Disorders of thyroid function – Quick Reference
Məlumat kitabçası
03.01.2014 • Sonuncu dəyişiklik 03.01.2014
Editors
- This is a Quick Reference article. See also the main articles Examining a patient with thyroid complaint , Hypothyroidism and Hyperthyroidism .
Examination
- Symptoms
- In hypothyroidism: fatigue, constipation, feeling cold, slow heart rate, impaired memory
- In hyperthyroidism: sweating, feeling hot, fatigue, muscle weakness, deteriorating physical fitness, palpitations, tremor, diarrhoea, weight loss, thirst, irritability, sleeplessness
- History (medication, family)
- Palpation (the size and consistency of the thyroid gland, nodules, tenderness)
- Initial investigations serum TSH, free T4 (FT4)
- Additional investigations
- Free T3 (FT3) if hyperthyroidism is suspected (low TSH) but FT4 is normal
- Thyroid peroxidase (TPO) antibodies, if the diagnosis of autoimmune thyroiditis would assist the treatment assessment
Hypothyroidism
- TSH high, FT4 below reference range
- Subclinical: FT4 within reference range
- Permanent
- Primary (95%): autoimmune thyroiditis (TPO antibodies high), following surgery or radio-iodine therapy
- Central (5%): TSH normal or low, FT4 low
- Transient
- Subacute thyroiditis
- Drug induced (lithium, amiodarone)
- Thyroxine replacement therapy
- Usual maintenance dose 100 µg/day
- Starting dose in young patients 50–100 µg/day, in elderly and those with multiple diseases 25 µg/day
- Treatment is adjusted individually according to general health and laboratory values. Laboratory tests not to be repeated until 2 months after dose changes.
Hyperthyroidism
- TSH low, FT4 and/or FT3 above reference range
- Subclinical: TSH below reference range, FT4 and FT3 normal
Causes- Basedow's disease (Graves' disease; the most common, TSH receptor antibodies high, sometimes eye symptoms "?>)
- Multinodular goitre
- Adenoma
- Drugs: overdosage of thyroxine, iodine-containing substances
Treatment is started in primary health care with a beta-blocker or an antithyroid drug. The actual treatment strategy is decided on in specialised care- Long-term antithyroid therapy (small gland, eye symptoms; note the risk of agranulocytosis)
- Surgery (large gland, multinodular goitre; carried out in the euthyroid state; thyroidectomy leads to permanent hypothyroidism)
- Radioiodine (small gland, patient in good general health; may worsen eye symptoms, often leads to permanent hypothyroidism)
Symptomatic treatment with a beta blocker