Thyroid Disease - Dorridge Surgery
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Transcript Thyroid Disease - Dorridge Surgery
Thyroid Disease
Dr Andrew S Bates
Heart of England Foundation Trust
Outline
What and where is it?
What does it do?
How is it controlled?
What can go wrong with it?
Functional disorders
Hyper- and Hypothyroidism
Goitre, nodules and tumours
The normal thyroid
What does the thyroid do?
Secretes thyroid hormones (T4 and T3)
Control basal metabolic rate
Burn fat
Increase heart rate
Increase bone turnover
Thyroid Physiology
Heavily dependent on iodine
Iodination of thyroglobulin resulting in
formation of mono- and di-iodotyrosines
Iodotyrosines combine to form T4 (100%)
and T3 (20%) - released into circulation
80% of T3 is formed outside the thyroid
Deiodinases play important role in thyroid
metabolism
How is it controlled?
What do we measure?
TSH-most important
Low or ‘turned off’ if overactive
High if underactive
FT4 and FT3
Occasionally useful in addition to TSH
Thyroid antibodies
Non-diagnostic but useful as a pointer to
autoimmune thyroid disease
What can go wrong?
Overactive
Underactive
High free T4 low or suppressed TSH
Low free T4 and high TSH
Thyroid growths
Goitre, nodules, cancer
Overactive thyroid
Thyroid Hormone Excess
Clinical Features
General
Cardiovascular
Tachycardia, heart failure.
Gastrointestinal
Heat intolerance, fatigue, tremor.
Weight loss, diarrhoea
Ophthalmological
Lid lag, ophthalmopathy
Thyroid Hormone Excess
Clinical Features
Genitourinary
Neuromuscular
Proximal muscle weakness, HPP, MG
Psychiatric
Amenorrhea, infertility.
Irritability, agitation, anxiety, psychosis
Dermatological
Pruritus, hair thinning, onycholysis, vitiligo.
Causes of Thyroid Hormone
Excess
Increased iodine uptake
Graves
Toxic Multinodular Goitre
Toxic solitary adenoma
Causes of Thyroid Hormone
Excess
Reduced iodine uptake
Thyroiditis
Iodine induced (Amiodarone)
Factitious
Increased iodine uptake
Selective iodine uptake
No iodine uptake
Graves Disease
Most common cause in UK
Diffuse Goitre
Hyperthyroidism
Ophthalmopathy
Dermopathy
Autoimmune.
Toxic Multinodular Goitre
Older
Usually less severe hyperthyroidism
May have subclinical
hyperthyroidism(normal thyroid
hormones, low TSH)
May have long history of goitre
Toxic Solitary Adenoma
Rare cause (< 2% of patients with
hyperthyroidism)
Younger people 30’s and 40’s
Isotope scan useful
Benign follicular adenomas
Thyroiditis
Painful (subacute, de Quervain’s)
Painless (post partum)
Hyperthyroid, hypothyroid and
euthyroid phases
Anti thyroid drug therapy does not work
Treatment of hyperthyroidism
Antithyroid drugs
Carbimazole 10 mg tid
Reduce to maintenance after 4 weeks
Rash, GI, agranulocytosis
Graves – withdraw drugs after course of
treatment
Treatment of hyperthyroidism
Radio-iodine
Inflammatory response followed by fibrosis
May be used for Graves, TMG or TA
? Need for drug treatment before and after
May need retreatment
Long term risk of hypothyroidism
Treatment of Hyperthyroidism
Surgery
Rarely used nowadays
Need to be rendered euthyroid before
surgery
Lugol’s iodine 0.1-0.3 mls tid for 10 days
before surgery
Graves Eye Disease
Onset relative to hyperthyroidism is
variable.
Pain, watering, photophobia, blurred
vision, double vision
Usually mild – Tx, protective glasses,
elevate head of bed, conjunctival
lubricants
Graves Eye Disease
High dose steroids
External radiotherapy
Orbital decompression
Thyroid Eye Disease
Hypothyroidism
Autoimmune
Hashimoto’s
Iatrogenic
Congenital
Hypopituitarism
Treatment
Thyroxine – variable doses.
Aim to normalize TSH
In patients with heart disease start with
lower dose e.g. 25ug once daily.
Multinodular Goitre
Simple non-toxic goitre
Normal TFT’s
No treatment required
Surgery if obstructive symptoms
Nodular Thyroid Disease
Prevalence 5-50%
Depending on age and methods used
Clinically apparent nodules in 4-7% UK
population
Four times more common in women
<5% are cancerous
Factors Favouring Benign
Disease
Age
Family history of benign thyroid nodule
Presence of hyperthyroidism
Associated pain or tenderness
Soft, smooth, mobile nodule
Multinodular goitre without a dominant
nodule
Management
Clinical history and examination
Thyroid function tests
Ultrasound
Fine Needle Aspiration
Surgery
Conclusion
A small but very important gland with
many vital functions
Commonly develops faults, but
fortunately most are easily sorted out