Graves Hyperthyroidism - information for patients
Hyperthyoidism is common, about 1 in 100 people have it, it is six times more common in women than men.
There are two main causes in the UK
The immune system making antibodies that stimulate the thyroid and the patient becomes hyperthyroid - this is Graves' hyperthyroidism
There is benign nodularity in the thyroid - a multinodular goitre
Graves' hyperthyroidism
In Graves' disease the body makes antibodies that stimulate the TSH receptor causing thyroid over-reactivity and the production of excess thyroid hormones - thyroxine (T4) and liothyroinine (T3). These hormones attach to thyroid hormone receptors all round the body causing the symptoms of thyrotoxicosis.
Robert Graves was a Dublin physician who wrote one of the first descriptions of this form of thyrotoxicosis.
The features of Graves' disease are:
Hyperthyroidism with a Smoothly enlarged fleshy enlargement of the thyroid - a goitre.
The antibodies can also attach to other parts of the body causing the other features of Graves' disease.
The muscles of the eyes - causing protrusion of the eye, Graves' ophthalmopathy, or thyroid eye disease (TED); much more common in cigarette smokers
The skin - most commonly on the leg, over the shin, called pre-tibial myxoedema, or Graves' dermopathy; rare.
The nails and the bones of the wrist - causing digital clubbing and pain at the wrist - thyroid acropachy; very rare.
The diagnosis of Graves' disease
is supported by the presence of thyroid antibodies in the bloodstream.
Very commonly anti thyroid peroxidase antibodies (anti-TPO Ab) are elevated, most UK hospital laboratories measure these and the result comes back quickly.
Antibodies agains the TSH-receptor (TRAb) are also elevated, they define Graves' disease, but they are not measured in every hospital and the result tends to come back a fews days to a fortnight after being taken. They are increasingly being measured and are very useful to predict the course of therapy and whether the patient is more likely to relapse after treatment.
Graves' disease may rarely not be associated with hyperthyroidism, the patient might not be thyrotoxic and the thyroid function tests (TFT) might be completely normal but the patient still have TED, dermopathy or acropachy.
The mainstay of treatment for Graves' hyperthyroidism
is antithyroid medication - carbimazole and propylthiouracil (PTU) these are discussed in the resources page. The patient can expect to be treated for 12 - 18 months before making a decision on stopping, to see whether the patient is cured, or whether they will relapse.
Factors that favour Graves' thyrotoxicosis relapsing are male sex, large goitre, difficult to control thyrotoxicosis and extra-thyroidal Graves' disease.
If it does relapse off treatment it is not a problem to take carbimazole or PTU again and many patients are controlled on small doses for many years or decades.
What if the patient relapses after a course of treatment?
Many endocrinologists used to say that a patient who had relapsed would need definitive, or permanent therapy for Graves', usually guaranteeing cure of the thyrotoxicosis; these treatments were radioactive iodine (RAI) or surgical thyroidectomy- discussed in patient resources. Some patients are treated with RAI as first line therapy, it is a respected strategy in many units around the world, much more rarely is surgery used as a primary treatment; surgery carries more risk in a thyrotoxic patient, and there is a small but predictable risk of damaging the nerves controlling the voice box or the parathyroid glands that control calcium and phosphate balance across the body.
However many endocrinologist did not agree with a permanent treatment, that would usually leave the patient dependent on thyroid hormone therapy for life, and would choose to maintain patients on low doses of carbimazole or PTU for life, as long as the patient tolerated these drugs and it suited the patient's informed preference. Long-term antithyroid medication has generally been a strategy I have supported in the majority of patients and this has now become a more accepted strategy internationally, with support from the American Thyroid Association.
Gender, family plans, pregnancy, breastfeeding, child care responsibilities and c0-existing medical conditions all have to be taken into account before deciding on what is best for the individual patient.
General Practitioners in the UK are generally reluctant to manage hyperthyroidism themselves, particularly Graves' thyrotoxicosis. It is usual that patients are referred to an endocrinologist, though some GPs will have experience of managing the condition and local practice varies.
It is important is that the patient sees someone experienced in the diagnosis and management of thyroid disease, who is able to accurately diagnosis the condition, counsel the patient on treatment options and supervise treatment appropriately AND that the patient and doctor have a relationship based on mutual trust.
Hyperthyroidism if not treated well is associated with ill-health, and before effective treatment used to shorten patients' lives, and it still retains the potential to do so even with modern treatment. It is a serious condition.
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If you have thyroid dysfunction and wish to see an endocrinologist to discuss your condition and its treatment click here
Dr Philip Kelly and Dr Martin Whyte are both trained specialist endocrinologists with experience of investigating, diagnosing and managing thyroid disease. Dr Philip Kelly is a member of the British Thyroid Association and the Society for Endocrinology, and Dr Whyte is a Senior Lecturer in Metabolism at the University of Surrey, alongside both their jobs as Consultant Physicians at King's College Hospital.
There are more resources on thyroid disease here
Every effort is made to ensure that this health and medication advice is accurate and up to date. It is for information only and supports your consultation it does not obviate the need for that consultation and should not replace a visit to your doctor or health care professional.
The written advice is general in nature and in is not specific to individual patients and Dr Philip Kelly cannot accept any liability for actions arising from its use nor can he be held responsible for the content of any pages contained in any external link.