Thyroid Disease Flashcards

1
Q

What are the different test results for primary hypothyroidism vs secondary hypothyroidism?

A

Primary - High TSH and low T4.
Secondary - Low TSH and low TH

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2
Q

What are the causes of hyperthyroidism?

A
  • Autoimmune (Grave’s disease)
  • Hot nodule
  • Multinodular,
  • Thyroiditis (viral, drug induced or gestational)
  • Drugs induced include amiodarone or lithium
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3
Q

What are the causes of hypothyroidism?

A
  • Autoimmune (Hashiomotos)
  • Post surgery or radioactive iodine ablation
  • Drug induced
  • Hypopituitarism
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4
Q

Explain the formation of thyroxine

A

Iodide is absorbed by thyroid follicle cells where it is then oxidized to form iodine. The iodine is then used to form thyroxine. This is then exocytosed by TSH.
In the periphery, thyroxine is converted into the active form triiodothyronine (T3)

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5
Q

What are the functions of the thyroid hormones?

A
  • Increased metabolism,
  • Increased growth and development,
  • Increased catecholamine effect.
  • This results in increased cardiac output, heart rate, stroke volume and systolic BP.
  • Stimulates bone turnover,
  • Stimulates gut motility,
  • Increases glucose usage
  • T3 acts on nuclear receptors
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6
Q

What is measured in a thyroid function test?

A
  • TSH and free/total thyroxine.
  • Sometimes do triiodothyronine
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7
Q

What is the treatment for hypothyroidism?

A

Levothyroxine 1.6mcg/Kg/Day

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8
Q

Explain the presentation and causes of neonatal hypothyroidism?

A

Presentation - Coarse facial features, macroglossia, umbilical hernia, mottled, dry skin, pallor, myxoedema and goiter.
- May be caused by thyroid dysgenesis or dyshormonogenesis (affects how thyroxine is made)

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9
Q

What are the investigations for thyroid disease?

A
  • Thyroid function test,
  • TSH receptor antibodies (graves) and thyroid peroxisomal antibody (Hashimotos)
  • If antibodies are negative then do an uptake scan
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10
Q

What are the signs/symptoms of hyperthyroidism

A
  • Tremor, sweating, thyroid acropachy, pretibial myxoedema
  • Goiter, thyroid bruit,
  • Lid retraction and lid lag which are due to increased SNS activity, exophthalmos (graves), Periorbital oedema (graves) ophthalmoplegia (graves),
  • AF,
  • Diarrhoea,
  • Muscle wasting, proximal muscle weakness
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11
Q

What are the signs/symptoms of hypothyroidism?

A
  • Dry, thick skin, brittle hair
  • Macroglossia, puffy face, loss of lateral 1/3rd eyebrow
  • Bradycardia, cardiomegaly,
  • Carpal tunnel, slow relaxing reflexes, cerebellar ataxia, peripheral neuropathy
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12
Q

What is the treatment for hyperthyroidism?

A
  1. Beta blockers for symptomatic control,
  2. Carbimazole (40mg daily) or propylthiouracil - used in pregnancy (inhibit iodine organification)
  3. Radioactive iodine
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13
Q

Explain the treatment for Graves eye disease

A
  • Urgent ophthamology referral if poor/blurred vision or rapid change in vision.
  • Give eye drops for grittiness,
  • Tape eyelids shut in exophthalmos to avoid corneal damage
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14
Q

What are the Joe basedow phenomenon and the Wolff Chaikoff effects

A

Jod Basedow - Iodine induced hyperthyroidism when a person is iodine deficiency (2-12 weeks)
Wolff Chaikoff effect - Iodine induced hypothyroidism as excess iodine inhibits iodide organification

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15
Q

What are the two types of amiodarone thyroid disease?

A

Type 1 - Autoimmune thyrotoxicosis, treated with carbimazole.
Type 2 - Destructive thyroiditis, treated with glucocorticoids +/- ATDs (anti-thyroid drugs)

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16
Q

What are the investigations of a thyroid lump?

A

FNA biopsy. If cancer then treatment is either surgery or therapeutic radioiodine

17
Q

What is the major side effect of Carbimazole?

A

Agranulocytosis - deficiency in granulocytes increasing risk of infection