endo - thyroid Flashcards

1
Q

most common cause of congenital hypothyroidism in the UK

A

maldescent of the thyroid/athyrosis

- theres a mass at the back of the tongue or neck

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2
Q

most common cause of congenital hypothyroidism in consanguineous parents

A

dyshormonogenesis - inborn error of thyroxine synthesis

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3
Q

most common cause of congenital hypothyroidism in the world

A

iodine deficiency in diet

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4
Q

clinical features of congenital hypothyroidism

A

usually nothing - just found on screening

faltering growth
feeding problems
jaundice
constipation
pale, cold mottled skin
large tongue
hoarse cry
umbilical hernia, goitre
delayed developement
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5
Q

clinical features of acquired hypothyroidism

A
females more
short
cold intolerant 
dry skin, cold hands/feet
bradycardia
puffy eyes, loss of eyebrows
goitre
slow relaxing reflexes
constipation
delayed puberty/amenorrhoea
obesity - slipped upper femoral epiphysis
poor concentration (affects school)
learning difficulties
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6
Q

treatment of hypothyroidism

A

thyroxine - lifelong

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7
Q

most common cause of acquired hypothyroidism?

A

autoimmune thyroiditis

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8
Q

hyperthyroidism - most common cause

A

Grave’s disease - autoimmune thyroiditis from thyroid stimulating immunoglobulins

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9
Q

hyperthyroidism - biochemistry

A

high thyroxine (t4) and or t3
TSH low
anti-thyroid peroxisomal antibodies may be present and eventually cause hypothyroidism

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10
Q

hyperthyroidism treatment

what is it and what do they need to know

A

carbimazole or propylthiouracil
neutropenia risk - so sore throat and fever > go to hospital immediately

b blockers for anxiety, tremor, HR^ etc

usually treat for 2 years

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11
Q

hyperthyroid clinical features

A
anxiety, restless, tremor 
hungry
sweaty, warm, vasodilated peripheries 
diarrhoea
weight loss
rapid growth in height
tachycardia, wide pulse pressure
goitre (and bruit)
learning difficulties, behavioural issues, psychosis
eye signs - exophthalmos, ophthalmoplegia, lid retraction, lid lag
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12
Q

what does parathyroid hormone do

A

increases calcium level in blood via
osteoclast stimulation (bone remodelling)
increasing renal reabsorption of calcium
activates vitamin D - absorb more ca in gut

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13
Q

hypoparathyroidism =

A

low calcium (muscle spasm, fits, stridor, diarrhoea, rickets)

often from congenital deficiency (ie DiGeorge)

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14
Q

pseudohypoparathyroidism

A

end organ resistance to PTH

so normal PTH levels but low calcium and high phosphate

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15
Q

treatment of hypocalcaemia

A

calcium gluconate (diluted 10%) if acute symptomatic

vitamin D and oral calcium if chronic

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16
Q

hyperparathyroidism

A

high calcium - constipation, anorexia, lethargy, polyuria/polydipsia

severe - rehydrate, diuretics, bisphosphonates