Endo Questions Flashcards
Causes diffuse goitre
Idiopathic
Puberty, pregnancy, postpartum
Graves disease
Thyroiditis- hashimotos, subacute (Tender), chronic fibrosing (riedel’s)
Simple goitre- iodine deficiency
Goitrogens- iodine excess, drugs (lithium etc)
Inherited disorders/inborn errors
Causes hypothyroidism
Without goitre- decreased/absent thyroid tissue o Idiopathic atrophy o Treatment (iodine, surgery) o Agenesis or lingual thyroid o Unresponsiveness to TSH
With goitre- decreased synthesis o Chronic thyroiditis- hashimotos, riedels o Drugs- lithium, amiodarone o Iodine deficiency o Inborn errors
Secondary
o Pituitary lesions
Tertiary
o Hypothalamic lesions
Transient
o Thyroid hormone treatment withdrawal
o Subacute thyroiditis
o Postpartum thyroiditis
Neurological associations of hypothyroidism
Common
o Entrapment- carpal or tarsal tunnel
o Delayed relaxation phase of ankle jerks
o Nerve deafness
Uncommon o Peripheral neuropathy o Proximal myopathy (with normal CK levels) o Hypokalaemic periodic paralysis o Eaton Lambert syndrome or unmasking of myasthenia gravis o Cerebellar syndrome o Pyschosis o Coma o Cerebrovascular disease o High CSF protein o Muscle cramps
Causes panhypopituitarism
Chromophobe adenoma Other space occupying lesion (craniopharyngioma, metastatic carcinoma, granuloma) Iatrogenic (surgery, radiation) Sheehans syndrome (postpartum necrosis) Head injury Idiopathy
Evidence activity in acromegaly
- Skin tag number
- Excessive sweating
- Presence of glycosuria
- Increasing visual field loss or development of cranial nerve palsies of 3, 4, 6 and 5
- Enlarging goitre
- Hypertension
- Symptoms of headache
- Increasing ring size, shoe size or dentures
Autoimmune disease associations
- Addison’s disease
- Hyooparathyrodism
- Mucocutaneous candidiasis
- T1DM
- Hashimotos thyroiditis
- Graves disease
- Primary ovarian failure
- Pernicious anaemia
- Vitiligo
- Alopecia
- Hypophysitis
- Myasthenia gravis
Causes addisons (chronic adrenal insufficiency)
Iatrogenic Primary -Autoimmune adrenal disease -Polyglandular syndromes (i.e. a/w other AI dx) -Tuberculosis, histoplasmosis -Infiltration (e.g. amyloidosis, sarcoidosis, metastatic malignant Dx) -Demyelinating Dx -Drugs
Secondary
-Pituitary or hypothalamic disease- usually no mineralocorticoid deficiency
Diabetic retinopathy
- Haemorrhages
- Hard exudates
- Cotton wool spots
- Microaneurysms
- Dilated veins
- New vessels, vitreous haemorrhages, scar formation, retinal detachment and laser scars- if proliferative