Hypothyroidism Flashcards

1
Q

what is it?

A

the signs and symptoms due to low levels of T3 and T4

results from any disorder which results in insufficient secretion of thyroid hormones from the thyroid gland

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2
Q

what is the difference between primary and secondary hypothyroidism

A

primary - gland failure, mag be a goitre - low free T3/T4 and high TSH

secondary to TRH or TSH - nor goitre secondary - low free T3/4 and low or normal TSH

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3
Q

What is myxoedema?

A

refers to severe hypothyroidism and is a medical emergency

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4
Q

what causes it?

A

majority of cases are due to Hashimoto’s thyroiditis an autoimmune disorder with a variety of antigenic targets
- affects middle aged women
- associated with other AI disease
- associated with HLA - DR3 and DR5
can also occur because of iodine deficiency, drugs (lithium etc.), post-therapy (surgery, 131I, irradiation), congenital abnormalities and in born errors of metabolism
rarely a result of secondary (pituitary or tertiary (hypothalamic) pathology

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5
Q

how does it present?

A
Reduced BMR
Slow pulse rate 
Fatigue, lethargy, slow response times and mental sluggishness
Cold-intolerance
Tendency to put on weight easily
In adults – Myxoedema – puffy face,  hands & feet
Babies - Cretinism – dwarfism & limited mental functioning due to deficiency of thyroid hormones present at birth
Hair and skin
o	Coarse, sparse hair
o	Dull, expressionless face
o	Periorbital puffiness
o	Pale cool skin that feels doughy to touch
o	Vitiligo may be present
o	Hypercarotenaemia 
Thermogenesis – Cold intolerance
Fluid Retention – Pitting oedema
Cardiac
o	Reduced heart rate
o	Cardiac dilatation
o	Pericardial effusion 
o	Worsening of heart failure
Metabolic – Hyperlipidaemia
Metabolic rate
o	Decreased appetite
o	Weight gain
GI
o	Constipation
o	(Megacolon and intestinal obstruction)
o	(Ascites)
Respiratory
o	Deep hoarse voice
o	Macroglossia
o	Obstructive sleep apnoea
Neurology/CNS
o	Decreased intellectual and motor activities
o	Depression, psychosis, neuro-psychiatric
o	Muscle stiffness, cramps
o	Peripheral neuropathy
o	Prolongation of the tendon jerks
o	Carpal tunnel syndrome
o	(Cerebellar ataxia, encephalopathy)
o	Decreased visual acuity
Gynae/reproductive
o	Menorrhagia
o	Later oligo- or amenorrhoea
o	Hyperprolactinaemia - ↑TRH causes ↑ PRL secretion
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6
Q

how is it managed?

A

normal metabolic rate should be gradually restored if rapid restoration it can precipitate cardiac arrythmias
young patients - start levothyroxine at 50-100µg daily
Elderly if history IHD – start levothyroxine at 25-50µg daily, adjusted every 4 weeks according to response

  • Main treatment is levothyroxine (T4)
  • No benefit with combination of T4 + T3
  • T4 preferably taken before breakfast
  • T3 therapy is rarely used: 20μg T3 = 100μg T4
  • T3 effects develop within a few hours and disappear within 24-48 hours of discontinuation
  • Dose requirements may increase by 25-50% in pregnancy (↑TBG)
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7
Q

how often should TSH be checked once treatment has been started?

A

2 months after dose change

every 12-18 months once stabilised

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8
Q

secondary hypothyroidism

A

TSH unreliable (decreased TCH production) so titrate dose of levothyroxine of the fT4 level

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9
Q

what is a myxoedema coma

A

normally in elderly women with long-standing, frequently unrecognised or untreated hypothyroidism
there is a high mortality - 60% despite early diagnosis and treatment

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10
Q

what are the findings of myxoedema coma?

A

ECG: bradycardia, low voltage complexes, varying degrees of heart block, T wave inversion, prolongation of the QT interval
Type 2 resp failure: hypoxia, hypercarbia, resp acidosis
co-existing adrenal failure is present in 10% of patients

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11
Q

how should myxoedema be managed?

A

intensive care A,B,C!
passively rewarm: aim for slow rise in body temperature
cardiac monitoring for arrhythmias
close monitoring of urine output, fluid balance, central venous pressure, blood sugars, oxygenation
broad spectrum antibiotics
thyroxine cautiously (hydrocortisone)

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12
Q

what causes goitrous primary hypothyroidism?

A
chronic thyroiditis (Hashimoto's thyroiditis) 
iodine deficiency 
drug-induced (e.g. amiodarone, lithium)
maternally transmitted (e.g. anti-thyroid drugs)
hereditary biosynthetic defects
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13
Q

what causes non-goitrous primary hypothyroidism?

A

atrophic thyroiditis
post-ablative therapy (e.g. radioiodine, surgery)
post-radiotherapy (e.g. for lymphoma treatment)
congenital developmental defect

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14
Q

what causes self-limiting primary hypothyroidism

A

following withdrawal of anti-thyroid drugs
subacute thyroiditis with transient hypothyroidism
post-partum thyroiditis

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15
Q

what are the laboratory findings for primary hypothyroidism?

A

↑TSH and ↓fT4/3 – cardinal abnormalities

Other abnormalities
Macrocytosis (↑MCV)
↑Creatine kinase (CK)
↑LDL-cholesterol
Hyponatraemia – ↓renal tubular water loss
Hyperprolactinaemia – ↑TRH leads to ↑PRL (often mild)

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16
Q

what can cause secondary hypothyroidism?

A

diseases of the hypothalamus and pituitary gland

  • infiltrate
  • infectious
  • malignant
  • traumatic
  • congenital
  • cranial radiotherapy
  • drug-induced