beta blockers do?

A
  • Helps with sympathetic symptoms- usually works immediately so given first
  • It takes several weeks for anti thyroid drugs to have clinical effects e.g. reduced tremor, slower heart rate, less anxiety
  • Can use non-selective (i.e. beta1 and beta2) beta blockers eg. propranolol to achieve these effects in the interim

NOT thyroid blockers

16
Q

What are 2 examples of thionamides and how do they work?

A
  • Propylthiouracil (PTU)
  • Carbimazole (CBZ)

Stops thyroid production in thyroid gland itself:

  • Good for daily treatment of hyperthyroid conditions like Graves’ and toxic thyroid nodule/toxic multinodular goitre
  • Block thyroid peroxidase enzyme to stop making T3 and T4
  • Doesn’t work straight away (4-6 weeks to start effect) since stored thyroxine needs to be used up
17
Q

What can we give while waiting for thionamides to work?

A

Treatment may include propranolol beta blocker to rapidly reduce tremor and tachycardia while waiting for effect to take place

18
Q

What are side effects of thionamides?

A
  • Rashes (relatively common)
  • More commonly for CBZ: Agranulocytosis (usually reduction in neutrophils)- rare and reversible on withdrawal of drug
  • For PTU: liver failure - also v rare
19
Q

How does potassium iodide work?

A

ONLY used if patient is headed for surgery- not for Graves’- increases vascularity; or for severe thyrotoxic crisis

  • Good preparation of hyperthyroid patients for surgery- start taking it every day from 10 days before surgery
  • It inhibits iodination of thyroglobulin and inhibits H2O2 generation and thyroperoxidase
  • Overall, there’s inhibition of thyroid hormone synthesis and secretion → Wolff-Chaikoff effect
20
Q

What effects does potassium iodide have on hyperthyroidism?

A
  • Hyperthyroid symptoms reduce within 1-2 days
  • Vascularity and size of gland reduce within 10-14 days
21
Q

When do we follow up patients taking drugs for hyperthyroidism?

A
  • Usually aim to stop anti-thyroid drug treatment after 18 months
  • Review patient periodically including thyroid function tests for remission/relapse
22
Q

How does radioiodine work?

A
  • Swallow a capsule of 270 MBq (10mCi) of the isotope I(131)
  • Don’t use if pregnant or child
23
Q

What substance can we use for scans only and not treatment?

A

Tc-99m pertechnetate

24
Q

What are the problems with surgery?

A
  • Risk of voice change if recurrent laryngeal nerve is damaged
  • Risk of losing parathyroid glands
  • Scar
  • Need anaesthetic
25
Q

What are the symptoms to Viral (de Quervain’s) thyroiditis?

A
  • Pyrexia (fever)
  • Malaise
  • Painful dysphagia
  • Hyperthyroidism
  • Thyroid inflammation
  • Tender + palpable thyroid
  • Thyroid gland visibly enlarged on one side
26
Q

What happens in Viral (de Quervain’s) thyroiditis?

A
  • Virus attacks thyroid gland causing pain and tenderness
  • Thyroid stops making thyroxine and makes viruses instead
  • Thus no iodine uptake- scan would show up empty
  • Stored thyroxine is released (fT4 increases and TSH drops) so there is 1 month of hyperthyroidism after which thyroxine runs out causing hypothyroidism
  • After another month, resolution occurs (like in all viral diseases), patient becomes euthyroid again
27
Q

How is postpartum thyroiditis different?

A

It’s similar but there’s no pain and only occurs after pregnancy

Immune system modulated during pregnancy

28
Q

When should PTU be used over CBZ?

A

PTU is the safer option for pregnant women, or women if they are planning a pregnancy in the near future.

If she is already on CBZ, then she should be fine as long as she is on small dosages.