- hyperthyrodism



Hyperthyroidism
 

 

Hyperthyroidism
Violent cat attacks, draws blood 
Miami Herald - Apr 01 12:16 AM
Q: About two years ago, our dog brought home an unweaned, 4-day-old kitten whose mother probably dropped him while transporting him to another location. We took the newborn kitten in and raised him. However, he has become a problem. Teddy is very aggressive and attacks us without any provocation. His attacks are fierce and often draw blood (at least once requiring medical attention). Our ...

Hypocalcemia
Staff Writer 
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On the heels of a new warning label for its erythropoietin drugs Aranesp and Epogen, shares of Amgen Inc. dipped a little lower on more bad news.

Hypochondroplasia
Disability no drawback for student 
East Valley Tribune - Mar 12 3:49 AM
Those who know Ryan Shea say it's in his nature to help others and work hard. The Chandler 20-year-old's bedroom walls display awards and plaques. His Boy Scout badges and uniform are laid out in one corner, next to his Eagle Scout award. And airplane posters cover the walls.

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Treatment with insulin revolutionized the life of individuals with diabetes. However, because insulin acts to lower blood glucose levels, it can cause hypoglycemia (low levels of glucose in the blood), which, if prolonged, can lead to brain injury and coma.

Hypogonadism
Indevus Pharmaceuticals to seek approval for testosterone therapy 
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Indevus Pharmaceuticals plans to ask federal regulators by this summer to approve a new treatment for male hypogonadism, backed up by an interim review of late-stage clinical trial data.

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Title: Zelnorm Has Serious Side Effects Alert Category: Health News Created: 4/29/2004 Last Editorial Review: 4/2/2007

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PARSIPPANY, N.J., March 14 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- NPS Pharmaceuticals, Inc.

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Hypothalamic dysfunction
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BOSTON, May 1 (UPI) -- Research shows that about 43 percent of all U.S. women between the ages of 18 and 59 suffer from female sexual dysfunction. As many as two-thirds of those may have low androgen levels, according to Dr. Andre Guay, an endocrinologist at Harvard Medical School.

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Hypothyroidism
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WASHINGTON Even a slightly underactive thyroid too mild for symptoms during pregnancy might trigger premature birth and babies born with lower IQs. But doctors don't know if treating a symptom-free mother would help.

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Scientists have linked the delivery of nutrients and streamflow to the formation and extent of a "hypoxic zone" - a zone of waters with low dissolved oxygen that forms each summer in the northern Gulf along the Louisiana-Texas coast. The resulting lack of oxygen can cause stress or death in bottom-dwelling organisms that cannot escape to more oxygen-rich areas of the Gulf.

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LEXINGTON, Mass.----April 19, 2006--Cubist Pharmaceuticals, Inc. today reported results for the first quarter ended March 31, 2006. CUBICIN continued to show strong revenue growth with $37.9 million of net product revenues for the first quarter of 2006 , compared to $20.9 million for the first quarter of 2005, a 79% increase year-over-year, excluding international product sales.


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If something doesn't feel right, persist in finding out the reason. My name is Cindy Burdick. I am 54 years old and I am a two-year survivor. I was diagnosed on April 7, 2004, with inflammatory breast cancer. Only 1 percent of women who develop breast cancer have this type. I didn't have a lump.

Influenza
The Scary Truth About Influenza 
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The Flu Kills More Than 36,000 People Each Year -- Here's How to Protect Yourself

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DURECT Corporation , an emerging specialty pharmaceuticals company, provided an update on its post-operative pain relief depot, SABER-Bupivacaine program. DURECT announced results from its Phase II Australian clinical study in hernia patients and the initiation of dosing in the first U.S. clinical trial, a Phase II, placebo-controlled trial in hernia patients.

Interstitial cystitis
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DUBLIN, Ireland----May 9, 2006--Research and Markets has announced the addition of "Dry Overactive Bladder - A Precursor to Wet Overactive Bladder?" to their offering.

Iodine deficiency
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An international meeting will be held MAy 10-11 in Beijing on Making the case for universal flour fortification in China. WHY?

Iritis
Culture clash teaches student lesson 
Pocono Record - Feb 18 9:40 PM
EFFORT Before she had even reached high school, Estella Baker was on her way to Japan to study for a year. It didn't begin well. After three days at the small school in the countryside, Baker wanted to return home.

Irritable bowel syndrome
GI response to acupuncture may be placebo effect 
Reuters via Yahoo! News - 45 minutes ago
As a treatment for irritable bowel syndrome, acupuncture is associated with improvements in quality of life. However, the improvement reported by patients who underwent a fake or "sham" procedure suggest that a placebo effect is largely responsible for the benefits, new research shows.

Jacobsen syndrome
Adams man rises to the top By Lee Bonorden/Austin Daily Herald 
Austin Daily Herald - May 01 8:57 AM
News Call or email the Newsroom at (507) 434-2230. ADAMS - Pick one person around which to build a community and that would be Tom Mullenbach. The winner of the 2006 Jefferson Awards' contest top honor never saw a need he didn't want to fill.

Japanese encephalitis
Govt vouchsafes Chinese made Japanese encephalitis vaccine 
The Hindu - May 09 12:28 AM
NEW DELHI: The Centre has said that Chinese-made Japanese encephalitis vaccine is safe as Uttar Pradesh government plans to start a vaccination campaign from May 15. "The vaccine is safe. All details have been discussed and all data analysed," Mr P Hota, Health Secretary, said.

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Hyperthyroidism
Hyperthyroidism
ICD-10 code: E05
ICD-9 code: 242, 775.3

Hyperthyroidism (or "overactive thyroid gland") is the clinical syndrome caused by an excess of circulating free thyroxine (T4) or free triiodothyronine (T3), or both.

Contents

  • 1 Causes
  • 2 Signs and symptoms
  • 3 Diagnosis
  • 4 Treatment
    • 4.1 Surgery
    • 4.2 Radioiodine
    • 4.3 Thyrostatics
  • 5 Veterinary medicine
  • 6 See also
  • 7 External links

Causes

Major causes in humans are:

  • Graves' disease (the most common etiology with 70-80%)
  • Toxic thyroid adenoma
  • Toxic multinodular goitre

Other causes of hyperthyroxinemia (high blood levels of thyroid hormones) are not to be confused with true hyperthyroidism and include subacute and other forms of thyroiditis (inflammation). Thyrotoxicosis (symptoms caused by hyperthyroxinemia) can occur in both hyperthyroidism and thyroiditis. When it causes acutely increased metabolism, it is sometimes called "thyroid storm".

Signs and symptoms

Major clinical features in humans are weight loss (often accompanied by a ravenous appetite), fatigue, weakness, hyperactivity, irritability, apathy, depression, polyuria, and sweating. Additionally, patients may present with a variety of symptoms such as palpitations and arrhythmias (notably atrial fibrillation), dyspnea, infertility, loss of libido, nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea. In the elderly, these classical symptoms may not be present and they may present only with fatigue and weight loss leading to apathetic hyperthyroidism

Neurological manifestations are tremor, chorea, myopathy, and periodic paralysis. Stroke of cardioembolic origin due to coexisting atrial fibrillation may be mentioned as one of the most serious complications of hyperthyroidism.

As to other autoimmune disorders related with thyrotoxicosis, an association between thyroid disease and myasthenia gravis has been well recognised. The thyroid disease, in this condition, is often an autoimmune one and approximately 5% of patients with myasthenia gravis also have hyperthyroidism. Myasthenia gravis rarely improves after thyroid treatment and relation between two entities is yet unknown. Some very rare neurological manifestations that are reported to be dubiously associated with thyrotoxicosis are pseudotumor cerebri, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis and a Guillain-Barré-like syndrome.

Diagnosis

A diagnosis is suspected through blood tests, by measuring the level of TSH (thyroid stimulating hormone) in the blood. If TSH is low, there is likely to be increased production of T4 and/or T3. Measuring specific antibodies, such as anti-TSH-receptor antibodies in Graves' disease, may contribute to the diagnosis. In all patients with hyperthyoxinemia, scintigraphy is required in order to distinguish true hyperthyroidism from thyroiditis.

Treatment

The major and generally accepted modalities for treatment of hyperthyroidism in humans are:

Surgery

Surgery (to remove the whole thyroid or a part of it) is not extensively used because most common forms of hyperthyroidism are quite effectively treated by the radioactive iodine method. However, some Graves' disease patients who cannot tolerate medicines for one reason or another or patients who refuse radioiodine opt for surgical intervention. The procedure is relatively safe - some surgeons are even treating partial thyroidectomy on an out-patient basis.

Radioiodine

In Radioiodine (treatment) therapy, radioactive iodine is given orally (either by pill or liquid) on a one-time basis to ablate a hyperactive gland. The iodine given for ablative treatment is different from the iodine used in a scan. Radioactive iodine is given after a routine iodine scan, and uptake of the iodine is determined to confirm hyperthyroidism. The radioactive iodine is picked up by the active cells in the thyroid and destroys them. Since iodine is only picked up by thyroid cells, the destruction is local, and there are no widespread side effects with this therapy. Radioactive iodine ablation has been safely used for over 50 years, and the only major reasons for not using it are pregnancy and breast-feeding.

Often, due to the difficulty of picking the correct dose, the treatment results in an opposite condition - hypothyroidism. However, that is usually easily treated by the administration of levothyroxine, which is a pure synthetic form of T4.

Thyrostatics

Thyrostatics are drugs that inhibit the production of thyroid hormones, such as methimazole (Tapazole®) or PTU (propylthiouracil).

If too high a dose is used in pharmacological treatment, patients can develop symptoms of hypothyroidism. Hypothyroidism is also a very common result of surgery or radiation treatment as it is difficult to gauge how much of the thyroid gland should be removed. Supplementation with levothyroxine may be required in these cases.

Veterinary medicine

In veterinary medicine, hyperthyroidism is one of the most common endocrine conditions affecting older domesticated cats. The disease has become significantly more common since the first reports of feline hyperthyroidism in the 1970s. In cats, it is almost always caused by a benign thyroid adenoma.

The most common presenting symptoms are: rapid weight loss, rapid heart rate, vomiting, diarrhoea, increased water consumption and increased urine production.

Surgery is not normally an option in feline hyperthyroidism. Radioiodine treatment or methimazole may be used to control symptoms.

See also

  • hypothyroidism

External links

  • Hyperthyroidism Primer
  • NIH/Medline Plus
  • Merck
  • Mayo Clinic
  • eMedicine
Search Term: "Hyperthyroidism"

 
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