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Difficulties in Differential Diagnosis of Thyrotoxicosis: Clinical Case

Introduction: Thyrotoxicosis (T) develops as a result of persistent excess of thyroid hormones (TH). There are two groups of diseases that are fundamentally different in pathogenesis. The first group includes those in which the production of TH increases. Diseases of the second group are accompanied...

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Autores principales: Volkova, Natalia I, Davidenko, Ilya, Dzherieva, Irina, Ganenko, Lilia, Reshetnikov, Igor, Sorokina, Julya, Zibarev, Alexander, Degtyareva, Yulya, Chernova, Anastasya, Gizatullina, Gulnara
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2021
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Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8265929/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvab048.1895
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author Volkova, Natalia I
Davidenko, Ilya
Dzherieva, Irina
Ganenko, Lilia
Reshetnikov, Igor
Sorokina, Julya
Zibarev, Alexander
Degtyareva, Yulya
Chernova, Anastasya
Gizatullina, Gulnara
author_facet Volkova, Natalia I
Davidenko, Ilya
Dzherieva, Irina
Ganenko, Lilia
Reshetnikov, Igor
Sorokina, Julya
Zibarev, Alexander
Degtyareva, Yulya
Chernova, Anastasya
Gizatullina, Gulnara
author_sort Volkova, Natalia I
collection PubMed
description Introduction: Thyrotoxicosis (T) develops as a result of persistent excess of thyroid hormones (TH). There are two groups of diseases that are fundamentally different in pathogenesis. The first group includes those in which the production of TH increases. Diseases of the second group are accompanied by T caused by destruction of the thyroid gland tissue. Therapeutic approaches for different pathogenetic types of T are different, therefore, a careful differential diagnosis of T is necessary, even if at first glance the diagnosis seems obvious. Clinical Case: A 35-year-old patient consulted a physician complaining of weakness, weight loss by 11 kg in 1.5 months, tremors, palpitations, which first appeared about a month ago. The examination revealed TSH <0.0083 mU/l (0.4-4.0), and an endocrinologist’s consultation was recommended. On examination, the thyroid gland is no larger than the distal phalanx of the subject’s thumb, BMI=24 kg/m2, HR=100 bpm, BP=115/80 mm Hg. Laboratory examination: TSH <0.0083 mU/l, free T4 =28.29 pmol/l (9.0-19.05). Ultrasound of the thyroid gland: signs of diffuse changes in tissue, the total volume=16.8 ml(3). For differential diagnosis of T, antibodies to TSH receptors were determined, the titer of which turned out to be slightly increased 1.43 IU / L (<1). A diagnosis of Graves’ disease (GD) was made and treatment was prescribed (Tyrozol 30 mg, Bisoprolol 2.5 mg per day). After 3 weeks, the patient noted an improvement in well-being, but weakness, tremor, an increase in free T4 (23.33 pmol/l) and total T3 (3.26nmol / l at a rate of 0.98-2.33) remained. The lack of achievement of the target values of TH levels was regarded as inadequacy of the received dose of Tyrozol, in connection with which it was decided to increase the dose to 40 mg per day. After 2 weeks, an increase in free T4 (27.26 pmol/L) and total T3 (3.84 nmol/L) remained. The lack of positive dynamics called into question the diagnosis of GD. With a more thorough collection of anamnesis, it was found that 1.5 years ago, the patient took amiodarone for 6 months as prescribed by a cardiologist (he does not remember the dose). In this connection, to establish the cause of T, scintigraphy was performed: revealed a weak accumulation of a radiopharmaceutical with diffuse uneven distribution. Based on the data obtained, amiodarone-induced T type 2 was verified. Treatment was corrected: Tyrosol withdrawal and Prednisolone administration, 40 mg/day with positive dynamics from treatment. Conclusion: Clinical case demonstrates how important it is to carefully collect the patient’s history and follow the algorithms for differential diagnosis. Errors in diagnosis lead to incorrectly prescribed treatment, lengthening the duration of symptoms, which affects not only the patient’s quality of life, but also reduces the level of his trust in medical professionals.
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spelling pubmed-82659292021-07-09 Difficulties in Differential Diagnosis of Thyrotoxicosis: Clinical Case Volkova, Natalia I Davidenko, Ilya Dzherieva, Irina Ganenko, Lilia Reshetnikov, Igor Sorokina, Julya Zibarev, Alexander Degtyareva, Yulya Chernova, Anastasya Gizatullina, Gulnara J Endocr Soc Thyroid Introduction: Thyrotoxicosis (T) develops as a result of persistent excess of thyroid hormones (TH). There are two groups of diseases that are fundamentally different in pathogenesis. The first group includes those in which the production of TH increases. Diseases of the second group are accompanied by T caused by destruction of the thyroid gland tissue. Therapeutic approaches for different pathogenetic types of T are different, therefore, a careful differential diagnosis of T is necessary, even if at first glance the diagnosis seems obvious. Clinical Case: A 35-year-old patient consulted a physician complaining of weakness, weight loss by 11 kg in 1.5 months, tremors, palpitations, which first appeared about a month ago. The examination revealed TSH <0.0083 mU/l (0.4-4.0), and an endocrinologist’s consultation was recommended. On examination, the thyroid gland is no larger than the distal phalanx of the subject’s thumb, BMI=24 kg/m2, HR=100 bpm, BP=115/80 mm Hg. Laboratory examination: TSH <0.0083 mU/l, free T4 =28.29 pmol/l (9.0-19.05). Ultrasound of the thyroid gland: signs of diffuse changes in tissue, the total volume=16.8 ml(3). For differential diagnosis of T, antibodies to TSH receptors were determined, the titer of which turned out to be slightly increased 1.43 IU / L (<1). A diagnosis of Graves’ disease (GD) was made and treatment was prescribed (Tyrozol 30 mg, Bisoprolol 2.5 mg per day). After 3 weeks, the patient noted an improvement in well-being, but weakness, tremor, an increase in free T4 (23.33 pmol/l) and total T3 (3.26nmol / l at a rate of 0.98-2.33) remained. The lack of achievement of the target values of TH levels was regarded as inadequacy of the received dose of Tyrozol, in connection with which it was decided to increase the dose to 40 mg per day. After 2 weeks, an increase in free T4 (27.26 pmol/L) and total T3 (3.84 nmol/L) remained. The lack of positive dynamics called into question the diagnosis of GD. With a more thorough collection of anamnesis, it was found that 1.5 years ago, the patient took amiodarone for 6 months as prescribed by a cardiologist (he does not remember the dose). In this connection, to establish the cause of T, scintigraphy was performed: revealed a weak accumulation of a radiopharmaceutical with diffuse uneven distribution. Based on the data obtained, amiodarone-induced T type 2 was verified. Treatment was corrected: Tyrosol withdrawal and Prednisolone administration, 40 mg/day with positive dynamics from treatment. Conclusion: Clinical case demonstrates how important it is to carefully collect the patient’s history and follow the algorithms for differential diagnosis. Errors in diagnosis lead to incorrectly prescribed treatment, lengthening the duration of symptoms, which affects not only the patient’s quality of life, but also reduces the level of his trust in medical professionals. Oxford University Press 2021-05-03 /pmc/articles/PMC8265929/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvab048.1895 Text en © The Author(s) 2021. 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 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ (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
Volkova, Natalia I
Davidenko, Ilya
Dzherieva, Irina
Ganenko, Lilia
Reshetnikov, Igor
Sorokina, Julya
Zibarev, Alexander
Degtyareva, Yulya
Chernova, Anastasya
Gizatullina, Gulnara
Difficulties in Differential Diagnosis of Thyrotoxicosis: Clinical Case
title Difficulties in Differential Diagnosis of Thyrotoxicosis: Clinical Case
title_full Difficulties in Differential Diagnosis of Thyrotoxicosis: Clinical Case
title_fullStr Difficulties in Differential Diagnosis of Thyrotoxicosis: Clinical Case
title_full_unstemmed Difficulties in Differential Diagnosis of Thyrotoxicosis: Clinical Case
title_short Difficulties in Differential Diagnosis of Thyrotoxicosis: Clinical Case
title_sort difficulties in differential diagnosis of thyrotoxicosis: clinical case
topic Thyroid
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8265929/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvab048.1895
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