Thyroid drugs Flashcards

1
Q

Thyroid hormone synthesis

Peripheral metabolism of thyroid hormones

A

Thyroid hormone synthesis

  1. dietary iodine –> active uptake to the thyroid gland
  2. I- + Tyroside –> MIT or DIT (organification)
  3. MIT + DIT combine in the thyroid gland –> forms T3 + rT3
  4. DIT + DIT = T4
  5. Proteolysis and exocytosis release T3 and T4
  6. T3 and T4 are bound to and circulate with thyroid binding globulin

Peripheral metabolism of thyroid hormones

  • deiodination of T4 produces T3 or rT3 depending on which iodine is removed
  • T3 is more potent than T4
  • drugs, severe illness and starvation can inhibit 5’ deiodinase –> results in low T3 and increased rT3
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2
Q

Mechanisms of action of thyroid hormones

A
  • site of action is the nucleus where gene expression for metabolism is controlled
  • T4 and T3 dissociate from TBG and enter cell –> T4 is converted to T3 –> binds to receptor
  • receptor for T3 exists in 2 forms = alpha and beta monomers –> can form alpha-alpha, alpha-beta, and beta-beta dimers
  • dimers bind to DNA response elements and control RNA synthesis
  • more receptors on responsive tissues –> pituitary, kidneys, heart, skeletal muscles, lungs, intestine
  • yield different proteins upon activation –> Na/K ATPase, cardiac and smooth muscle contractile proteins, enzymes for lipid metabolism
  • increase NA/K ATPase = increase in ATP turnover and oxygen consumption
  • lag of hours/days to see the effects
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3
Q

Regulation of thyroid function

A
  • thyroid pituitary axis
  • thyroid autoregulation –> thyroid regulates uptake of iodide and hormone synthesis in non-TSH dependent manner –> large doses of iodine inhibit iodide organification
  • abnormal thyroid stimulators –> e.g. graves disease
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4
Q

Treatment of hypothyroidism

A

Hypothyroidism is treated with T4 supplementation –> although T3 is more potent than T4…

  • it has a shorter half life, requiring multiple daily doses = expensive/inconvenient
  • due to higher potency, risk for cardiac toxicity is greater –> should be avoided in patients with cardiac disease
  • T4 gets converted to T3 intracellularly
  • T3 is only used for a short term suppression of TSH

Thyroid preparations

  • Levothyroxine = T4 (synthroid)
  • Liothyronine = T3
  • Liotrix = 4:1 ratio of T4:T3

T4 supplements should be taken on empty stomach, preferably at least 30 min before breakfast

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5
Q

Hypothyroidism in pregnancy

A

Hypothyroid women frequently have anovulatory cycles

  • relatively infertile until restoration of euthryoid state
  • previous widespread use of thyroid hormone for infertility - now know there is no use in euthyroid women

Pregnant hypothyroid women need close monitoring

  • early development of fetal brain depends on maternal thyroxine
  • modest increase in dose (20-30%) is required to normalize serum TSH –> thyroid binding globulin levels are increased during pregnancy, resulting in lower levels of free T3
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6
Q

Myxedema coma

A

Untreated hypothyroid state

  • medical emergency
  • progressive weakness, stupor, hypothermia, hypoventilation, hypoglycemia, hyponatremia, water intoxication, shock and death
  • IV therapy –> aboid excessive water intake
  • loading dose of T4 to fill empty thyroid binding globulin
  • –> 300 to 400 microgram T4 followed by 50 microgram daily
  • –> IV T3 can be used but it is difficult to monitor and cardiotoxic
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7
Q

Toxicity

A
  • monitor TSH levels
  • older patients hearts are very sensitive to circulating T4 levels –> can cause angina pectoris or arrhythmia
  • chronic over treatment can increase the risk of atrial fibrillation and accelerated osteoporosis
  • in children –> restlessness, insomnia, accelerated bone maturation and growth are signs of toxicity
  • in adults –> increased nervousness, heat intolerance, episodes of palpitations and tachycardia or unexplained weight loss may present
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8
Q

Management of Grave’s disease

A
  • anti-thyroid drug therapy –> small glands and mild disease
  • thyroidectomy –> near total thyroidectomy is a treatment of choice for patients with large glands or multinodular goiters
  • radioactive iodine –> preferred treatment for most patients over 21 years
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9
Q

Anti-thyroid drugs - Thioamides

A

Thiocarmamide group is essential for anti-thyroid activity

Methimazole

  • T1/2 = 6 hours
  • 65-70% dose is recovered in the urine in 48 hours

Propylthiouracil

  • T1/2 = 1.5 hours
  • most of it is excreted by kidneys as inactive glucuronide within 24 hours

Short half life does not influence duration of action, since these agents accumulate in the thyroid gland

  • dose every 6-8 hours for PTU
  • daily for methimazole

Cross placenta –> PTU is more protein bound so less readily

Most dangerous side effect = agranulocytosis

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10
Q

Anti-thyroid durgs - Thioamides

- mechanism of action

A

Prevent hormone synthesis by:

  • –> inhibiting thyroid peroxidase catalyzed reactions
  • –> blocking iodine organification
  • –> block coupling of iodotyrosines
  • do not block the uptake of iodine
  • PTU (methimazole to lesser extent) inhibit the peripheral deiodination of T3 and T4
  • since they affect synthesis rather than release of hormones, onset of action is slow –> often requires 3-4 weeks before the stores of T4 are depleted
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11
Q

Anti-thyroid drugs - Anion inhibitors

A

Monovalent anions = perchlorate (CLO4-) + thiocyanate (SCN-)

  • block uptake of iodide through competitive inhibition of iodide transport mechanism
  • effects can be overcome by large doses of iodide
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12
Q

Anti-thyroid drugs - Iodides

A

Mechanism

  • inhibit organification
  • inhibit hormone release through inhibition of thyroglobulin proteolysis
  • decrease size and vascularity of the hyperplastic gland –> preferred for pre op preparation before surgery

Rapid improvement in thyrotoxicosis symptoms in 2-7 days –> valuable in thyroid storm

Disadvantage = increase in intraglandular iodine stores

  • delay onset of thioamide therapy
  • prevent use of radioactive iodine for weeks

Should not be used alone –> gland escapes the block and withdrawal can produce severe thyrotoxicosis

Should be avoided in pregnancy –> can cross placenta and produce fetal goiter

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13
Q

Antithyroid drugs - radioactive iodine (I-131)

A

Given orally, concentrated by thyroid

  • therapeutic effect depends on emission of beta rays
  • effective half life = 5 days
  • destruction of thyroid parenchyma within a few weeks
  • should not be given to pregnant or nursing women –> cross placenta and secreted in breast milk
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14
Q

Anti-thyroid drugs - beta blockers

A

Used for symptomatic relief

- beta blockers without intrinsic sympathomimetic activity is treatment of choice –> propanolol

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15
Q

Thyroid storm

A

Life threatening thyrotoxicosis crisis
- excessive adrenergic activity

Symptoms

  • fever with flushing and sweating
  • tachycardia
  • afib
  • high pulse pressure
  • occasionally heart failure
  • restlessness, agitation, delirium, coma
  • nausea, vomiting, diarrhea
  • death due to heart failure or shock

Treatment

  • control cardiac symptoms
  • supportive therapy to control fever and heart failure
  • underlying condition that may have precipitated the attack
  • propanolol
  • KI solution - blocks release of T3/T4 from TBG
  • PTU/methimazole - stop hormone synthesis
  • hydrocortisone - for shock to stop conversion of T4 to T3
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