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Query: UMLS:C0002962 (angina)
21,142 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Cardiac arrhythmias may often be of the thyroid origin. It is so-called thyroid-cardiac syndrome which may also be manifested by the circulatory failure and angina pectoris. The authors have been observed 54 cases of such arrhythmias; they have frequently been manifested by the paroxysmal tachycardia, extrasystolic beats, and paroxysmal or stable atrial fibrillation. Diagnosis of such arrhythmias may be difficult in case of the masked hyperthyroidism being its only clinical symptom. In order to establish a proper diagnosis the following tests of thyroid gland functioning have been carried out: TRH-TSH, scintigraphy and ultrasound examination of the thyroid gland. TRH-TSH test enables to detect disorders of hypophyseal-thyroidal regulation characteristic for both overt and masked hyperthyroidism. Scintigraphic examination reveals autonomic nodules of the thyroid glands being frequently a cause of cardiac arrhythmias. Ultrasound examination enables confirmation of the diagnosed autonomic thyroid nodules without TSH test. In the majority of cases of cardiac arrhythmias therapy with radioactive iodine isotope was introduced. Some patients with appropriate indications have been treated surgically after proper preparation. Pharmacological treatment in thyroid-cardiac syndrome produces transient and instable result.
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PMID:[Current diagnosis and treatment of cardiac arrhythmias of thyroid origin]. 281 77

Amiodarone is an antiarrhythmic agent with high iodine content. Ten patients treated with amiodarone developed thyrotoxicosis. I131 uptakes were negligible, and TT3 levels low in relation to TT4 levels, and sometimes even normal. Cessation of amiodarone caused thyroid functions to return to normal in one to five months, unrelated to propylthiouracil treatment. Eight of the patients had normal thyroid glands on radioscan or palpation. All patients tested had normal TRH tests. Thyrotoxicosis is a relatively common complication of amiodarone treatment, probably caused by its high iodine content. It is possible in apparently normal thyroid glands, suggesting failure of the homeostatic mechanisms controlling thyroid synthesis and release in these patients. Amiodarone is very efficient in controlling tachyarrhythmias and angina pectoris, situations in which thyrotoxicosis is dangerous. Thyroid function tests should therefore be drawn periodically, and the complication considered whenever tachyarrhythmias worsen on treatment with amiodarone.
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PMID:Thyrotoxicosis induced by amiodarone, a new efficient antiarrhythmic drug with high iodine content. 646 85