HPA - Hyperthyroidism

Description

Flashcards on HPA - Hyperthyroidism, created by Em J on 10/06/2018.
Em J
Flashcards by Em J, updated more than 1 year ago
Em J
Created by Em J about 6 years ago
5
0

Resource summary

Question Answer
What is it? Excessive functional activity of the thyroid gland
Prevalence? In Australia, thyroid conditions affect approx 7.5% of women and 1.5% of men and the prevalence increases with age.
Risk factors Viral infection of the thyroid Pregnancy Auto-immune disease (i.e graves) Family history (genetic) Females higher risk
Aetiology Graves disease is a large cause Pituitary issues Thyroiditis Thyroid storm Excess thyroid hormone replacement medication
Graves disease (what is it? epidem, presentation) an autoimmune disease caused by a defect in immunoregulation in genetically predisposed individuals. It leads to a production of thyroid-stimulating antibodies. Occurs five times more often in women. Increased iodine intake is associated with increased frequency of hyperthyroidism. People with this disease have an enlarged thyroid gland (goiter) and symptoms of hyperthyroidism. Often seen with bulging eyes. Goiter results from excess TSH
Thyroid storm extreme hyperthyroidism (life threatening) due to infection, stress, trauma. Leads to febrile state, tachycardia, HTN, tremors, seizures
Pathophysiology Increased circulating levels of TH → increases metabolic rate and heightens sympathetic nervous systems response to stimulation → increases cardiac rate and stroke volume → increases cardiac output and peripheral blood flow; increases carbohydrate, lipid and protein metabolism → lipids are depleted and glucose tolerance increases → protein degradation increases → negative nitrogen balance → kilojoule and nutritional deficiencies
Symptoms - Increased appetite - Weight loss - May have increased bowel motility and diarrhoea - Heat intolerance = Increased sweating - Insomnia - Palpitations
Investigations required TA test TSH test T3 test, free T3, uptake test T4 test, total RAI uptake test Thyroid suppression test
Nursing assessments and findings Full body assessment required - has multisystemic effects Cardiovascular - hypertension, tachycardia, arrhythmia, palpitations Respiratory - dyspnoea Gastrointestinal - nausea, vomiting, diarrhoea, abdominal pain Musculoskeletal - muscle wasting, weakness, fatigue Neurological - hand and eye tremors, nervousness, insomnia, emotional lability, hyperactive reflexes Sensory: blurred vision, photophobia, lacrimation, Exophthalmos (Graves disease), heat intolerance Integumentary - fine and thin hair, flushed and moist skin Metabolic - weight loss Reproductive - amenorrhea, decreased libido
Vital signs effects RR - dyspnea can occur on movement and can also be high >20 HR - tachycardia & arrhythmia BP - hypertension
Treatments Hyperthyroidism is treated by administering antithyroid medications that reduce TH production.
Show full summary Hide full summary

Similar

All the Countries of the World and their Capital Cities
PatrickNoonan
Segunda Guerra Mundial 1939-1945
miminoma
Cell Structure
daniel.praecox
Biology Unit 2 - DNA, meiosis, mitosis, cell cycle
DauntlessAlpha
Cognitive Psychology - Loftus and Palmer (1974)
Robyn Chamberlain
GCSE Biology, Module B4
jessmitchell
CPA Exam Topics and breakdown
joemontin
Certification Prep_1
Tonya Franklin
AS Biology Unit 1
lilli.atkin
Leaving Certificate Japanese Kanji
Sarah Egan
Chemistry GCSE Review - States of Matter, Particles, Atoms, Elements, Compounds and Mixtures
Morgan Overton