Thyroid
Hyperthyroidism
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Hyperthyroidism
, Thyrotoxicosis
See Also
Subclinical Hyperthyroidism
Grave's Disease
Thyroid Storm
Hyperthyroidism in Pregnancy
Epidemiology
Prevalence
Overt Hyperthyroidism (US): 0.5% (
Subclinical Hyperthyroidism
in another 0.7%)
Women: 2%
Men 0.2%
References
Turnbridge (1977) Clin Endocrinol 7:481-93 [PubMed]
Pathophysiology
Excessive
Thyroid Hormone
up-regulates beta-
Adrenergic Receptor
s, increasing sensitivity to
Catecholamine
s
Causes
Stimulatory Causes (positive
Radioactive Iodine
scan)
Grave's Disease
(60-80% of Hyperthyroidism cases)
Other Rare Causes
Trophoblastic Tumor
s activate TSH receptors via HCG (
Choriocarcinoma
)
TSH-
Secretin
g
Pituitary Adenoma
Non-Stimulatory Causes (TSH independent)
Thyroid
follicular cell hyperplasia with increased
Thyroid Hormone
production
Toxic Multinodular Goiter
(5%, esp. elderly in
Iodine
deficient regions)
Toxic Thyroid Adenoma
(Plummer's Disease)
Thyroiditis
(common)
Subacute Thyroiditis
(
Granulomatous Thyroiditis
)
Acute Suppurative Thyroiditis
(
Bacterial Infection
)
Postpartum Thyroiditis
(lymphocytic
Thyroiditis
)
Medication-Induced Hyperthyroidism
See
Medications Affecting Thyroid Function
Exogenous
Thyroid Hormone
source
Tumors (rare)
Metastatic follicular
Thyroid Cancer
Ovarian Cancer
producing
Thyroxine
(struma ovarii)
Combined Stimulatory and Non-Stimulatory Causes (positive
Radioactive Iodine
scan)
Nodular
Goiter
with superimposed stimulation
Findings
Common Presentations
Unintentional Weight Loss
, heat intolerance,
Palpitation
s and generalized weakness
Exam with palpable
Goiter
,
Tachycardia
,
Tremor
and proximal
Muscle Weakness
Symptoms
Neurologic and psychiatric symptoms
Nervousness or alertness
Emotional lability (Anxiety, Irritability or even
Psychosis
)
Proximal
Muscle Weakness
Insomnia
Adrenergic symptoms
Palpitation
s
Tremor
Frequent
Bowel Movement
s,
Diarrhea
Excessive Sweating
Heat intolerance
Miscellaneous
Weight loss despite increased appetite (hypermetabolism)
Oligomenorrhea
or
Amenorrhea
Signs
Vital Sign
s
Body weight
Compare to prior recorded values
Temperature
Fever
may be present (
Acute Thyroiditis
)
Neck
Palpable
Thyroid Goiter
Thyroid
may be tender (
Acute Thyroiditis
)
Dermatologic
Warm, moist and velvety
Palmar erythema
Hair
fine and silky
Fingernail
s
Onycholysis
(Plummer's Nails)
Brown
Nail Discoloration
Graves Dermopathy
Pretibial
Myxedema
(
Thyroid
dermopathy) occurs in 1.5% of cases
Thyroid
Acropachy
(finger soft tissue swelling and
Digital Clubbing
)
Skin Pigment Changes
(patchy
Hyperpigmentation
or vitilgo)
Neuropsychiatric
Anxious, restless, fidgeting patient
Fine
Tremor
of fingers,
Tongue
Hyperkinesia
Rapid speech
Proximal
Muscle Weakness
(e.g. Quadriceps weakness)
Eye changes
See
Thyroid Eye Disease
Stare
Widened palpebral fissures
Infrequent blinking
Chemosis
Lid Lag
Proptosis
(
Exophthalmos
) -
Graves Disease
Periorbital edema
Cardiovascular
Increased
Blood Pressure
and
Heart Rate
Systolic
Hypertension
Wide
Pulse Pressure
Tachycardia
Auscultation
Loud
S1 Heart Sound
Loud
S2 Heart Sound
Systolic Murmur
Chronic changes
Atrial Fibrillation
(10-15%)
Cardiac hypertrophy or
Cardiomyopathy
(5%)
Labs
Thyroid
testing
See
Thyroid Function Test
ing
Obtain
Thyroid Stimulating Hormone
(TSH) with reflex to
Free T4
Serum
Thyroid Stimulating Hormone
(TSH) suppressed
Serum
Free Thyroxine
(
Free T4
) elevated
Normal findings despite abnormal labs
Pregnancy or
Estrogen
therapy
Estrogen
increases
Thyroxine Binding Globulin
and, in turn, Total T4 and Total T3
TSH and
Free T4
will be normal and requires no management
In pregnancy, interpret based on trimester specific normal
Thyroid Hormone
level references
Acute illness
TSH mildly decreased (0.1 to 0.4 mIU/ml)
Normal or mildly decreased
Free T4
Resolves as acute illness does and requires no management
Exogenous
Corticosteroid
s or
Dopamine
(e.g. ICU) may cause a similar finding
Advanced labs:
Thyroid
Antibodies (indicated in some cases)
Thyroid Stimulating Immunoglobulin
(TSH receptor ab)
Sensitive and Specific for
Graves Disease
Test Sensitivity
: 97%
Test Specificity
: >=98%
Associated with ophthalmopathy
Usually not needed for diagnosis unless imaging contraindicated
However, may also be used in lieu of
Thyroid
uptake scan in
Grave's Disease
diagnosis
Antithyroid Peroxidase Antibody
Negative in
Graves Disease
and positive in
Hashimoto's Thyroiditis
Non-specific lab changes (variably present)
Complete Blood Count
(CBC)
Anemia
Granulocytosis and
Lymphocytosis
Electrolyte
s
Hypercalcemia
Liver Function Test
s
Liver
transaminases (AST,ALT) increased
Alkaline Phosphatase
increased
Acute Phase Reactants (ESR,
C-RP
)
Erythrocyte Sedimentation Rate
>50 mm/h (
Acute Thyroiditis
)
Diagnostics
Electrocardiogram
Sinus Tachycardia
Atrial Fibrillation
(esp. age >60 years, males, CAD, CHF, valvular disease)
Imaging
Thyroid
Uptake Scan
Differentiate Hyperthyroidism causes
Identify hot and cold
Nodule
s
Doppler may differentiate Hyperthyroidism types
Normal
Thyroid
perfusion:
Painless Thyroiditis
Increased
Thyroid
perfusion:
Graves Disease
Thyroid
Ultrasound
Differentiate solid from cystic
Nodule
s
May be used when
Thyroid
uptake scan cannot be used (e.g. pregnancy and
Lactation
)
If solid cold
Nodule
:
Fine needle biopsy
CT Head
and Neck (evaluate for metastatic disease)
Evaluation
Step 1: Check TSH
TSH Normal
No Hyperthyroidism
TSH Suppressed
Go to Step 2 below
TSH Increased: Check
Free T4
Normal or Low
Consider
Hypothyroidism
Free T4
High
Secondary Hyperthyroidism (rare)
Obtain CT or
MRI Brain
with cone down of
Pituitary Gland
(sella turcica)
Step 2: Check
Free T4
(for suppressed TSH)
Free T4
High: Go to Step 3
Free T4
Normal: Measure Total
Triiodothyronine
(Total T3, preferred over
Free T3
)
Normal T3
See
Subclinical Hyperthyroidism
Follow for transient cause resolution
Free T3
high
Go to Step 3
T3 toxicosis (seen in 10-15% cases)
Step 3:
Thyroid
Uptake Scan (Primary Hyperthyroidism)
Alternative Protocol:
TSH Receptor Antibody
In classic
Grave's Disease
,
TSH Receptor Antibody
may be obtained
TSH Receptor Antibody
is highly sensitive and specific for
Grave's Disease
Positive
TSH Receptor Antibody
may be used in lieu of
Thyroid
Uptake Scan
Thyroid
Uptake Scan with low uptake
Single "Cold"
Nodule
Possible
Thyroid Cancer
Diffusely low uptake
Go to Step 4
Thyroid
Uptake Scan with high uptake
Diffusely high uptake (or
TSH Receptor Antibody
positive)
Grave's Disease
Single "Hot"
Nodule
Toxic Thyroid Adenoma
Multiple "Hot"
Nodule
s
Toxic Multinodular Goiter
Step 4: Check
Thyroglobulin
(scan with low uptake)
Thyroglobulin
Low
Exogenous
Hormone
source
Thyroglobulin
High
Thyroiditis
Ectopic
Thyroid Hormone
production (e.g. ovary)
Excess
Iodide
exposure
Management
See
Hyperthyroidism Management
Complications
Thyroid Storm
References
Bahn (2011) Thyroid 21(6):593-646 [PubMed]
Haddard (1998) Postgrad Med 104(1):42-59 [PubMed]
Hennessey (1996) Am Fam Physician 54(4):1315-24 [PubMed]
Kravets (2016) Am Fam Physician 93(5): 363-70 [PubMed]
Mounsey (2025) Am Fam Physician 112(2): 146-52 [PubMed]
Reid (2005) Am Fam Physician 72:623-36 [PubMed]
Singer (1995) JAMA 273(10):808-12 [PubMed]
Slatosky (2000) Am Fam Physician 61(4):1047-52 [PubMed]
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