Non-thyroidal illness and pregnancy Flashcards
what do thyroid hormone levels look like in non-thyroidal illness
TSH can be suppressed acutely then rise on recovery
tT3 fall due to impaired hepatic uptake and T4 to T3 conversion
fT4 usually stays within reference range or is moderately raised
can mimic TFTs seen in patients with thyroid disease
in patients recovering from illness, raised TFTs may be misinterpreted as hypothyroidism
low T3 may be an adaptive response
what does non-thyroidal illness affect
thyroid binding proteins, which reduces total hormone and raises free hormone fraction
should TFTs always be performed
no, should not be performed in patients with chronic or acute illness unless thyroid disease is considered to be the cause of the presenting complaint
what is the severity and duration of the disease correlated with
degree of abnormality observed in TFTs
what is the mechanism of TSH supression
TRH release is suppressed by cytokines and glucocorticoids (some drugs may also inhibit this)
carbohydrate residues on TSH dictate is biological activity and half-life, in NTI the carbohydrate moieties are modified leading to diminished bioactivity
in illness, thyroid hormone uptake by the liver is impaired, resulting in low circulating tT3
conversion of T3 to T4 be deiodinases is impaired in NTI so T3 levels fall
thyroid hormone requirements in pregnancy
foetus needs T4 from week 4/5
uses maternal T4 exclusively up to week 10, and partially thereafter
T4 requirements can increase by 50% by week 20, and plateau from there
what management is there for a pregnant woman with hypothyroidism
increase T4 dose when pregnancy is confirmed
TFTs in each trimester
check TFTs pre-pregnancy in autoimmune disease, current or PH/FH of thyroid disease, features of thyroid disease
what is overt untreated hypothyroidism associated with
infertility
micarriage
pre-eclampsia
premature delivery
increased foetal mortality
impaired neurological development
what is mild subclinical hypothyroidism associated with
neurodevelopmental delays
placental abruption