thyroid and parathyroid Flashcards

1
Q

what stimulates the parathyroid glands to release PTH

A

low serum calcium

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2
Q

what form of calcium is sensed?

A

ionized calcium

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3
Q

where does the increase in calcium come from?

A

the bone, intestine, and kidney

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4
Q

how does the kidney respond to PTH?

A

it increases its secretion of phosphate, retains calcium, produces 1, 25 hydroxyvit D, which stimulates the intestinal absorption.

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5
Q

how does VIt D increase calcium?

A

stimulates intestinal absorption and stimulates osteoclasts.

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6
Q

how is vit D regulated?

A

tightly, through the action of calcium, PTH and phosphorus

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7
Q

what are the most common causes of hypercalcemia?

A

hyperparathyroidism and malignancy

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8
Q

what is the first step in diagnosing hyperthyroidism

A

PTH levels! always first

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9
Q

PTH levels in primary hyperparathyroid?

A

high or normal

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10
Q

primary hyperparathyroidism characteristics and statistics ?

A

3:1 women, more common when 60. typically caused by hyper secretion in one or more glands. solitary adenoma 80% of the time. less common that all glands are hypertrophied.

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11
Q

how is primary hyperPT diagnosed on labs?

A

elevated calcium, elevated or normal PTH, low phosphorus, elevated urine calcium.

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12
Q

secondary hyperPT characteristics

A

perceived low calcium concentration. can occur in renal disease due to phosphate retention and lack of 1-alpha hydroxylase activity in the kidney thus a deficiency of activated Vit D.

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13
Q

how does high phosphorus effect the PTH system?

A

it will stimulate PTH secretion

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14
Q

what do you have to prescribe sometimes in renal disease, due to phosphorus and why?

A

low phosphate diet, phosphate binders, replacement of activated Vit D and dialysis.

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15
Q

can vitamin D deficiency cause hyperPT

A

yes. very common actually. need to replace sometimes.

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16
Q

tertiary hyperPTism characteristics and causes

A

PT becomes autonomous after prolonged hyperPTism. this is similar to primary, in that the gland is hyper secreting. this is different from secondary in the sense that the calcium in high, not low.

17
Q

hypocalcemia characteristics

A

the PTH levels will be high in effort to counteract. can be caused by destruction of the parathyroid, or failure to produce. characterized by the level of PTH

18
Q

hypoPTism

A

PTH produced is insufficient to meet demands or is unable to function properly. usually there is a low serum calcium and low PTH.

19
Q

pseudohypoPTism

A

similar to hypo but the PTH is elevated. there is a resistant state.

20
Q

thyroid disease characteristics and demographics

A

most prevalent endocrine disorder. usually a slow and insidious process, often vague symptoms not understood by the patient. often misdiagnosed.

21
Q

hypothyroid

A

failure to secrete adequate amounts of hormone.

22
Q

primary hypothyroid

A

destruction of the thyroid or interference with hormone synthesis.

23
Q

secondary hypothyroid

A

hypothalamic or pituitary disease.

24
Q

labs for primary hypothyroidism

A

high TSH, low T4

25
Q

labs for secondary hypothyroid

A

T4 low but TSH low or normal.

26
Q

common causes of primary hypothyroidism

A

hashimotos. idiopathic (usually old hash), irradiation of the thyroid, surgical removal, fibrous thyroiditis, iodine deficiency, drug therapy, infiltrative diseases

27
Q

causes of secondary hypothyroid

A

pituitary or hypothalamic tumor, congenital hypopituitarism, pituitary necrosis

28
Q

hypothyroid face?

A

apathetic facies, lack of eyebrows, bilateral ptosis.

29
Q

risk factors for hypothyroid

A

age (men > 60, women >35), sex (female), goiter, history of thyroid dysfunction, family history, head/neck/thyroid surgery, autoimmune disease, drug, hypercholesterolemia

30
Q

treatment for hypothyroid

A

levothyroxine aiming to normalize TSH.

31
Q

hyperthyroidism

A

hyper metabolic state caused by increased availability of hormone.

32
Q

clinical features of hyperthyroid

A

nervousness, irritability, sweating, goiter, rapid HR, bulging eyes, warm moist palms, infertility, weight loss, first-trimester miscarriage. difficulty sleeping.

33
Q

causes of hyperthyroidism

A

diffuse toxic goiter (graves), diffuse multinodular goiter, toxic adenoma.

34
Q

Graves

A

autoimmune disorder, favors women 8:1, thyroid stimulating antibodies to the TSH receptor causes hypertrophy and hyper secretion.

35
Q

ophthalmic disorder graves

A

true infiltrative eye disease, results in periorbital edema, conjunctival swelling and congestion, limited upward and lateral gaze, keratitis.

36
Q

acute/subacute thyroiditis

A

viral or bacterial etiology

37
Q

De Quervains subacute thyroiditis

A

lymphocytic (painless, subacute), post-partum thyroiditis,

38
Q

labs for primary hyperthyroid

A

suppressed TSH levels, high T4 and T3. increased radioactive iodine uptake.

39
Q

which forms of iodine are used to image the thyroid?

A

I123, I131.