Thyroid Flashcards

(46 cards)

1
Q

Preferred routine lab pair to assess thyroid status?

A

TSH and free T4.

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2
Q

Primary vs secondary vs tertiary thyroid dysfunction?

A

Primary: thyroid gland; Secondary: pituitary; Tertiary: hypothalamus.

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3
Q

Name key metabolic effects of thyroid hormones.

A

↑ Basal metabolic rate, protein synthesis, mitochondria, ATP, Na/K+ pump activity.

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4
Q

Systems affected by thyroid hormones?

A

Cardiac output, respiration, GI motility, sleep, mood/cognition, muscle tone, weight, sexual/menstrual function.

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5
Q

Most common cause of hypothyroidism in iodine‑sufficient regions?

A

Hashimoto’s thyroiditis (autoimmune).

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6
Q

Medications that can cause or affect hypothyroidism?

A

Lithium, amiodarone, thioamides; interferon; iodine excess.

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7
Q

Pathology hallmark of Hashimoto’s?

A

Autoimmune lymphocytic infiltration; anti‑TPO and antithyroglobulin antibodies common.

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8
Q

Compensatory change when T4 is low?

A

Goiter from ↑ TSH; increased peripheral conversion of T4→T3.

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9
Q

Metabolic downstream effects of hypothyroidism?

A

↓ Metabolic rate; ↑ total & LDL cholesterol; ↑ triglycerides; slowed GI transit.

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10
Q

Fluid change in long‑standing hypothyroidism?

A

Myxedema (hydrophilic proteoglycan accumulation).

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11
Q

Classic hypothyroid symptoms (subjective)?

A

Fatigue, dry skin, weight gain, cold intolerance, constipation, heavy menses.

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12
Q

Objective signs in hypothyroidism?

A

Bradycardia, periorbital edema, dry thick skin, brittle nails, slow/hoarse speech, diastolic HTN.

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13
Q

Hypothyroidism in older adults—presentation?

A

Often atypical or muted; cold intolerance, fatigue, cognitive decline, and depression. may be asymptomatic; lab testing necessary.

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14
Q

When should older adults be screened for thyroid disease?

A

With decline in clinical/cognitive/functional status; at nursing home admission.

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15
Q

Lab pattern in primary hypothyroidism?

A

↑ TSH, ↓ free T4.

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16
Q

Lab pattern in central (secondary/tertiary) hypothyroidism?

A

Low/normal/mildly ↑ TSH with ↓ free T4; low T3.

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17
Q

Define subclinical hypothyroidism (labs).

A

Mildly ↑ TSH with normal free T4.

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18
Q

Medications that affect TSH measurement?

A

Metoclopramide ↑TSH; dopamine, glucocorticoids, NSAIDs, somatostatin ↓TSH.

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19
Q

Other agents altering thyroid tests?

A

Dilantin, amiodarone, lithium; nicotine can affect TFTs.

20
Q

Initial dosing strategy for levothyroxine?

A

Start low (e.g., 12.5–25–50 mcg/day) and titrate q6–8 weeks; mean full replacement ~1.6 mcg/kg/day.

21
Q

Special dosing caution in severe cardiac disease?

A

Begin even lower (e.g., 12.5 mcg/day).

22
Q

Time to steady state after dose change?

A

6–8 weeks; recheck TSH no sooner.

23
Q

Pregnancy and levothyroxine dosing?

A

Increase dose ~30% when pregnancy confirmed; follow free T4; revert postpartum and recheck TSH at ~8 weeks.

24
Q

Untreated hypothyroidism in pregnancy risks?

A

Maternal HTN, preeclampsia, anemia, PPH (post partum hemorrhage), cardiac issues; fetal loss, low birth weight.

25
Subclinical hypothyroidism—when to treat?
Consider if +antibodies, CAD/HF, or symptoms; older adults often observe unless TSH persistently >10 mIU/L.
26
Most common cause of hyperthyroidism?
Graves disease (autoimmune TSH‑receptor antibodies).
27
Other causes of hyperthyroidism?
Toxic multinodular goiter, toxic adenoma, subacute thyroiditis, excess thyroid hormone ingestion, iodine excess, rare TSH‑secreting pituitary tumor.
28
Younger vs older presentation differences in Hyperthyroid?
Younger: tremor/anxiety; Older: more CV symptoms (AF, dyspnea), weight loss; 'apathetic' hyperthyroidism possible.
29
Graves ophthalmopathy features?
Periorbital edema, conjunctival injection, proptosis, lid lag, diplopia.
30
Subacute (de Quervain) thyroiditis hallmark?
Acute painful, firm thyroid after viral illness. Pain may radiate to the jaw, upper chest, neck and throat. Presents with systemic flu-like systems, markedly elevated ESR and CRP; release of preformed hormone; low radioiodine uptake. Acute hyperthyroid
31
Medications that alter thyroid binding/tests?
Anabolic steroids, estrogens, heparin, iodine compounds, phenytoin, rifampin, salicylates.
32
Symptom control for tremor/palpitations associated with hyperthyroid?
Beta‑blockers (avoid in COPD/bronchospasm/HF; consider CCB).
33
First‑line treatment for Hyperthyroid in many US adults?
I‑131 ablation → hypothyroid → lifelong levothyroxine. CAN be first line, but antithyroid drugs (methimazole or propylthiouracil), or thyroidectomy are also common.
34
Which antithyroid drug preferred in pregnancy?
PTU- Propylthiouracil (crosses placenta; dose can often be reduced/ceased before delivery) BUT associated with less birth defects than MMI- Methimazole
35
Subacute thyroiditis treatment?
Beta‑blockers and NSAIDs; corticosteroids if moderate‑severe or refractory.
36
Thyroid storm—what to do?
Medical emergency; inpatient management per protocols (slides refer to text).
37
Thyroid storm—symptoms?
High fever (>103), confusion/delirium/psychosis, extreme agitation/restlessness, profuse diaphoresis, severe weakness
38
Why does amiodarone affect thyroid?
37% iodine by weight; alters synthesis/metabolism.
39
Is RAI (radioactive iodine) useful in amiodarone hyperthyroidism?
Not typically (low uptake).
40
When to order thyroid ultrasonography?
Hx radiation, MEN2, FH of thyroid cancer; unexplained lymphadenopathy; select nodules for biopsy; guide FNA; incidental nodules on CT/MRI/PET.
41
How are functioning nodules usually classified?
Hot (functioning) and rarely malignant.
42
What does a nonfunctioning ('cold') nodule imply?
Needs FNA to exclude malignancy.
43
General size threshold for nodule evaluation?
>1 cm typically requires evaluation for malignancy.
44
Most common thyroid cancer type?
Papillary (~60%).
45
Major risk factor for thyroid cancer?
Ionizing radiation (head/neck).
46
Key complication post‑thyroidectomy?
Hypocalcemia from parathyroid removal/damage.