Thyroid storm
Background
- Mortality
- Without treatment: 80-100%
- With treatment: 15-50%
Precipitants
- Infection
- Trauma
- Surgery
- DKA
- Withdrawal of thyroid medication
- Iodine administration
- MI
- CVA
- PE
Diagnosis
- Classic Triad:
- Hyperthermia
- Tachycardia
- AMS
- Agitation, confusion, delirium stupor, coma, seizure
- May also have:
- CHF
- Palpitations
- Dyspnea
- Increased pulse pressure
- A-fib
Burch & Wartofsky Diagnostic Criteria
I. Thermoregulatory dysfunction (Temperature)
| Temp | Points |
| 99-99.9 | 5 |
| 100-100.9 | 10 |
| 101-101.9 | 15 |
| 102-102.9 | 20 |
| 103-103.9 | 25 |
| 104.0 | 30 |
II. Central nervous system effects
| Mild (Agitation) | 10pts |
| Moderate (delirium, psychosis, extreme lethargy) | 20pts |
| Severe (seizure, coma) | 30pts |
III. Gastrointestinal-hepatic dysfunction
| Moderate (diarrhea, n/v, abd pain) | 10pts |
| Severe (unexplained jaundice) | 20pts |
IV. Cardiovascular dysfunction (tachycardia)
| 99-109 | 5pts |
| 110-119 | 10pts |
| 120-129 | 15pts |
| 130-139 | 20pts |
| 140 | 25pts |
V. Congestive heart failure
| Mild (pedal edema) | 5pts |
| Moderate (bibasilar rales) | 10pts |
| Severe (pulm edema, A. fib) | 15pts |
VI. Precipitant history
| Negative | 0pts |
| Positive | 10pts |
Scoring
- >45 = Highly suggestive of thyroid storm
- 25-44 = Suggestive of impending storm
- <25 = Unlikely to represent storm
DDX
- Infection
- Sympathomimetic ingestion (cocaine, amphetamine, ketamine)
- Heat exhaustion
- Heat stroke
- Delirium tremens
- Malignant hyperthermia
- Malignant neuroleptic syndrome
- Hypothalamic stroke
- Pheochromocytoma
- Medication withdrawal (cocaine, opioids)
- Psychosis
- Organophosphate poisoning
Work-Up
- Chemistry
- CBC
- TSH/Free T3/T4
- Cortisol level (rule-out concurrent adrenal insufficiency)
- ECG
- Rule-out infection:
- CXR
- Blood culture
Treatment
- Supportive care
- Fever
- Cooling measures, acetaminophen (avoid aspirin)
- Dehydration/hypoglycemia
- D5NS (most pts have depleted glycogen stores)
- Cardiac decompensation (CHF, A-fib)
- Rate control, inotropes, diuretics as needed
- Fever
- Block beta-adrenergic tone and peripheral T4>T3 conversion
- Contraindications are same as for other medical conditions (e.g. CHF)
- Propranolol PO 60-80 q4hr (if pt can tolerate PO) OR
- Propranolol IV 1mg over 10 min; if tolerates then 1-3mg boluses q3hr OR
- Esmolol 250-500mcg/kg loading dose, then 50-100mcg/kg/min
- Block new hormone synthesis
- PTU 600-1000 mg PO or PR followed by 200-250mg q4hr
- Preferred to methimazole b/c also blocks T4>T3 conversion
- Methimazole 20-25mg q4hr
- Longer acting than PTU
- PTU 600-1000 mg PO or PR followed by 200-250mg q4hr
- Block hormone release
- Wolff-Chaikoff effect: incr iodine concentration leads to transient decrease of T3/T4
- Likely due to suppression of already-formed thyroid hormone release
- Potassium iodide
- Give 1hr after PTU
- 1st line
- 5 gtt q6hr
- Avoid potassium iodide if patient is on amiodarone
- Lithium
- Consider if iodine allergic
- 300mg q6hr
- Wolff-Chaikoff effect: incr iodine concentration leads to transient decrease of T3/T4
- Treat possible adrenal insufficiency (also blocks T4>T3)
- Hydrocortisone 100-300mg IV bolus, followed by 100mg q8hr
- Identify precipitant
Disposition
- Admission to ICU
See Also
Sources
- Tintinalli
- UpToDate
- Burch, HB, Wartofsky, L, Endocrinol Metab Clin North Am 1993; 22:263
- Rosen
