Hyperthyroidism Flashcards

1
Q

what is Graves’s disease

A

autoimmune disease
antibodies attack the thyroid to make it overactive
can be associated with eye disease

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2
Q

what are the clinical features of graves disease

A

smooth goitre with uniformly increased uptake on scintigraphy

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3
Q

what is toxic multinodular goitre

A

multiple lumps (nodules) or enlarged thyroid (goitre)
often one or more lumps will be overactive
can get eyelid lag or lid retraction but no other features of thyroid eye disease
tends to occur as people age

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4
Q

what is a toxic nodule

A

single overactive lump

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5
Q

what is thyroiditis

A

temporary overactivity of thyroid
can be followed by a period of underactivity
triggered by pregnancy, infections or some drugs (amiodarone)

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6
Q

what are common symptoms of hyperthyroidism

A

weight loss despite good appetite (often very hungry)
tiredness
tremor
hot, sweaty
palpitations
diarrhoea
light/absent menses
irritable mood, anxiety
eyes - change in appearance, red, gritty, painful, double vision
muscle weakness

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7
Q

what are important features of patient history

A

past medical history - asthma (use of propranolol) heart disease (risk from tachycardia)
family history - thyroid or other autoimmune disease
social history (eyes), job and family (radio-iodine)

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8
Q

what may be present upon examination of hyperthyroidism

A

agitated
talking fast
increased heart rate (may be in atrial fibrillation)
smooth goitre, multinodal goitre, single nodule, no goitre
bruit heard over goitre almost diagnostic of graves

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9
Q

what are common eye problems seen in hyperthyroidism

A

lid retraction and lid lag - associated with any thyrotoxicosis, caused by activation of sympathetic NS (all other eye signs are associated with graves)
redness
gritty sensation
dry or watery eyes
pain on eye movement
swelling around the eyes
proptosis (pushed forward appearance of the eyes)
double vision
loss of colour vision

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10
Q

diagnostic tests

A

TRAbs (TSH receptor antibodies) - significantly positive indicates graves
thyroid peroxidase (TPO) antibodies are less specific
if TRAbs are negative do scintigraphy

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11
Q

drug management of hyperthyroidism

A

antithyroid drugs (ATDs)
carbimazole and propylthiouracil (PTU)
decrease production of thyroid hormone (block TPO)
not for thyroiditis
propranolol is good for tremor and increased heart rate but contraindicated in asthma

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12
Q

why are ATDs contraindicated in thyroiditis

A

high T4 levels are due to the release of hormone stores from damaged gland not actually due to overactive gland

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13
Q

radioactive iodine as treamtent

A

I131
risk of long-term hypothyroidism
avoid pregnancy for 6 months
restrict contact with children under 12 and pregnant people
limit close contact (don’t share bed with partner for 11 days)

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14
Q

risks of surgery as treatment

A

long-term hypothyroidism
damage to recurrent laryngeal nerve and parathyroid glands (controls calcium)

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15
Q

what is the first line treatment for graves

A

ATDs
12-18 month course of tablets
60-70% of recurrence

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16
Q

what is I131 used for

A

recurrent graves 9once it returns it will keep coming back)
TMMG
toxic nodule (no chance of long-term remission with course of tablets)

17
Q

what are the risks of I131

A

risk of hypothyroidism (lower with TMNG and toxic nodule than graves)
thyroid eye disease flaring up

18
Q

when is surgery considered

A

large goitre
eye disease

19
Q

what does active thyroid eye disease look like

A

may respond to steroids
dynamic picture
active inflammation (redness, swelling, pain change in visual function)

20
Q

what does inactive thyroid disease look like

A

static picture
there may be severe damage left behind
will not respond to immunosuppression
may need surgical reconstruction

21
Q

what are the features of thyroid eye disease

A

can have eye disease without thyroid being overactive
thyroid eye disease can even present many months before thyroid disease develops

22
Q

what is the management of thyroid eye disease

A

unless mild should manage in joint thyroid eye clinic
achieve euthyroidism (both hyper/hypo are bad)
smoking cessation (9x increased risk of developing severe disease and respond less well to treatment)
topical lubricants
selenium 200 mcg daily (antioxidant)
steroids (oral or IV if active eye disease)

23
Q

what should be considered if initial treatments don’t work

A

consider additional immunosuppressant treatment as it is TRAbs that drive eye disease
consider orbital radiotherapy
surgical decompression if evidence of optic neuropathy and raised intraocular pressure

24
Q

what can be considered once eye disease is inactive

A

elective eye decompression to resolve residual proptosis
squint surgery if extra-ocular muscle restriction
eyelid surgery if residual swelling or retraction