Lec 6 Thyroid Diagnostics Flashcards

1
Q

What is structure of TSH?

A

pituitary glycoprotein w/ 2 alpha and 2 beta subunits

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2
Q

What is mutation associated with thyroid hot nodule?

A

constitutively active TSH receptor –> autonomous thyroid function

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3
Q

How can you confirm presence of thyroid hot nodule?

A

do radioiodine thyroid scan to show iodine uptake in nodule and suppressed uptake in rest of normal tissue

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4
Q

What are the steps in thyroid hormone synthesis and secretion?

A
  • thyroid follicular cells concentrate iodide from extracellular space
  • Na-I symporte brings I in
  • high I permits organification of iodide into tyrosine residues on thyrogolobulin storage protein in follicular lumen
  • condensation of iodinated tyrosine rings yields T4 and T3
  • hydrolysis of thyroglobulin releases thyroid hormone into circulation
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5
Q

What is mech of antithyroid drugs?

A

inhibits thyroid hormone synthesis [organification] but do not release the stored hormone –> medication response is delayed by several weeks

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6
Q

What is difference in action/half life/etc T3 and T4?

A

T3 = higher potency and higher receptor affinity but shorter half life

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7
Q

What is problem with measuring dessicated thyroid level?

A

T3 spikes a few hours after does and then goes down; T4 relatively constant

pt can have high spike causing symptoms of hyperthyroid but at the time you measure them might show up with normal levels

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8
Q

What is euthyroid sick syndrome?

A

normal TSH but T3 looks really low b/c most of circulating T3 is from peripheral tissue deiodination of T4 [mostly in liver]

in pt who has chronic illness and starvation [cachexia] –> downregulated conversion to T3

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9
Q

What is T3 toxicosis?

A

when you are hyperhtyroid you tend to secrete more T3 compared to T4 –> disproportionate elevation of T3 relative to T4

can have high T3, normal T4, and low TSH and be hyperthyroid

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10
Q

What is significance of thyroxine binding globulin?

A

binds most T3 and T4 in circulation; if its high –> makes T3/T4 look high; if its low –> makes T3/T4 look low

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11
Q

What happens to free hormone level and total hormone level with altered hormone binding?

A
  • free hormone level stays the same

- total hormone level changes

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12
Q

What are 5 causes of increased TBG?

A
  • estrogen
  • oral contraceptives
  • estrogen replacement therapy
  • pregnancy
  • acute infectious hepatitis
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13
Q

What are 4 causes of decreased TBG?

A
  • androgens
  • nephrotic syndrome
  • hypoproteinemia
  • acromegaly
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14
Q

What is most sensitive test for thyroid dysfunction?

A

TSH

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15
Q

What determines clinical status of thyroid?

A

free T3/T4 levels

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