Week 3 - G - ITA thyroid tutorial Flashcards

1
Q

Where are thyroid hormones stored?

A

In the colloid

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2
Q

What is the main plasma protein that T4 and T3 bind to?

A

Thyroxine binding globulin , less than 0.5% of each is present in the free form which is biologically active

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3
Q

As T4 accounts for 90% of the total thyroid hormones produced and T3 is the major biologically active, how does the main production of T3 take place?

A

T3 is mainly produced by de-iodination of T4 within target cells outside the thyroid gland. (mainly through D2-deiodinase enzyme)

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4
Q

What enzyme activates iodine to attach to the tyrosine residues?

A

A thyroid perxoidase enzyme

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5
Q

Once TSH has bound to the receptor on the follicular cell, how does this trigger the release of the thyroid hormones?

A

Release of thyroid hormones via endocytosis (pinocytosis) is triggered and the thyroglobulin is broken down by lysosomes to release T4 and T3 into the bloodstream

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6
Q

What are 7 causes of goitre?

A

Grave’s disease Hashimoto’s thyroditis Iodine deficiency Amiodorane Lithium Multi-Nodular goitre Sub-acute thyroditis

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7
Q

What age groups with a thyroid nodule are at an increased worry of malignancy?

A

Below 20 and above 70 years of age

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8
Q

If the lump is smooth, does this indicate benign or malignant? What about if there is dysphagia? Cervical lymphadenopathy?

A

If smooth then benign Dysphagia and cervical lymphadenopathy are malignant

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9
Q

What size does the thyroid lump have to be to assess for malignancy or benign? What procedure is used to carry this out?

A

Greater than 1.5cm Ultrasound guided fine needle aspiration (FNA)

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10
Q

Thyroid Storm (crisis) Untreated or inadequately treated thyrotoxicosis Rare but life threatening Medical emergency - HR increased , BP decreased, Fever , Altered mental status, Multiorgan failure How is it treated? (always rememeber to treat precipitating cause)

A

Management of thyroid storm Carbimazole –high dose Beta blockers - slow heart Hydrocortisone - reduces peripheral conversion of T4 to T3 Potassium Iodide IV fluids +/- Inotropes Treat precipitating cause e.g MI, Infection, PE

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11
Q

What is the hand, leg and eye conditions associated with grave’s disease?

A

Hand - thyroid acropachy Leg - pretibial myxoedema Eye - exopthalmos (aka proptosis)

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12
Q

What are the features of dysthyroid eye disease?

A

Clinical features of dysthryoid eye disease - Grittiness, watery eyes Conjunctival injection Eyelid retraction Proptosis Visual blurring Painful eye movements

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13
Q

When treating patients with (levo)thyroxine for hypothyroidism, usual starting dose is 50-100 micrograms, when is the starting dose lowered to 25micro grams?

A

Start lower dose if history of IHD or LVF

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