A hyperthyroid patient with bloody pericardial effusion is presented. He was hospitalized for severe dyspnea. Pericardiocentesis yielded 1.2 liters of bloody fluid. Biochemical, cytologic, and radiologic examinations failed to identify the etiology of the effusion. Upon normalization of thyroid function using antithyroid drugs, the pericardial effusion resolved without recurrence. The patient was diagnosed as Graves' disease, which rarely is complicated by bloody pericardial effusion. As it is rarely reported and not widely known, this association may be underdiagnosed. (Internal Medicine 44: 1064-1068, 2005)
A 46-year-old woman with chronic thyroiditis who had been receiving thyroid hormone treatment for 10yr developed severe hypothyroidism (FT4 0.37ng/dl, FT3 1.38pg/ml, TSH 151.00 /iU/ml) following tumor necrosis factor-cc (TNF) infusion for the treatment of a compli cated cutaneous T-cell lymphoma. Indirect immunofluorescence staining of thyroid follicular cells showed aberrant expression of HLA class II antigens. The mechanisms underlying the exacerbation of the hypothyroidism may be an augmentation of immunological processes in the thyroid and a direct action of TNF on the synthesis and secretion of thyroid hormone.
We herein report a 31-year-old Japanese woman with evolving hypopituitarism due to pituitary stalk transection syndrome. She had a history of short stature treated with growth hormone (GH) in childhood and had hypothyroidism and primary amenorrhea at 20 years old. Levothyroxine replacement and recombinant follicle stimulating hormone-human chorionic gonadotropin (FSH-hCG) therapy for ovulation induction were started. GH replacement therapy (GHRT) was resumed when she was 26 years old. She developed mild adrenocortical insufficiency at 31 years old. She succeeded in becoming pregnant and delivered twice. GHRT was partially continued during pregnancy and stopped at the end of the second trimester without any complications.
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