Thyroid + neck exam Flashcards
How is the thyroid located?
- butterfly shaped gland that covers the 2nd and 4rd tracheal rings
- palpate inferiorly from the midline of the chin until you feel a hard structure = thyroid notch
- inferior to this you can feel a dip (cricothyroid ligament) and then another hard structure (cricoid cartilage)
- below the cricoid are the 1st and 2nd laryngeal rings
- the normal thyroid is palpable in around 50% of females and 25% of males
- 50% of the population have an additional pyramidal lobe it the middle
Upon general inspection of the patient in a thyroid exam, what are you looking for?
- Body type:
- hyperthyroid: weight loss, muscle
- hypothyroid: weight gain - How they are dressed:
- hyperthyroid: heat intolerant, underdressed
- hypothyroid: cold intolerant, overdressed - How they are acting:
- hyperthyroid: anxious, restless
- hypothyroid: fatigue - also the standard are they comfortable/well at rest, any medication, anything of note etc etc
Upon inspection of the neck in a thyroid exam, what are you looking for?
- inspect the front + both sides - look at the contour of the neck
- look in the mouth (lingual thyroid)
- scars or any asymmetry?
- any obvious swelling? (goitre)
- ask patient to take a sip of water and swallow - does the thyroid move upwards on swallowing?
- if any identifiable swellings also move up, they are likely associated with the thyroid
How should you palpate the neck + thyroid?
- tell the patient what you are doing before you stand behind them
- ask them to relax their neck
- palpate with both fingertips one the lobes of the thyroid
- note any swellings, repeat the swallowing test and not any thrills (vibration from increased blood flow in thyrotoxicosis)
- if there is a midline mass, ask the patient to stick their tongue out –> a thyroglossal cyst will move
- is the trachea central?
- any lymphadenopathy?
If a lump is found, in what terms should it be described?
- size - measure
- shape
- surface - smooth/rough
- colour
- contours - regular/irregular. Plane of attachment
- consistency - firm, soft, fluctuant, rubbery, lobulated?
- temperature
- tenderness
- trans-illumination - if you shine a pen torch into the lump, what happens?
Compare how the hands would appear in a patient with hyper and hypothyroidism?
Hyperthyroid:
- Acropachy - similar to clubbing but affects the whole finger (Specific to Grave’s)
- Fine tremor
- Sweaty palms
- Pulse - tachycardic and irregular
Hypothyroidism:
- Dry hands
- Pulse - bradycardic and irregular
Compare how the face would appear in a patient with hyper and hypothyroidism?
Hyperthyroidism:
- Exophthalmos - anterior displacement of the eyes (specific to Grave’s disease)
- Lid lag - upper eyelid is more displaced than normal due to proptosis
Hypothyroidism:
- Coarsened facial features
- Dry hair
- Thinning of eyebrows
- Facial myxoedema (severe hypothyroidism - cutaneous oedema)
Compare how the upper + lower limbs would appear in a patient with hyper and hypothyroidism?
Hyperthyroidism:
- proximal myopathy - difficulty stand from chair, weakened flexion/extension against resistance
- brisk reflexes
- pretibial myxoedema (specific to Grave’s disease)
Hypothyroidism:
1. slowly relaxing reflexes
How does the chest appear in a patient with hypothyroidism?
- pleural effusion - dullness to percussion, absent breath sounds
- pericardial effusion - signs of tamponade if severe, e.g. raised JVP, distended neck veins