by antibodies, which may lead to an over or under production of thyroxine and cause hyperthyroidism or hypothyroidism. Hyperthyroidism or thyrotoxicosis occurs when the thyroid escapes control of the TSH from the pituitary and begins to produce increasing quantities of thyroxine under the influence of another hormone called ‘long-acting thyroid stimulator’ or LATS which acts as a sort of ‘counterfeit’ TSH, while TSH itself is suppressed. LATS also causes enlargement of the pad of fat behind the eye, leading to the familiar bulging eyes or exophthalmos, which is a noticeable feature of what is sometimes called Graves disease.
It is most frequently seen in young women who notice increasing exhaustion, nervousness, insomnia, sweating and palpitations, symptoms which might easily be put down to anxiety. The increasing amount of energy being used is obtained by an enlarged appetite but with a considerable loss of weight, tremor of the hands is caused by the bounding circulation which also leads to high blood pressure and even atrial fibrillation and dyspnoea. Peristalsis also increased and causes diarrhoea or more frequent normal stools while the periods become scanty or cease altogether. The eyes feel inflamed and gritty and double vision may occur if the muscles are affected.
Such a florid picture is seldom seen and in older people the signs may be restricted to palpitations and wasting of the muscles with no goiter or exophthalmos. In them it is often a small overactive thyroid nodule which is the problem and this is another form of hyperthyroidism.
There are three conventional avenues of treatment – by antithyroid drugs, by removal of part of the gland - thyroidectomy or by destruction of the gland with radioactive iodine. The drug treatment is normally tried first, but may result in relapse when the drug is stopped, surgery is the usual approach and works in the great majority.
Hypothyroidism or myxoedema can be the result of pituitary failure but is more often due to damage to the thyroid itself by inflammation, drugs such as lithium, removal of too much of the gland for thyrotoxicosis or most often from an autoimmune |
|
process causing destruction of the gland known as Hashimoto’s disease. The term ‘myxoedema’ refers to the mucilaginous substance deposited under the skin giving it a puffy yellow coarse appearance, but differing from true oedema in that it does not pit under pressure. It is one of the most common and most subtle of the endocrine disorders arising usually in middle aged women around the time of the menopause and leading to weakness and fatigue rheumatic pains and loss of appetite.
THE ADRENAL GLANDS
These glands are each actually double glands, one inside the other, each arising from different embryonic tissue. The central part, the medulla, derives from nervous tissue and secretes the hormones adrenalin and noradrenalin. It seldom malfunctions except in the very rare instance of a benign tumour secreting the substances in excess. This causes symptons of sweating, palpitations headache and hypertension along with a degree of panic from the rush of adrenalin. However it is more commonly the cortex which malfunctions either over or underproducing the hormone cortisone and leading to Cushings syndrome or Addisons disease.
CUSHINGS SYNDROME is a collection of symptoms arising from an excess of circulating steroid hormones in the body, and can occur in those being treated with long term cortisone for asthma, rheumatoid arthritis or one of the collagen diseases. It may also be caused by a tumour in the cortex stimulating an overproduction of steroid hormones.
Whatever the cause the symptoms are seen first in the face which becomes rounded and moon-shaped with reddening and acne. The trunk also swells and stretch marks and bruises appear on the skin. The fat over the shoulders increases and the bones become thin and brittle and the spine starts to collapse, leading to the familiar ‘buffalo hump’ it is only a minority of those treated with cortisone who develop this syndrome, for it is related to the dosage of the drug as well as the duration of use.
|