Endocrine Surgeon, Thyroid Surgeonendocrine surgery and thyroid surgery information for patients and health professionals

What is Thyrotoxicosis?

When there are increased levels of thyroid hormone in the blood the patient is said to have thyrotoxicosis. Thyrotoxicosis affects 2% of the United Kingdom population. It is ten times more common in females than males and in 40% of patients the disease is self-limiting.

What are the causes of Thyrotoxicosis?

There are four main causes of thyrotoxicosis:

1) A generalised enlargement of the thyroid (Graves' Disease)
2) An overactive solitary lump in the thyroid (Plummer's disease)
3) Overactivity in a multinodular goitre (Toxic multinodular goitre)
4) Inflammation of the thyroid resulting in release of excess thyroid hormone (Thyroiditis).

Other less common causes of thyrotoxicosis are:

  • Patients taking excess thyroid hormone (Thyrotoxicosis Factitia)
  • The passage from the mother to the foetus of maternal immunoglobulins that stimulate the foetal thyroid (Congenital Thyrotoxicosis)
  • Transient thyrotoxicosis occurs in 20% of women who have had previous thyrotoxicosis and normal thyroid function during pregnancy (Post-partum Thyroiditis)
  • Thyroid 'storm' is rarely seen, but is brought about by physical or surgical stress causing a massive release of thyroid hormone into the circulation (Thyrotoxic Crisis)
  • An ectopic tumour that produces excessive amounts of TSH causing overactivation of the thyroid (Ectopic Hyperthyroidism)
 
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