Newly diagnosed thyrotoxicosis in hospitalized patients: Clinical characteristics

Prima Rotman-Pikielny*, O. Borodin, R. Zissin, R. Ness-Abramof, Y. Levy

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

12 Scopus citations

Abstract

Background: Thyrotoxicosis is often diagnosed in an outpatient setting. The most common symptoms include irritability, heat intolerance, palpitations and weakness. Sometimes, however, thyrotoxicosis is first diagnosed in the hospital setting. The prevalent symptoms in hospitalized patients with newly diagnosed thyrotoxicosis have not been fully characterized. Aim: To determine the clinical characteristics of patients with thyrotoxicosis newly diagnosed during hospitalization. Design: A retrospective computer-based search was undertaken to detect patients that were hospitalized in our medical centre during 1999-2006, and discharged with thyrotoxicosis or thyroiditis as the primary diagnosis. Results: Fifty-eight patients (36F/22M; mean age 52.1 ± 17.5 years) were identified. Weakness, weight loss and palpitations were the most common manifestations (50, 40 and 35%, respectively) and were predominantly present in patients with hyperthyroidism. Sore throat was present in 41% of patients with thyroiditis. Sinus tachycardia and atrial fibrillation occurred in 65.5 and 15.5% of the patients, more common in those with hyperthyroidism. The diagnoses on discharge were Graves' disease, subacute thyroiditis and multinodular goiter in 39.7, 34.5 and 8.9%, respectively. Conclusions: Weakness, weight loss and palpitations were the main symptoms in patients diagnosed with thyrotoxicosis during hospitalization. Thyrotoxicosis should be included in the differential diagnosis when patients are admitted to the hospital with those symptoms.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)871-874
Number of pages4
JournalQJM: An International Journal of Medicine
Volume101
Issue number11
DOIs
StatePublished - 2008

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