Thyroid disease Flashcards
Thyroid physiology
- Thyroid releases 90% T4 and 10% T3
- Hypothalamus produces TRH tripeptide
- Very small changes in T4 result in very large changes in TSH
- T4: prehormone; half life is 1 week
o Dose change takes 5-6 weeks to change steady state level
o 100% of serum T4 is released from thyroid - T3: active hormone
o Half life is 1 day
o 20% from thyroid; 80% from peripheral conversion of T4
o 10X the affinity of T4 for the nuclear receptor
o Provides the predominant biologic activity - Thyroid hormone
o Molecule of thyroglobulin contains 134 tyrosine residues
o Release: digestion of thyroglobulin by lysosomal enzymes endocytosis exocytosis
o Protein binding:
> 99% protein bound (TBG, thyroxine binding prealbumin, albumin)
Only free fraction is biologically active
Free fraction remains stable in pregnancy - hCG shares an alpha subunit with TSH
Fetal thyroid physiology
- Maternal T4 crosses the placenta; noted as early as 6 weeks
- Important for brain development
- Minimal transfer in 3rd trimester
- Fetal thyroid gland:
o Iodine uptake: 10 wks
o Hormone secretion: 18 weeks
o Most fetal T4 is converted to RT3 (inactive) by the placenta
o As in adults, T3 provides the predominant biologic activity
Thyroid testing in pregnancy
- Symptomatic women, family history, type I DM (5-8% risk of hypothyroidism); 25% risk of postpartum dysfunction
- Presence of goiter (always considered abnormal)
- Prior newborn with thyroid disease
- Previous history of high dose neck radiation
Thyroid testing in pregnancy
- Symptomatic women, family history, type I DM (5-8% risk of hypothyroidism); 25% risk of postpartum dysfunction
- Presence of goiter (always considered abnormal)
- Prior newborn with thyroid disease
- Previous history of high dose neck radiation
Risk of untreated hyperthyroidism
- Risk of untreated disease:
o Maternal: PEC, thyroid storm, congestive heart failure, death
o Neonatal: thyroid dysfunction, may occur independent of treatment or result from treatment
o Fetal: SAB, PTD, abruption, IUGR (increased 9 fold), IUFD
Causes of hyperthyroidism
o Transient hyperthyroidism of hyperemesis gravidarum
#1 cause of biochemical hyperthyroidism (2/3 of hyperemesis cases)
FT4/FT4I increase up to 4-6 X normal; proportional so severity of N/V
No TFTs or therapy needed (up to 25% persist > 20 weeks)
o Graves: #1 cause of overt hyperthyroidism (2/1000 pregnancies)
o Hyperfunctioning nodule: accounts for < 10% of cases
o Subacute thyroiditis (very rare in pregnancy)
o Gestational trophoblastic disease – hCG stimulates thyroid
o Exogenous ingestion
Graves disease, mechanism, course, and therapy
- TSH receptor antibodies (TSHRAb)
o Stimulating thyroid stimulating immunoglobulines (TSI)
o Blocking thyroid-blocking inhibitor immunoglobulines (TBII) - Course: exacerbation in 1st and 3rd trimesters
o Incidence of complications (maternal, fetal) is realted to degree of maternal control - Therapy:
o Thioamide PTU and MM
o Mechanism: interfere with thyroid hormone synthesis; both are compatible with breastfeeding
o PTU: increased risk of liver failure; drug of choice is MM (PTU is 2nd line)
o MM possible embryopathy; aplasia cutis, esophageal atresia, choanal atresia; association has been refuted
o 1st trimester PTU (100mg TID)
o 2nd/3rd trimester MM 20mg QD
How to monitor Grave’s disease in pregnancy
- Monitoring: Follow FT4I Q 4 weeks; dose changes take 5-6 weeks to reach steady state
o Target levels:
FT4I – upper limit of normal range (4.5-12.5); to minimize fetal thyroid suppression
TSH < 0.5 mIU/L - Other therapies:
o Beta blockers: propanolol
Atenolol – risk of IUGR
o Thyroidectomy: only if medical therapy fails
o I 131 contraindicated – half life is 1 week; by 10 weeks, fetal thyroid concentrates iodine
Wait 6 months to conceive - Fetal surveillance:
o TSI peak at 28-30 weeks
o Best time to evaluate for goiter is > 28 weeks; hyperextension of neck, neck mass
Role of TSI in pregnancy
- Controversy: role for measuring maternal TSI
o Pro (endocrine): peak at 28-30 weeks; fetal thyrotoxicosis more likely if TSI > 300% of control levels
o Cons (ACOG): no practical use; limited value (1% fetal risk of thyrotoxicosis)
o Possible indications: history of fetal hyperthyroidism, fetal findings, women with h/o Graves not on meds
Role of TSI in pregnancy
- Controversy: role for measuring maternal TSI
o Pro (endocrine): peak at 28-30 weeks; fetal thyrotoxicosis more likely if TSI > 300% of control levels
o Cons (ACOG): no practical use; limited value (1% fetal risk of thyrotoxicosis)
o Possible indications: history of fetal hyperthyroidism, fetal findings, women with h/o Graves not on meds
Thyroid storm
- Thyroid Storm: life threatening
o May follow infection, surgery, PEC, delivery
o Thyroid hormone excess catecholamine release
o Diagnosis is CLINICAL: T4 level not helpful in diagnosis
Fever (>103F)
Tachycardia
Agitation (delirium, coma)
N/V, diarrhea dehydration
Congestive heart failure
Risks of untreated hypothyroidism
o Childhood intellectual impairment
Severe iodine deficiency severe MR (cretinism)
Milder disease impaired infant and childhool neurodevelopment
* Serum screening study: IQ decreased 7 points at age 7-9 vs controls
Causes of hypothyroidism
- Causes:
o Chronic autoimmune thyroiditis (Hashimoto)
#1 cause (present in 8-10% reproductive age women)
Painless goiter, thyroid peroxidase antibodies, thyroglobulin antibodies
o Result of therapy
I 131 ablation (frequency increases with time after therapy); thyroidectomy, medications
o Iodine deficiency (developing world); iron and antacids decrease iodine absorption
o Secondary hypothyroidism (rare) – hypothalamic/pituitary failure
Treatment of hypothyroidism
- Treatment:
o Synthroid 100-150 micro QD (increase by 25-50 increments)
o Goal: TSH < 2.5 mU/L (lower end of therapeautic range)
o Monitor TSH Q 6-8 weeks, then q trimester
o L thyroxine requirements increase in pregnancy
Return to prepregnancy dose postpartum
Do NOT take PNV at time of synthroid; iron limits uptake of thyroid hormone
Postpartum thyroiditis: incidence, symptoms, pathology
Postpartum Thyroiditis:
- Incidence: 10% of pp women (30% with Type I DM)
- Symptoms: depression, carelessness, memoray impairment
- Pathology: destructive lymphocytic thyroiditis
o Transient thyrotoxicosis (for 1-4 months; treat with MM/PTU), then hypothyroidism (4-8 mo pp; treat with l-thyroxine)
o 2/3 resolve by 12 months
- When TPO antibodies are found at 16 weeks; 50% will develop pp thyroiditis; 25% will develop permanent overt hypothyroidsm within 1 year