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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

How total thyroxine and thyroid exam relate in hyperthyroid

By Wehner, Astrid et al.·Published in Journal of feline medicine and surgery·2019·Clinic of Small Animal Medicine, Germany·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Relationship between total thyroxine, thyroid palpation and a clinical index in hyperthyroid and healthy cats and cats with other diseases.

Species:
cat

Plain-English summary

A group of hyperthyroid cats, which often show symptoms like weight loss and increased appetite, were examined to see how their thyroid glands felt during a physical exam and how this related to their thyroid hormone levels. The study found that nearly 80% of these cats had noticeable thyroid glands, but they were smaller than expected. Interestingly, cats with more severe symptoms had lower thyroid hormone levels. This suggests that while a palpable thyroid gland can indicate hyperthyroidism, it doesn't always correlate with hormone levels. If your cat is showing signs of hyperthyroidism, it's important to discuss these findings with your vet for proper diagnosis and treatment.

People also search for: cat hyperthyroidism symptoms · how to treat hyperthyroid cat · palpable thyroid gland in cats

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: Present-day diagnosis of hyperthyroidism is often established in the early stages where clinical signs and physical examination findings typically associated with the disease may not yet be present. The purpose of this study was to investigate thyroid palpation score (TPS), total thyroxine (T4), body weight, body condition score and a clinical scoring index, which assesses severity of illness and quality of life, in untreated hyperthyroid cats, healthy cats and cats with non-thyroidal illness. METHODS: Fifty-five cats with hyperthyroidism, 45 healthy cats and 327 euthyroid cats with non-thyroidal disease were prospectively enrolled. A Kruskal-Wallis test was used to determine any differences between metric data. A χtest was applied to compare nominal data between the three subgroups. Correlation between two variables was analysed using Spearman's correlation coefficient. RESULTS: Almost 80% of the hyperthyroid cats and up to 20% of the healthy cats and cats with non-thyroidal illness had a palpable thyroid gland. Median TPS in hyperthyroid cats was 2, which was significantly higher compared with the other groups. Although there was a significant correlation between TPS and T4 when evaluating all cats, this could not be demonstrated in the three subgroups. Hyperthyroid cats with larger thyroid glands (TPS >3) did not have higher T4 levels. Hyperthyroid cats with lower clinical scores had significantly higher T4 levels compared with hyperthyroid cats with higher scores. Hyperthyroid cats were older and had lower body weights and body condition scores than other cats. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: Hyperthyroid cats were commonly found to have palpable thyroid glands, but they were smaller than previously reported.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/30328752/