Cargando…

FRI513 Pathological Bone Fracture In An Adolescent With Graves’ Disease

Disclosure: J. Hayes dorado: None. M. Calla Ayala: None. D. Vargas Sejas: None. E. Coca Tapia: None. G. Justiniano Vargas: None. F. Leon Arze: None. Graves’ disease is the most common pediatric cause of hyperthyroidism. Although hyperthyroidism has been reported to cause a decrease in bone mineral d...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Hayes Dorado, Juan Pablo, Calla Ayala, Marco Antonio, Sejas, Daniela Vargas, Tapia, Emilene Coca, Vargas, Gerben Justiniano, Arze, Francisco Leon
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10555726/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvad114.1858
_version_ 1785116721245323264
author Hayes Dorado, Juan Pablo
Calla Ayala, Marco Antonio
Sejas, Daniela Vargas
Tapia, Emilene Coca
Vargas, Gerben Justiniano
Arze, Francisco Leon
author_facet Hayes Dorado, Juan Pablo
Calla Ayala, Marco Antonio
Sejas, Daniela Vargas
Tapia, Emilene Coca
Vargas, Gerben Justiniano
Arze, Francisco Leon
author_sort Hayes Dorado, Juan Pablo
collection PubMed
description Disclosure: J. Hayes dorado: None. M. Calla Ayala: None. D. Vargas Sejas: None. E. Coca Tapia: None. G. Justiniano Vargas: None. F. Leon Arze: None. Graves’ disease is the most common pediatric cause of hyperthyroidism. Although hyperthyroidism has been reported to cause a decrease in bone mineral density (BMD), its association with bone fractures is rare. A 12-year-old female patient presented to emergency with left arm pain that started after collision with an electricity pole. Her medical history included fractured right femur one year previously. Her heart rate 128 beats/min, blood pressure 120/70 mm Hg, weight 44 kg, height 156 cm (75(th) percentile) and BMI 18 kg/m(2)(50(th) percentile). Family history was unremarkable. He had prominent thyromegaly with diffuse enlargement and soft consistency on palpation. X-ray revealed a fracture of left humerus. Demineralization of bone was detected. Blood Tests: calcium 8.9 mg/dL (8.5-10.5); phosphate 4.36 mg/dL (3.7-5.6); alkaline phosphatase 239 U/L (42-362); PTH 23 pg/mL (12-88); 25-OHD 22.8 ng/mL (20-80); TSH <0.01 μIU/mL (0.38-5.33); fT3 29 pg/mL (2.6-4.37); and fT4 5.13 ng/dL (0.61-1.2). Auto-antibodies were positive: thyroid peroxidase Abs 42 IU/mL (0-9), thyroglobulin Abs 21 IU/mL (0-4) and TSH Receptor Abs 7.33 IU/L (0-0.1). Complete blood count, liver, kidney function tests were normal. Thyroid ultrasonography showed a significant increase in thyroid gland volume and vascularization. A diagnosis of Graves’ disease was confirmed. Methimazole, propranolol, calcium and vitamin D therapies were started. Pre-treatment bone densitometry showed significantly low BMD: lumbar BMD (L1-L4) was 0.701 g/cm2 (Z-score - 2) and femoral BMD was 0.639 g/cm2 (Z-score -2). Euthyroidism was achieved after ten weeks of treatment and clinical signs of hyperthyroidism had improved. At six months follow up there were no clinical signs of hyperthyroidism and the patient remained euthyroid. Bone densitometry investigation one year after diagnosis showed marked improvement: lumbar BMD (L1-L4) was 0.898 g/cm2 (Z-score -0.5) and femoral BMD was 0.799 g/cm2 (Z-score -0.4). Untreated adolescents with Graves’ disease may present with fractures. It highlights the importance of considering hyperthyroidism as a possible diagnosis among the differential diagnoses of pathological bone fractures. Presentation: Friday, June 16, 2023
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-10555726
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2023
publisher Oxford University Press
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-105557262023-10-07 FRI513 Pathological Bone Fracture In An Adolescent With Graves’ Disease Hayes Dorado, Juan Pablo Calla Ayala, Marco Antonio Sejas, Daniela Vargas Tapia, Emilene Coca Vargas, Gerben Justiniano Arze, Francisco Leon J Endocr Soc Thyroid Disclosure: J. Hayes dorado: None. M. Calla Ayala: None. D. Vargas Sejas: None. E. Coca Tapia: None. G. Justiniano Vargas: None. F. Leon Arze: None. Graves’ disease is the most common pediatric cause of hyperthyroidism. Although hyperthyroidism has been reported to cause a decrease in bone mineral density (BMD), its association with bone fractures is rare. A 12-year-old female patient presented to emergency with left arm pain that started after collision with an electricity pole. Her medical history included fractured right femur one year previously. Her heart rate 128 beats/min, blood pressure 120/70 mm Hg, weight 44 kg, height 156 cm (75(th) percentile) and BMI 18 kg/m(2)(50(th) percentile). Family history was unremarkable. He had prominent thyromegaly with diffuse enlargement and soft consistency on palpation. X-ray revealed a fracture of left humerus. Demineralization of bone was detected. Blood Tests: calcium 8.9 mg/dL (8.5-10.5); phosphate 4.36 mg/dL (3.7-5.6); alkaline phosphatase 239 U/L (42-362); PTH 23 pg/mL (12-88); 25-OHD 22.8 ng/mL (20-80); TSH <0.01 μIU/mL (0.38-5.33); fT3 29 pg/mL (2.6-4.37); and fT4 5.13 ng/dL (0.61-1.2). Auto-antibodies were positive: thyroid peroxidase Abs 42 IU/mL (0-9), thyroglobulin Abs 21 IU/mL (0-4) and TSH Receptor Abs 7.33 IU/L (0-0.1). Complete blood count, liver, kidney function tests were normal. Thyroid ultrasonography showed a significant increase in thyroid gland volume and vascularization. A diagnosis of Graves’ disease was confirmed. Methimazole, propranolol, calcium and vitamin D therapies were started. Pre-treatment bone densitometry showed significantly low BMD: lumbar BMD (L1-L4) was 0.701 g/cm2 (Z-score - 2) and femoral BMD was 0.639 g/cm2 (Z-score -2). Euthyroidism was achieved after ten weeks of treatment and clinical signs of hyperthyroidism had improved. At six months follow up there were no clinical signs of hyperthyroidism and the patient remained euthyroid. Bone densitometry investigation one year after diagnosis showed marked improvement: lumbar BMD (L1-L4) was 0.898 g/cm2 (Z-score -0.5) and femoral BMD was 0.799 g/cm2 (Z-score -0.4). Untreated adolescents with Graves’ disease may present with fractures. It highlights the importance of considering hyperthyroidism as a possible diagnosis among the differential diagnoses of pathological bone fractures. Presentation: Friday, June 16, 2023 Oxford University Press 2023-10-05 /pmc/articles/PMC10555726/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvad114.1858 Text en © The Author(s) 2023. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Endocrine Society. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/), which permits non-commercial reproduction and distribution of the work, in any medium, provided the original work is not altered or transformed in any way, and that the work is properly cited. For commercial re-use, please contact journals.permissions@oup.com
spellingShingle Thyroid
Hayes Dorado, Juan Pablo
Calla Ayala, Marco Antonio
Sejas, Daniela Vargas
Tapia, Emilene Coca
Vargas, Gerben Justiniano
Arze, Francisco Leon
FRI513 Pathological Bone Fracture In An Adolescent With Graves’ Disease
title FRI513 Pathological Bone Fracture In An Adolescent With Graves’ Disease
title_full FRI513 Pathological Bone Fracture In An Adolescent With Graves’ Disease
title_fullStr FRI513 Pathological Bone Fracture In An Adolescent With Graves’ Disease
title_full_unstemmed FRI513 Pathological Bone Fracture In An Adolescent With Graves’ Disease
title_short FRI513 Pathological Bone Fracture In An Adolescent With Graves’ Disease
title_sort fri513 pathological bone fracture in an adolescent with graves’ disease
topic Thyroid
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10555726/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvad114.1858
work_keys_str_mv AT hayesdoradojuanpablo fri513pathologicalbonefractureinanadolescentwithgravesdisease
AT callaayalamarcoantonio fri513pathologicalbonefractureinanadolescentwithgravesdisease
AT sejasdanielavargas fri513pathologicalbonefractureinanadolescentwithgravesdisease
AT tapiaemilenecoca fri513pathologicalbonefractureinanadolescentwithgravesdisease
AT vargasgerbenjustiniano fri513pathologicalbonefractureinanadolescentwithgravesdisease
AT arzefranciscoleon fri513pathologicalbonefractureinanadolescentwithgravesdisease