Chapter 57: Thyroid Gland- Benign Thyroid Disease Flashcards
What is the most common cause of hyperthyroidism?
Graves’ disease
What is Graves’ disease?
Diffuse goiter with hyperthyroidism, exophthalmos, and pretibial myxedema
What is the etiology?
Caused by circulating antibodies that stimulate TSH receptors on follicular cells of the thyroid
What is the female-to-male ratio?
6:1
What specific physical finding is associated with Graves’?
Exophthalmos
How is the diagnosis made?
Increased T3, T4, and anti-TSH receptor antibodies, decreased TSH, global uptake of 131I radionuclide
Name treatment option modalities for Graves’ disease
Medical blockade:
- iodide
- propranolol
- propylthiouracil (PTU)
- methimazole
- Lugol’s solution (potassium iodide)
- *Radioiodide ablation:** most popular therapy
- *Surgical resection** (bilateral subtotal thyroidectomy)
What are the possible indications for surgical resection?
- Suspicious nodule
- if patient is noncompliant or refractory to medicines
- pregnant
- a child
- if patient refuses radioiodide therapy
What is the major complication of radioiodide or surgery for Graves’
disease?
Hypothyroidism
What does PTU stand for?
PropylThioUracil
How does PTU work?
- Inhibits incorporation of iodine into T4/T3 (by blocking peroxidase oxidation of iodide to iodine)
- Inhibits peripheral conversion of T4 to T3
How does methimazole work?
Inhibits incorporation of iodine into T4/T3 only (by blocking peroxidase oxidation of iodide to iodine)