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Thyrotoxicosis

Endocrinology and Metabolism Clinics of North America, 2023
Hyperthyroidism is a diagnosis existing along a spectrum of severity. Patients present with a variety of signs and symptoms: tachycardia, elevated heart rate, anxiety, changes in mental status, gastrointestinal disturbances, and hyperthermia. Management of subclinical hyperthyroidism and thyrotoxicosis without thyroid storm is heavily dependent on ...
Brannon L, Inman, Brit, Long
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Thyrotoxicosis

Medical Clinics of North America, 2012
Hyperthyroidism describes the sustained increase in thyroid hormone biosynthesis and secretion by a thyroid gland with increased metabolism. Although the use of radioiodine scanning serves as a useful surrogate that may help characterize the cause of thyrotoxicosis, it only indirectly addresses the underlying physiologic mechanism driving the increase ...
Stuart C, Seigel, Steven P, Hodak
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Thyrotoxicosis and Lithium

British Journal of Psychiatry, 1976
SummaryTwo cases are presented in which treatment with lithium was complicated by thyrotoxicosis. The underlying physiological mechanisms are discussed.Lithium suppresses thyroid function, so the early stages of thyrotoxicosis may be clinically undetectable.
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SUBCLINICAL THYROTOXICOSIS

Endocrinology and Metabolism Clinics of North America, 1998
Subclinical thyrotoxicosis is defined as low serum thyrotropin (TSH) and normal serum thyroid hormone concentrations. It must be distinguished from nonthyroidal illness and secondary hypothyroidism. The most common causes are excessive thyroid hormone therapy, autonomously functioning thyroid adenoma, multinodular goiter, and Graves' disease, but many ...
E, Marqusee, S T, Haden, R D, Utiger
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Depression in thyrotoxicosis

American Journal of Psychiatry, 1975
The author describes the case of a middle-aged man who was admitted twice to a psychiatric hospital with depression. On the second admission, his mental state improved following treatment for thyrotoxicosis. The author emphasizes the importance of recognizing such atypical presentations of thyrotoxicosis and postulates a possible depression-producing ...
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Splenomegaly in Thyrotoxicosis

JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1982
To the Editor.— Edward R. Eichner, MD, and Charles L. Whitfield, MD, presented an excellent algorithmic approach to the diagnosis of splenomegaly (1981;246:2858). However, there is one omission that strikes an endocrinologist immediately: thyrotoxicosis.
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NEONATAL THYROTOXICOSIS

Pediatrics, 1959
Two cases of congenital goiter with severe thyrotoxicosis are described. In one instance, unusual tachycardia was noted in utero. The mothers, treated before conception with radioactive iodine and thyroidectomy, respectively, were, at the time of delivery, not only thyrotoxic, but markedly exophthalmic.
S N, JAVETT   +3 more
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Living with Thyrotoxicosis

AJN, American Journal of Nursing, 1980
gain weight, and we gave her her iodine drops. My brothers and I did the housework and spent what seemed like endless hours washing sweaty bed linen, spoon-feeding her, and keeping her bedroom clean. Despite her enforced bed rest we were harassed by the supervision my mother maintained.
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The Elderly and Thyrotoxicosis

AACN Advanced Critical Care, 1992
Thyrotoxicosis is gaining recognition as a significant clinical problem in the elderly. However, distinguishing thyrotoxicosis is difficult because the elderly usually present with nonspecific and atypical clinical manifestations. The most common cause of hyperthyroidism in the elderly is toxic multinodular goiter.
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Thyrotoxicosis in Childhood

Pediatric Annals, 1992
Evidence supports the presence of a genetic predisposition to an abnormality in immune surveillance, with environmental factors precipitating the development of Graves' disease.
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