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QJM Advance Access originally published online on September 10, 2008
QJM 2008 101(12):943-947; doi:10.1093/qjmed/hcn111
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© The Author 2008. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Association of Physicians. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oxfordjournals.org

Thyrotoxicosis and acute abdomen—still as defying and misunderstood today? Brief observations over the recent decade

M.K.-S. Leow, D.E.-K. Chew, M. Zhu and P.-C. Soon

From the Department of Endocrinology, Division of Medicine, Tan Tock Seng Hospital, 11 Jalan Tan Tock Seng, Singapore 308433

Address correspondence to M.K.-S. Leow, Department of Endocrinology, Tan Tock Seng Hospital, 11 Jalan Tan Tock Seng, Singapore 308433. email: mleowsj{at}massmed.org

Received 20 October 2007 and in revised form 16 August 2008


   Abstract

Background: Clinicians managing thyrotoxic patients with acute abdomen face challenging diagnostic and risky therapeutic dilemmas.

Aim: To analyse the frequency of medical vs. surgical acute abdomen, and to characterize the poorly understood thyrotoxic medical acute abdomen phenomenon.

Design: Retrospective review of case notes.

Methods: All case files with a simultaneous diagnosis of thyrotoxicosis and acute abdomen admitted between 1994 and 2004 were traced and audited.

Results: Thirteen had a history of thyrotoxicosis while 12 were newly diagnosed. The commonest cause was Graves’ disease. Twenty-three (92%) cases were thyrotoxic, of whom six (24%) had thyroid crisis, while two (8%) had subclinical thyrotoxicosis. The provisional diagnosis of acute abdomen was correct in 14 cases (56%), but discordant with the final diagnosis in 11 cases (44%). Eight cases (32%) without any demonstrable pathology were medical, vs. four (16%) with surgical acute abdomen, while 11(44%) had gastritis, hepatobiliary–pancreatic disorders or diverticulitis conservatively managed. The epigastrium and/or central abdomen (72.7%) were the commonest affected regions in medical acute abdomen.

Conclusions: Although the majority of acute abdomen in thyrotoxicosis was medical in nature, our experience indicates that surgical conditions were not uncommon. Thus, serious causes requiring life-saving surgery should be excluded before attributing it to medical acute abdomen.


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