Title: Thyroid Disorders
1Thyroid Disorders
- Hasan AYDIN, MD
- Yeditepe University Medical Faculty
- Department of Endocrinology and Metabolism
2Thyroid Regulation
TSH -R
3Thyroid Hormones
- THEY ARE NOT ESSENTIAL FOR LIFE, BUT ARE
EXTREMELY HELPFUL
4THYROID GLAND DISORDERS
- THYROID HORMONE EFFECTS
- Affects every single cell in the body
- Modulates
- Oxygen consumption
- Growth rate
- Maturation and cell differentiation
- Turnover of Vitamins, Hormones, Proteins, Fat,
CHO
5Thyroid Gland Disorders
- Overproduction of thyroid hormones
- Underproduction of thyroid hormones
- Thyroid nodules
- Thyroiditis
- Thyroid neoplasms
6Hyperthyroidism
7Thyroid Gland Disorders
- TSH High usually means Hypothyroidism
- Rare causes
- TSH-secreting pituitary tumor
- Thyroid hormone resistance
- Assay artifact
- TSH low usually indicates Thyrotoxicosis
- Other causes
- First trimester of pregnancy
- After treatment of hyperthyroidism
- Some medications (Steroids-dopamine)
8Thyroid Gland Disorders
- THYROTOXICOSIS
- is defined as the state of thyroid hormone
excesss -
- HYPERTHYROIDISM
- is the result of excessive thyroid gland function
9Abnormalities of Thyroid Hormones
- Thyrotoxicosis
- Primary
- Secondary
- Without Hyperthyroidism
- Exogenous or factitious
- Hypothyroidism
- Primary
- Secondary
- Peripheral
10Causes of Thyrotoxicosis
- Primary Hyperthyroidism
- Graves disease
- Toxic Multinodular Goiter
- Toxic adenoma
- Functioning thyroid carcinoma metastases
- Activating mutation of TSH receptor
- Struma ovary
- Drugs Iodine excess
11Causes of Thyrotoxicosis
- Thyrotoxicosis without hyperthyroidism
- Subacute thyroiditis
- Silent thyroiditis
- Other causes of thyroid destruction
- Amiodarone, radiation, infarction of an adenoma
- Exogenous/Factitia
- Secondary Hyperthyroidism
- TSH-secreting pituitary adenoma
- Thyroid hormone resistance syndrome
- Chorionic Gonadotropin-secreting tumor
- Gestational thyrotoxicosis
12Thyrotoxicosis
- Signs
- Tachycardia
- Atrial fibrillation
- Tremor
- Goiter
- Warm, moist skin
- Muscle weakness, myopathy
- Lid retraction or lag
- Gynecomastia
- Exophtalmus
- Pretibial myxedema
- Symptoms
- Hyperactivity
- Irritability
- Dysphoria
- Heat intolerance sweating
- Palpitations
- Fatigue weakness
- Weight loss with increased appetite
- Diarrhea
- Polyuria
- Sexual dysfunction
13Manifestations of Thyrotoxicosis
14Differential Diagnosis
- Panic attacks
- Psychosis
- Mania
- Pheochromocytoma
- Hypoglycemia
- Occult malignancy
15Treatment
- Reducing thyroid hormone synthesis
- Antithyroid drugs (Methimazole, Propylthyouracil)
- Radioiodine (131I)
- Subtotal thyroidectomy
- Reducing Thyroid hormone effects
- Propranolol
- Glucocorticoids
- Benzodiazepines
- Reducing peripheral conversion of T4 to T3
- Propylthyouracil
- Glucocorticoids
- Iodide (Large oral or IV dosage) (Wolf-Chaikoff
effect)
16Treatment Special Considerations
- Thyrotoxic crisis or Thyroid storm
- Its a life-threatening exacerbation of
thyrotoxicosis, acompanied by fever, delirium,
seizures, coma, vomiting, diarrhea, jaundice. - Mortality rate reachs 30 even with treatment
- Its usually precipitated by acute illness, such
as - Stroke, infection,trauma, diabetic ketoacidosis,
surgery, radioiodine treatment - Propylthyouracil IV or Nasogastric tube
- Radioiodine (131I)
- Propranolol
- Glucocorticoids
- Benzodiazepines
- Iodide (Large oral or IV dosage) (Wolf-Chaikoff
effect)
17HYPOTHYROIDISM
18Definition
- A deficiency of thyroid hormones, which in turn
results in a generalized slowing down of
metabolic processes. - In infants and children gt marked slowing of
growth and development, with serious permanent
consequences including mental retardation. - In adulthood gt a generalized slowing down of the
organism, with the clinical picture of myxedema.
19Causes of Hypothyroidism
- Primary
- Congenital
- Acquired
- Transient
- Secondary
- Pituitary
- Hypothalamic
20Hypothyroidism
- Symptoms
- Tiredness
- Weakness
- Dry skin
- Sexual dysfunction
- Hair loss
- Difficulty concentrating
- Signs
- Bradycardia
- Dry coarse skin
- Puffy face, hands and feet
- Diffuse alopecia
- Peripheral edema
- Delayed tendon reflex relaxation
- Carpal tunel syndrome
- Serous cavity effusions.
21Hypothyroidism
22Special Considerations
- Myxedema coma
- Reduced level of consciousness, seizures
- Hypotension/shock
- Hypothermia
- Hyponatremia
- Usually in elderly hypothyroid pts.
- Usually precipitated by intercurrent illnesses
that impairs ventilation - Its an Emergency with a high mortality rate
- Treatment Lyotironine(T3) or T4, Hydrocortisone,
external warming, IV fluids
23Many Causes, One Treatment
- Goal Normalize TSH level regardless of cause of
hypothyroidism - Treatment Once daily dosing with Levothyroxine
sodium (1.6 µg/kg/day) - Monitor TSH levels at 6 to 8 weeks, after
initiation of therapy or dosage change
24Treatment Special Considerations
- Elderly patients
- Coronary Artery Disease
- Poor adrenal gland reserve
- Childrens
- Pregnancy
- Emergency surgery (Non thyroid related)
25Goiter and Thyroid Cancer
26Definitions
Goiter is a diffuse or nodular enlargement of
the thyroid gland resulting from excessive
replication of benign thyroid epithelial cells.
A thyroid nodule is a discrete lesion within the
thyroid gland that is palpably and/or ultrasonog-
raphically distinct from the surrounding thyroid
parenchyma
27Etiology of Nontoxic Goiter
- Iodine deficiency
- Goitrogen in the diet
- Hashimoto's thyroiditis
- Subacute thyroiditis
- Inherited defect in thyroidal enzymes necessary
for T 4 and T 3 biosynthesis - Generalized resistance to thyroid hormone (rare)
- Neoplasm, benign or malignant
28Multinodular Goiter Clinical Issues
- Hyperthyroidism
- Suspicion of malignancy
- Compressive/obstructive symptoms
- Cosmetic concerns
29MULTINODULAR GOITERPresentation
- Asymptomatic
- Neck mass discovered by patient or physician
- Abnormal CXR
- Symptomatic
- Pressure symptoms
- Hoarseness
- Thyrotoxicosis
30NODULAR GOITERSuspicious Nodule or Goiter
- High suspicion
- Family history of medullary thyroid carcinoma
- Rapid tumor growth
- A nodule that is very firm or hard
- Fixation of the nodule to the adjacent structures
- Paralysis of the vocal cord
- Regional lymphadenopathy
- Distant metastasis
- Moderate suspicion
- Age of eitherlt20 or gt70 years
- Male sex
- History of head and neck irradiation
- A nodule gt4 cm in diameter or partially cystic
- Symptoms of compression, including dysphagia,
dysphonia, hoarseness, dyspnea, and cough
31Ultrasound
- Ultrasonographic Cancer Risk Factors for a
Thyroid Nodule - hypoechogenicity,
- microcalcifications,
- irregular margins,
- increased nodular flow visualized by Doppler,
- the evidence of invasion or regional
lymphadenopathy
32Multinodular Goiter Evaluation
- TSH
- FT4, T3
- Radionuclide Scan / RAIU
- US
- CT Scan (without contrast)
- FNA biopsy
33Multinodular Goiter Fine Needle Aspiration
Evaluation
- Biopsy all accessible nodule(s)
- Biopsy suspicious nodule(s) cold on scan firm by
palpation growing in size - Results less reliable in large goiters
- Most common diagnosis is colloid nodule
34Fine Needle Aspiration Evaluation
35FNA results
- Malignant- pt needs to have surgical management
- Benign- observation with interval ultrasounds and
clinical examinations - Indeterminate- radioisotope scan- perform
suppression scan and if cold proceed to surgical
management- if hot nodule consider observation - Non diagnostic- repeat FNA or U/S guided FNA
36Thyroid Cancers
37Benign Neoplasms of the Thyroid
- Thyroid adenoma is a benign neoplastic growth
contained within a capsule.
Embrional adenoma Fetal adenoma Microfollicular
adenoma Macrofollicular adenoma Papillary
cystadenoma Hurtle cell adenoma
38Thyroid Cancer
- Papillary (mixed papillary and follicular) 75
- Follicular carcinoma 16
- Medullary carcinoma 5
- Undifferentiated carcinomas 3
- Miscellaneous (lymphoma, fibrosarcoma, 1
squamous cell carcinoma, malignant
hemangioendothelioma, teratomas, and
metastatic carcinomas)
39Papillary Carcinoma
- very slowly grow and remain confined to the
thyroid gland and local lymph nodes for many
years. - In older patients, more aggressive and invade
locally into muscles and trachea. - in later stages, they can spread to the lung.
- Death is usually due to local disease, with
invasion of deep tissues in the neck less
commonly, death may be due to extensive pulmonary
metastases..
40Follicular Carcinoma
- is characterized by the presence of small
follicles, colloid formation is poor. - capsular or vascular invasion.
- more aggressive and local invasion of lymph nodes
or by blood vessel invasion with distant
metastases to bone or lung. - often retain the ability to concentrate
radioactive iodine, to form thyroglobulin, and,
rarely, to synthesize T3 and T4.
41Follicular Carcinoma
- rare ''functioning thyroid cancer'' is almost
always a follicular carcinoma. - more likely to respond to radioactive iodine
therapy. - In untreated patients, death is due to local
extension or to distant bloodstream metastasis
with extensive involvement of bone, lungs, and
viscera.
42Medullary Carcinoma
- a disease of the C cells (parafollicular cells)
derived - calcitonin, histamin, prostaglandins, serotonin,
other peptides - more aggressive , but not undifferentiated
thyroid cancer. - locally into lymph nodes and into surrounding
muscle and trachea. - lymphatics and blood vessels and metastasize to
lungs and viscera. - Calcitonin and CEA clinically useful markers for
diagnosis and follow-up.
43Medullary Carcinoma
- About 80 are sporadic
- the remainder are familial. four familial
patterns - without associated endocrine disease (FMTC)
- MEN 2a medullary carcinoma, pheochromocytoma, and
hyperparathyroidism - MEN 2B, medullary carcinoma, pheochromocytoma,
and multiple mucosal neuromas - MEN 3 with cutaneous lichen amyloidosis, a
pruritic skin lesion located on the upper back.
44Undifferentiated (Anaplastic) Carcinoma
- small cell, giant cell, and spindle cell
carcinomas. - usually occur in older patients with a long
history of goiter in whom the gland suddenly
-over weeks or months- begins to enlarge and
produce pressure symptoms, dysphagia, or vocal
cord paralysis. - Death from massive local extension usually occurs
within 6-36 months These tumors are very
resistant to therapy .
45Lymphoma
- only type of rapidly growing thyroid cancer that
is responsive to therapy - as part of a generalized lymphoma or may be
primary in the thyroid gland. - occasionally with long-standing Hashimoto's
thyroiditis - characterized by lymphocyte invasion of thyroid
follicles and blood vessel walls, which helps to
differentiate thyroid lymphoma from chronic
thyroiditis. - If there is no systemic involvement, the tumor
may respond dramatically to radiation therapy
46Cancer metastatic to the thyroid
- Cancers of the breast and kidney, bronchogenic
carcinoma, and malignant melanoma. - The primary site of involvement is usually
obvious, - Occasionally , the diagnosis is made by needle
biopsy or open biopsy of a rapidly enlarging cold
thyroid nodule. - The prognosis is that of the primary tumor,
47Management of Thyroid Cancer
- Papillary and Follicular Carcinoma
- Low-risk group under age 45 with primary lesions
under 1 cm and no evidence of intra- or
extraglandular spread. - For these patients, lobectomy is adequate therapy
- All other patients high-risk, and for these total
thyroidectomy and-if there is evidence of
lymphatic spread -a modified neck dissection are
indicated. - Prophylactic neck dissection is not necessary.
- For the high-risk group, postoperative
radioiodine ablation
48Management of Thyroid Cancer
- Follow-up at intervals of 6-12 months should
include careful examination of the neck for
recurrent masses. - If a lump is noted, needle biopsy is indicated to
confirm or rule out cancer. - Serum TSH should be checked
- Serum Tg should be lt 1 ng/ml .
49Thyroiditis
50Definition
- Infectious or autoimmune inflammatory
- diseases of thyroid gland
51Classification
- Hashimoto thyroiditis
- Subacute granulomatous thyroiditis
- Infectious thyroiditis
- Radiation Trauma induced thyroiditis
- Subacute Lymphocytic thyroiditis
- Postpartum thyroiditis
- Drug induced thyroiditis
- Riedels thyroiditis
52HASHIMOTOs THYROIDITIS Chronic Lymphocytic
Thyroiditis
- Is the most prevalent form of thyroid autoimmune
disease - (3-4 of popul.) and most common cause of
hypothyroidism - Is characterized by gradual thyroid failure,
goitre or both - Is more common in middle age
- Clusters in families
- May be associated with other autoimmune
disorders
Dr. Hakaru Hashimoto
53Subacute Granulomatous (de Quervains)
Thyroiditis
- Most frequent cause of thyroid pain and
tenderness - Postviral inflammatory process
- (Coxsackievirus, mumps, measles, adenovirus,
other) - Strongly associated with HLA-B35, most common in
40-50 years old women - Transient thyroiditis (thyrotoxic for 2-6 wks)
54Clinical Presentation
- Previous viral infection (in 1-3 weeks)
- Pain over thyroid,upper neck, jaw, throat,ears
- Hoarseness,dysphagia
- Fever, palpitation, nervousness, lassitude
- Tender, enlarged, firm and often nodular
55Treatment of DeQuervains Thyroiditis
- A nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drug
- Aspirin 2.4-3.6 g in divided doses
- Naproxen 1.0-1.5 g in divided doses
- Prednisone 30-40 mg qd
- A beta blocker
- Propranolol 40-120 mg
- Atenolol 25-50 mg
56Infectious Thyroiditis
- Acute (with abscess formation)
- Gram-positive or negative organisms (via blood or
a fistula from the piriform sinus adjacent to the
larynx) - Chronic
- Mycobacterial
- Fungal
- Pneumocystis
57Infectious Thyroiditis
- Acute
- Usually unilateral neck pain and tenderness
- Fever, chills, a unilateral neck mass (fluctuant)
- USG, FNAB, drainage and antibiotics
- Chronic
- Bilateral, less prominent neck pain
- Some patients have hypothyroidism
- FNAB
58Radiation and Trauma-Induced Thyroiditis
- Radiation Thyroiditis
- Radioiodine treatment of Graves disease
- Develops 5-10 days later and is mild
- Trauma-induced Thyroiditis
- Palpation, thyroid biopsy, surgery, car seat belt
59Subacute Lymphocytic Thyroiditis(Painless,
Silent, Lymphocytic)
- A variant form of Hashimotos thyroiditis
- Associated with HLA-DR3
- Postulated initiating factors
- Excess iodine intake
- Various cytokines
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61Treatment of Subacute Lymphocytic
Thyroiditis
- Most patients need no treatment
- Symptomatic treatment during the hyperthyroid
phase propranolol or atenolol - T4 ( 50-100 µg daily) given for 8-12 wks,
discontinued and reevaluated 4-6 wks later
62Postpartum Thyroiditis
- Occurs in 3-16 of pregnancies (25 in T1DM)
- Is seen within 1 year after parturition
- Is likely to recur after subsequent pregnancies
- Thyrotoxicosis is mild and transient
- Antithyroid antibodies are elevated
- RAIU is low
- Slightly increased ESR
63Presentation of Postpartum Thyroiditis
- Transient hyperthyroidism (2-8 wks) followed by
hypothyroidism (2-8 wks) and then recovery
20-30 - Transient hyperthyroidism alone 20-40
- Transient hypothyroidism alone 40-50
64Drug-Induced Thyroiditis
- Interferon-alpha thyroiditis
- Interleukin-2 thyroiditis
- Amiodarone
65Riedels Thyroditis
- Is a fibrotic process associated with a
mononuclear cell inflammation that extends beyond
the thyroid into soft tissue - Can involve the parathyroids, the recurrent
laryngeal nerve, trachea, mediastinum, ant. chest
wall - Fibrosclerosis may involve the retroperitoneal
space, mediastinum, retroorbital space, the
biliary tract
66Treatment of Riedels Thyroiditis
- Thyroxine
- Surgery
- Glucocorticoids
- Tamoxifen
- Methylprednisone pulse therapy azathioprine or
penicillamine
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