Thyroid sonography as an extension of the bedside examination in hyperthyroidism

In this mini-review, we discuss the role of thyroid sonography as a ‘point-of-care’ tool for assessing and managing patients with (suspected) hyperthyroidism who present to the endocrine outpatient clinic. A thyroid ultrasound may aid in distinguishing between hyperthyroidism and destructive thyroi...

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Main Authors: Angelos Kyriacou, Panayiotis A Economides, Akheel A Syed
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Poznan University of Medical Sciences 2020-12-01
Series:Journal of Medical Science
Subjects:
Online Access:https://jms.ump.edu.pl/index.php/JMS/article/view/482
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spelling doaj-1cbc0a90544a46689fc672f7471e047b2021-08-08T08:23:57ZengPoznan University of Medical SciencesJournal of Medical Science2353-97982353-98012020-12-0189410.20883/medical.e482Thyroid sonography as an extension of the bedside examination in hyperthyroidismAngelos Kyriacou0Panayiotis A Economides1Akheel A Syed2CEDM Centre of Endocrinology, Diabetes & Metabolism, Limassol, Cyprus; Diabetes, Endocrinology & Obesity Medicine, Salford Royal NHS Foundation Trust, Salford, Greater Manchester, UKSchool of Medicine, European University Cyprus, Nicosia, Cyprus Division of Diabetes, Endocrinology & Gastroenterology, Faculty of Biology, Medicine & Health, The University of Manchester, Manchester, UK In this mini-review, we discuss the role of thyroid sonography as a ‘point-of-care’ tool for assessing and managing patients with (suspected) hyperthyroidism who present to the endocrine outpatient clinic. A thyroid ultrasound may aid in distinguishing between hyperthyroidism and destructive thyroiditis. The presence of intense vascularity (‘thyroid inferno’) on the power Doppler has a very high positive predictive value in identifying hyperthyroidism. It may also allow for the sub-classification of hyperthyroidism into autoimmune and nodular hyperthyroidism. It is important to identify the presence of thyroid nodules at an early stage, as this may influence management. Toxic nodules requires definitive treatment, as well as the presence of nodules in Graves’ disease because of increased risk of malignancy. Current guidelines on hyperthyroidism do not clearly state thyroid sonography as a first line investigation, although recent authoritative reviews point in that direction. Given the aforementioned benefits of thyroid sonography, alongside the reduced costs and widespread availability of high-resolution (including portable) ultrasound devices, there is an argument for thyroid sonography to be applied as a first line investigation for all patients with hyperthyroidism. Endocrinologists trained in thyroid sonography could perform this as an extension of their clinical examination when patients first present with hyperthyroidism at the endocrine clinic. https://jms.ump.edu.pl/index.php/JMS/article/view/482hyperthyroidismgravessonographyultrasoundpoint-of-care
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Angelos Kyriacou
Panayiotis A Economides
Akheel A Syed
spellingShingle Angelos Kyriacou
Panayiotis A Economides
Akheel A Syed
Thyroid sonography as an extension of the bedside examination in hyperthyroidism
Journal of Medical Science
hyperthyroidism
graves
sonography
ultrasound
point-of-care
author_facet Angelos Kyriacou
Panayiotis A Economides
Akheel A Syed
author_sort Angelos Kyriacou
title Thyroid sonography as an extension of the bedside examination in hyperthyroidism
title_short Thyroid sonography as an extension of the bedside examination in hyperthyroidism
title_full Thyroid sonography as an extension of the bedside examination in hyperthyroidism
title_fullStr Thyroid sonography as an extension of the bedside examination in hyperthyroidism
title_full_unstemmed Thyroid sonography as an extension of the bedside examination in hyperthyroidism
title_sort thyroid sonography as an extension of the bedside examination in hyperthyroidism
publisher Poznan University of Medical Sciences
series Journal of Medical Science
issn 2353-9798
2353-9801
publishDate 2020-12-01
description In this mini-review, we discuss the role of thyroid sonography as a ‘point-of-care’ tool for assessing and managing patients with (suspected) hyperthyroidism who present to the endocrine outpatient clinic. A thyroid ultrasound may aid in distinguishing between hyperthyroidism and destructive thyroiditis. The presence of intense vascularity (‘thyroid inferno’) on the power Doppler has a very high positive predictive value in identifying hyperthyroidism. It may also allow for the sub-classification of hyperthyroidism into autoimmune and nodular hyperthyroidism. It is important to identify the presence of thyroid nodules at an early stage, as this may influence management. Toxic nodules requires definitive treatment, as well as the presence of nodules in Graves’ disease because of increased risk of malignancy. Current guidelines on hyperthyroidism do not clearly state thyroid sonography as a first line investigation, although recent authoritative reviews point in that direction. Given the aforementioned benefits of thyroid sonography, alongside the reduced costs and widespread availability of high-resolution (including portable) ultrasound devices, there is an argument for thyroid sonography to be applied as a first line investigation for all patients with hyperthyroidism. Endocrinologists trained in thyroid sonography could perform this as an extension of their clinical examination when patients first present with hyperthyroidism at the endocrine clinic.
topic hyperthyroidism
graves
sonography
ultrasound
point-of-care
url https://jms.ump.edu.pl/index.php/JMS/article/view/482
work_keys_str_mv AT angeloskyriacou thyroidsonographyasanextensionofthebedsideexaminationinhyperthyroidism
AT panayiotisaeconomides thyroidsonographyasanextensionofthebedsideexaminationinhyperthyroidism
AT akheelasyed thyroidsonographyasanextensionofthebedsideexaminationinhyperthyroidism
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