Title: THE THYROID GLAND
1THE THYROID GLAND
2THE THYROID GLAND
- The thyroid secretes primarily
- Thyroxine / T4 /
- T4 is probably not metabolically active until
converted to T3 - (T4 prohormone)
- 85 of T3 is produced by monodeiodination of T4
3THE THYROID GLAND
- T3 and T4 circulate in plasma are almost entirely
(gt99,9) bound to transport proteins - (mainly TBG, less TBPA and albumins)
- Only free hormones exert its metabolic action
- ?
- It is better to measure the concentration in
plasma FT3 or FT4
4Patterns of thyroid function test results in
patients with hyperthyroidism
- Conventional hyperthyroidism
- (95 of cases)
- FT4 ? FT3 ? TSH ? or undetectable
- T3-hyperthyroidism
- (5 of cases)
- FT4 ? FT3 ? TSH ? or undetectable
- Subclinical hyperthyroidism
- FT4 ? FT3? TSH ? or undetectable
- NEGATIVE FEEDBACK
5Not-thyroidal illness (e.g. myocardial
infarction or pneumonia)
- Decreased peripherial conversion of T4 to T3.
- Alterations in the binding proteins.
- Alterations in the affinity of binding proteins
for thyroid hormones. - ?TSH levels as a results of the illness itself or
the use of drugs (e.g. dopamine or
corticosteroids). - ?TSH into the hypothyroid range during
convalescence.
6THYROTOXICOSIS ? Hypermetabolic state caused by
thyroid hormone excess at the tissue level
HYPERTHYROIDISM?Increased thyroid hormones
synthesis and secretion
All patients with hyperthyroidism have
thyreotoxicosis Not all patients with
thyreotoxicosis are hyperthyroid
7AETIOLOGY
PREVALENCE
Females 20/1000
Males 4/1000
- It is important to identify the cause of
hyperthyroidism in order to prescribe appropriate
treatment
8Causes of thyrotoxicosiscommon types
- With low RAIU
- Thyroiditis
- subacute (3)
- silent (painless)
- post-partum
- Iodine-induced thyrotoxicosis
- drugs (e.g. amiodarone)
- radiografic contrast media
- iodine prophylaxis programme
- With high RAIU
- Graves diseases (60-90)
- Multinodular goitre (14)
- Autonomously functioning solitary thyroid nodule
(5) - Iodine-induced thyrotoxicosis
9Causes of thyrotoxicosisuncommon types
- With high RAIU
- Congenital hyperthyroidism
- TSH-induced hyperthyroidism
- TSH-secreting adenoma
- selective pituitary resistance to thyroid hormone
- Trophoblastic tumors
- With low RAIU
- Thyrotoxicosis facticia (0.2)
- Metastatic thyroid carcinoma (0.1)
- Struma ovarii
10CLINICAL FEATURES OF HYPERTHYROIDISM
- Most signs and symptoms are common to all types
of thyreotoxicosis - Some of them are specific to defined disease
- for example
ophthalmopathy pretibial myxoedema thyroid
acropathy
thyroid pain tendernees
Graves disease
subacute thyroiditis
11CLINICAL FEATURES OF HYPERTHYROIDISM(according
to frequency)
- SYMPTOMS
- Nervousness
- Palptations
- Increased sweating
- Haet intolerance
- Fatigue
- Weight loss
- Dyspnea
- Increased appetite
- Eye symptoms
- Friable hair and nails
- Increased bowel movements
- Diarrhoea
- Menstrual disturbances
- SIGNS
- Tachycardia
- Goitre
- Tremors
- Skin changes
- Hyperkinesis
- Thyroid bruit
- Lid lag and retraction
- Ophthalmopathy
- Atrial fibrillation
- Onycholisis
- Localized (pretibial) myxedema
- Vitiligo
- Acropathy
12GRAVES DISEASEthe most frequent cause of
hyperthyroidism
- Graves disease is an autoimmune thyroid disease,
characterized by diffuse thyroid enlargement,
ophtalmopathy and less frequently dermopathy
(pretibial myxedema) and acropathy. - It can occur at any age
- (unusual before puberty and most commonly affects
the 30-50- years-old age group) - the female/ male ratio ? 7 1
13Graves disease - pathogenesis
- Thyroid antigen-specific T lymphocytes
- Humoral and cell-mediated immune reactions
- Infiltration of the thyroid gland by immune
effector cells
14Graves disease - pathogenesis
- Genetic and environmental factors
- ?
- Production of IgG antibodies
- (thyroid-stimulating immunoglobulins TSI
- or TSH-receptor antibodies TRAb)
- ?
- Stimulation thyroid hormone production and goitre
formation
15Graves disease - pathogenesis
- Genetic factors
- The familial predisposition.
- The frequent finding of circulating
autoantibodies in relatives of Graves patients. - The high concordance rate in monozygotic twins.
- The positive association with haplotypes HLA-B8
and DR3 (Caucasians), HLA-B35 (Japonese
population), and HLA-Bw46 (Chinese population). - Female sex hormones.
16Graves disease - pathogenesis
- Environmental factors
- Iodine
- ?
- Immune-stimulant effect
- (in areas of iodine defficiency thyroid
autoimmune diseases are rare). - Cigarettes
- (assotiation with Graves ophtalmopathy
?influence on immune-competent cells?).
17Graves disease - pathogenesis
- Environmental factors
- Escherichia coli and Yersinia enterocolitica
- (antibodies to these microbial antigens
- ?
- cross-reaction with the TSH-receptor
- ?
- hyperthyroidism.
- Stress
- (relationship between the onset of
hyperthyroidism - and a major life event).
18Graves disease - pathogenesis
- Ophtalmopathy and dermopathy
- Pathogenesis is less well understood.
- Immunologically mediated but TRAb is not
implicated. - Proliferation of fibroblasts (adipocytes?) within
the orbit - ?
- Increased interstitial fluid content
- Chronic inflammatory cel infiltrate
- ?
- Swelling of the extra-ocular muscles
- Rise in retrobulbar pressure
19Graves disease - clinical findings
- THYROID GLAND
- Symmetrically enlarged
- Firm
- Thrills and bruits
- Goiter is absent in 3 of causes
20Graves disease clinical findings
- LOCALIZED MYXEDEMA
- Pretibial region
- Raised, light colored or yellow-reddish lesion
with orange peel apperance - Sometimes pruritus
21Graves disease clinical findings
- THYROID ACROPATHY
- Swelling and soft tissues of hands feet
- Clubbing of fingers and toes
22True ophtalmopathy is specific of Graves disease
- Soft tissue involvement
- Lacrimation ? Redness
- Burning sensation ? Photophobia
- Gritty sensation
- Proptosis (exophtalmos) and lagophthalmos
- keratitis
- Extra-ocular muscle dysfunction
- diplopia
- Optic neuropathy
- blidness
23Cardiovascular system
- Tachycardia
- Palpitations
- Blood pressure
- systolic? diastolic?
- THYROCARDIAC SYNDROME
- Premature heart beats
- Atrial fibrillation
- Heart failure and/or angina
24Alimentary system
- Increased appetite
- but weight loss
- Increased frequency of bowel movements and
diarrhea - Rarely ?liver dysfunction
25Nervous system
- Nervousness
- Anxiety
- Emotional instability
- Hyperactivity
- Insomnia
- Fine tremors
Muscles
- Muscular weakness
- In most severe cases ?muscular atrophy
26Skeletal system
osteoporosis
Increased loss of bone
Thyrotoxicosis
Metabolism
- Increased oxygen consumption
- Diabetes mellitus may be exacerbated
- Serum cholesterol ? plasma triglycerides?
27GRAVES DISEASE DIAGNOSTIC PROCEDURES
- Labolatory investigation
- ?
- important particularly in the absence of goitre
and eye disease
- Imaging studies
- ?
- Important particularly in diagnostic of Graves
ophtalmophathy - ?
- Computed tommography
- Magnetic resonance
28LABORATORY INVESTIGNATION
- Hyperthyroidism
- Serum concentrations of
- TSH undetectable or ?
- FT4 ?
- FT3 ?
- T3-toxicosis
- TSH undetectable or ?
- FT3 ?
- FT4 ?
- Graves disease
- TRAb ? ?
- TPO ?
- ATG ?
29Imaging studies
- 24-hour thyroidal radioactive iodine uptake
- increased
- thyroid scan ?diffuse, homogenous goitre
- Thyroid ultrasound
- enlarged gland
- hypoechoic pattern
- increased blood flow
- Computed tomography and magnetic resonance
30GRAVES DISEASE TREATMENT
- General principles of treatment
RADIOIODINE
Treatments available for Graves disease
SURGICAL
MEDICAL
Most treatment regiments are directed at the
thyroid, but there is a small place for
peripherally acting drugs such as propranolol and
ipodate.
31GRAVES DISEASE TREATMENT
Indications for medical treatment
- Patient preference
- Small goitre
- Mild disease
- Other diseases
- Children
- Pregnancy
- Ophtalmopathy
- Preoperative
- Pre-radioiodine
- Thyrotoxic crisis
- Relapse after thyroidectomy
32ANTITHYROID DRUGS
- THIONAMIDES
- Methimazole, Carbimazole, Propylthiouracil
- Mechanism of actions
- Inhibition of thyroid hormone synthesis and
secretion - PTU?inhibition of peripheral conversion of T4 to
T3
33THIONAMIDES
- Goal
- Permanent remission of hyperthyroidism
- Limitations
- High recurrence rate of hyperthyroidism
- Possible side effects
34Factors that may influance antithyroid drug
therapyassociated with remission
- Clinical
- Small goitre
- Mild disease
- Rapid responce to antithyroid drugs
- Small maintenance dose
- Female sex
- Low iodine intake
- Laboratory
- Modest elevation of thyroid hormones
- Low urinary iodine excretion
- Low or absent TSH-R9s) antibodies at end of
therapy - Normal responce to TRH at end of therapy
- Normal suppression of thyroidal radioiodine
uptake at end of therapy
35Factors that may influance antithyroid drug
therapyassociated with relapse
- Clinical
- Large goitre
- Vascular goitre
- Severe disease
- Slow responce to antithyroid drugs
- Large maintenance dose
- Male sex
- High iodine intake
- Laboratory
- Major elevation of thyroid hormones
- High urinary iodine excretion
- Raised TSH-R(s) antibodies at end of therapy
- Absent responce to TRH at end of therapy
- Impaired or absent suppression of thyroidal
radioiodine uptake at end of therapy
36THIONAMIDES
- Side effects
- (overall frequency lt5)
- Mild leukopenia (12 25)
- Agranulocytosis (0.1 0.5)
- Aplastic anemia
- Thrombocytopenia
- Cholestasis
- Hepatocellular necrosis
- Lupus-like syndrome
- Nephrotic syndrome
- Nausea
- Vomiting
- Pruritis
- Skin rash
- Urticaria
- Loss of taste
37GRAVES DISEASE TREATMENT
Indications for surgical treatment
- Experienced thyroid surgeon avaliable
- Patient preference
- Adults up to 40 years
- Severe disease
- Nodular goitre
- Large goitre
- Relapse after drug treatment
38SURGICAL TREATMENT?PARTIAL THYROIDECTOMY
- Mechanism of action
- ?
- removal of tissue responsible for excessive
thyroid hormone synthesis
39PARTIAL THYROIDECTOMY
- Goal
- ?
- thyroid ablation, i.e. hypothyroidism
- Contraindications
- ?
- systemic contraindications to surgery
40PARTIAL THYROIDECTOMY- COMPLICATIONS
- EARLY
- Recurrent laryngeal nerve palsy
- Superior laryngeal nerve palsy
- Haemorrhage
- Hypoparathyroidism
- Pneumothorax
- Thyroid crisis
- Damage to thoracic drug
- Damage to carotic artery
- Damage to jugular vein
- LATE
- Cheloid scar
- Tethered scar
- Hypothyroidism
- Recurrence of hyperthyroidism
- Recurrent upper pole nodules
41GRAVES DISEASE TREATMENT
Indications for radioiodine therapy
- Patient preference
- Poor-compliance with antithyroid drugs
- Patients over 40 years
- Recurrence after thyroidectomy
- Severe uncontrolled disease
- Large goitre
- Unco-operative patients
- Presence of other disease(s)
42RADIOIODINE THERAPY
- Mechanism of action
- ?
- Destruction of thyrocytes by ß-radiation
- Goal
- ?
- thyroid ablation, i.e. hypothyroidism
- Contraindications
- ?
- pregnancy
43RADIOIODINE THERAPY
- Complcations
- Permanent hypothyroidism
- Transient hypothyroidism
- Thyroiditis
- Sialadenitis
- Thyrotoxic crisis
- Nodule formation
- Possible exacerbation of ophtalmopathy
- (preventable by glucocorticoids)
44GRAVES DISEASE TREATMENT
Other drugs
- ?-adrenergic antagonists
- (e.g. Propranolol)
- Inorganic iodide
- Potassium perchlorate
- Glucocorticoids
45GRAVES DISEASE TREATMENT OF OPHTHALMOPATHY
- Mild ophthalmopathy
- Guanethidine or ß-adrenergic eye drops
- (lid retraction)
- Methylcellulose eye drops
- (lacrimation, burning sensation)
- Sunglasses
- (photophobia)
- Nighttime tapering of eyes
- (lagophthalmos)
- Prisms
- (mild diplopia)
46- Severe ophthalmopathy
- High-dose glucocorticoids
- (active ophthalmopathy)
- Orbital radiotherapy
- (active ophthalmopathy)
- Orbital decompresion
- (active or inactive ophthalmopathy)
- Rehabilitative surgery eye muscles, eyelids
- (to be performed at least 6 months after
rendering ophthalmopathy stable and inactive with
other treatments) - Immunosuppressive drugs, somatostatin analogues,
intravenous immunoglobulins, plasmapheresis.
47THYROTOXIC STORM
- RARE BUT VERY SERIOUS COMPLICATION OF
HYPERTHYROIDISM - Severe manifestations of hypermetabolic
- (fever, profound sweating, dehydration,
restlessness, insomnia) - In patients with not diagnosed or inadeguately
treated hyperthyroidism
INFECTIONS
SURGERY
THYROTOXIC STORM
TRAUMAS
48THYROTOXIC STORM - TREATMENT
- The treatmnent of underlying non-thyroidal
illness - Correction of dehydration
- Normalisation of body temperature
- Plasmapheresis or peritoneal dialysis
- High doses of thionamide
- Iodide or iodinated contrast agents
- Glucocorticoids
- ß-adrenergic antagonists
49TOXIC ADENOMA
- An autonomously functioning, benign thyroid
nodule causing thyrotoxicosis
gt10
Iodine-deficient areas
FREQUECY
Iodine-sufficient areas
10
50TOXIC ADENOMA
Solitary nodule in
otherwise normal thyroid gland
goiter
Pathogenesis Somatic mutations in the gene
encoding the TSH receptor ? constitutive
activation of TSH receptor
51TOXIC ADENOMA
- Smptoms and signs of thyrotoxicosis
- Ophthalmopathy, localized myxedema and acropachy
are absent - Thyroid scan
- ?
- Prevalent tracer uptake in the nodule
- (hot nodule)
- Treatment
- Radioiodine or surgery
- Antithyroid drugs only for preparation of
definitive treatment
52TOXIC MULTINODULAR GOITER
- Multiple hyperfunctioning thyroid nodules
- or areas of autonomously functioning thyroid
follicles - Commonly found in older patients with
long-standing multinodular goiter.
53UNUSUAL FORMS OF THYROTOXICOSIS
TSH-INDUCED HYPERTHYROIDISM
- TSH-secreting pituitary adenoma
- (280 cases so far described)
- TSH ? or ? FT4 ? FT3 ?
- TSH a-subunit ?
- TSH a-subunit / TSHgt1
- Selective pituitary resistence
- TSH ? or ? FT4 ? FT3 ?
- TSH a-subunit ?
- TSH a-subunit / TSHlt1
54UNUSUAL FORMS OF THYROTOXICOSIS
- Thyrotoxicosis factitia
- Clinical and biochemical picture is typical of
thyrotoxicosis - Goiter is absent
- RAIU is very low/suppressed
- Serum thyroglobulin very low or undetectable
- Congenital hyperthyroidism
- Germline mutations of the TSH-R gene
- ?
- Constitutional activation in all thyroid
follicular cells
55UNUSUAL FORMS OF THYROTOXICOSIS
- Metastatic thyroid carcinoma
- Follicular thyroid arcinoma
- ?
- Metastases to lung and bone
- ?
- Thyrotoxicosis (rarely)
- Struma ovarii
- Functioning thyroid tissue within an ovarian
teratoma or dermoid
56UNUSUAL FORMS OF THYROTOXICOSIS
- Trophoblastic tumors
- High serum and urine concentrations
- of ß-subunit of chorionic gonadotropin
- ?
- stimulation of TSH receptor