Conditions » Condition

Hyperthyroidism

Hyperthyroidism affects approximately 1-2% of the population, causing a hypermetabolic state with symptoms ranging from weight loss and rapid heartbeat to anxiety and tremors. Early detection through TSH testing identifies this highly treatable condition before serious cardiac and bone complications develop.

If hypothyroidism is like driving with the brakes on, hyperthyroidism is like driving with the accelerator stuck to the floor. The thyroid gland, normally a precise regulator of metabolism, produces excessive hormone, pushing every system in the body into overdrive. Heart rate increases, metabolism accelerates, body temperature rises, and the nervous system becomes hyperactive. The result is a state of hypermetabolism that, while sometimes subtle initially, can become debilitating and even dangerous if left untreated.

Hyperthyroidism affects approximately 1-2% of the population, making it less common than hypothyroidism but still a significant health concern. Like its counterpart, hyperthyroidism predominantly affects women — about 5-10 times more frequently than men. The condition can occur at any age but is most commonly diagnosed in adults between 20 and 50 years old.

The most common cause of hyperthyroidism is Graves’ disease, an autoimmune condition in which antibodies stimulate the thyroid to produce excessive hormone. Unlike Hashimoto’s thyroiditis, which destroys the thyroid, Graves’ disease activates it. The result is an autonomous, unregulated overproduction of thyroid hormone that escapes the normal feedback control mechanisms.

The symptoms of hyperthyroidism reflect this metabolic acceleration: unexplained weight loss despite normal or increased appetite, rapid or irregular heartbeat, nervousness and anxiety, trembling hands, increased sweating, heat intolerance, frequent bowel movements, fatigue, and difficulty sleeping. In Graves’ disease specifically, eye problems (Graves’ ophthalmopathy) can occur, ranging from mild irritation to severe bulging of the eyes and vision changes.

From a prevention perspective, hyperthyroidism is important because early detection and treatment prevent serious complications. Untreated hyperthyroidism puts significant stress on the cardiovascular system, increasing the risk of atrial fibrillation, heart failure, and stroke. It accelerates bone turnover, leading to osteoporosis. In severe, untreated cases, thyroid storm — a life-threatening hypermetabolic crisis — can occur.

Detection of hyperthyroidism is straightforward: TSH testing reveals suppressed (low) TSH when excess thyroid hormone feeds back to shut down pituitary stimulation. Elevated Free T4 and/or Free T3 confirm the excess hormone production. Additional testing identifies the specific cause and guides treatment selection.

This guide provides a comprehensive overview of hyperthyroidism — from the mechanisms of thyroid hormone excess to the various causes, from recognizing symptoms to diagnostic testing, and from treatment options to long-term management and monitoring.

Quick Summary:


Understanding Hyperthyroidism

Normal Thyroid Regulation

To understand hyperthyroidism, it helps to review normal thyroid regulation. The hypothalamus releases TRH (thyrotropin-releasing hormone), which stimulates the pituitary to release TSH (thyroid-stimulating hormone). TSH then stimulates the thyroid to produce T4 and T3. When thyroid hormone levels rise, they feed back to suppress TRH and TSH release, maintaining hormone levels within a narrow range.

In hyperthyroidism, this feedback loop is disrupted. The thyroid produces excessive hormone, causing T4 and T3 levels to rise. The pituitary senses this excess and appropriately suppresses TSH production — often to undetectable levels. However, in most forms of hyperthyroidism, the thyroid is being stimulated by something other than TSH (such as antibodies in Graves’ disease) or is functioning autonomously (as in toxic nodules), so it continues producing hormone despite the lack of TSH stimulation.

Hyperthyroidism vs. Thyrotoxicosis

While often used interchangeably, these terms have slightly different meanings:

Hyperthyroidism: Specifically refers to excessive thyroid hormone production by the thyroid gland itself — the gland is “hyperactive.”

Thyrotoxicosis: A broader term referring to the clinical syndrome of excess thyroid hormone in the body, regardless of source. This includes hyperthyroidism but also includes conditions where the thyroid releases stored hormone without actually producing more (as in thyroiditis) or when excess hormone comes from an external source (excess thyroid medication).

In practice, the distinction matters because treatment differs: true hyperthyroidism may require treatments that reduce thyroid hormone production, while thyrotoxicosis from thyroiditis is often transient and requires only supportive care.


Causes of Hyperthyroidism

Understanding the cause of hyperthyroidism is essential because treatment differs depending on the underlying mechanism. The main causes fall into three categories: conditions where the thyroid is truly overproducing hormone, conditions where stored hormone is being released without new production, and external sources of excess thyroid hormone.

Graves’ Disease

Graves’ disease is the most common cause of hyperthyroidism, accounting for 60-80% of cases in iodine-sufficient areas. Named after Robert Graves, an Irish physician who described it in the 1830s, it is an autoimmune disorder in which the immune system produces antibodies that mimic TSH, binding to TSH receptors on thyroid cells and stimulating hormone production.

These antibodies, called thyroid-stimulating immunoglobulins (TSI) or TSH receptor antibodies (TRAb), are the pathogenic hallmark of Graves’ disease. Unlike TSH, which is subject to feedback regulation (high thyroid hormone suppresses TSH), these antibodies continuously stimulate the thyroid regardless of hormone levels. The result is unregulated, excessive thyroid hormone production that escapes normal physiological control.

The development of Graves’ disease involves a complex interplay of genetic susceptibility and environmental triggers. The genetic component is significant — first-degree relatives have a 5-10 fold increased risk, and concordance in identical twins is about 30-40%. Multiple genes contribute, including HLA genes (particularly HLA-DR3) and genes involved in immune regulation. Environmental triggers that may initiate disease in susceptible individuals include stress, smoking, pregnancy (particularly the postpartum period), viral infections, and possibly iodine intake.

Key features of Graves’ disease:

Graves’ ophthalmopathy (thyroid eye disease): Eye involvement occurs in about 25-50% of Graves’ patients and is the most visible manifestation of the disease. The eye disease results from autoimmune inflammation targeting tissues behind and around the eyes — the same TSH receptor antibodies that attack the thyroid also target receptors on orbital fibroblasts.

The spectrum of eye disease ranges from mild to severe:

Importantly, eye disease does not always parallel thyroid function — it can develop before, during, or after the hyperthyroid phase, and can worsen even when thyroid levels are controlled. Smoking dramatically increases the risk and severity of ophthalmopathy. Radioactive iodine treatment can worsen eye disease, particularly in smokers and those with pre-existing active ophthalmopathy.

Pretibial myxedema (thyroid dermopathy): A skin condition occurring in approximately 1-5% of Graves’ patients, almost always in those who also have ophthalmopathy. It presents as thickened, waxy, non-pitting skin typically on the anterior shins (hence “pretibial”), but can occur on feet, toes, and rarely elsewhere. Despite the confusing name “myxedema” (which usually refers to severe hypothyroidism), this occurs in hyperthyroid Graves’ disease.

Thyroid acropachy: The rarest manifestation of Graves’ disease, occurring in less than 1% of patients. It involves clubbing of the fingers and toes, soft tissue swelling of hands and feet, and characteristic bony changes. It occurs almost exclusively in patients who also have ophthalmopathy and dermopathy.

Toxic Nodular Goiter

Thyroid nodules are extremely common — present in up to 50% of adults on ultrasound — and most are benign and don’t affect thyroid function. However, some nodules become “autonomous,” producing thyroid hormone independently of TSH regulation. These autonomous nodules are usually benign adenomas (not cancer) that have acquired mutations in the TSH receptor or its downstream signaling pathways, causing constitutive activation.

Toxic adenoma (single autonomous nodule):

Toxic multinodular goiter (Plummer’s disease):

Toxic nodular goiter tends to cause milder hyperthyroidism than Graves’ disease. It does not cause ophthalmopathy or pretibial myxedema (these are specific to Graves’ autoimmunity).

Thyroiditis

Thyroiditis refers to inflammation of the thyroid. Several types can cause a transient thyrotoxic phase as stored hormone leaks from damaged thyroid cells. This is technically thyrotoxicosis (excess circulating hormone) rather than true hyperthyroidism (excess hormone production) — the thyroid isn’t making new hormone; it’s releasing what was already stored.

Subacute thyroiditis (de Quervain’s thyroiditis, granulomatous thyroiditis):

Silent (painless) thyroiditis:

Postpartum thyroiditis:

Drug-induced thyroiditis:

Other Causes

Excess thyroid hormone intake:

Iodine-induced hyperthyroidism (Jod-Basedow phenomenon):

TSH-secreting pituitary adenoma (TSHoma):

Struma ovarii:

Gestational thyrotoxicosis:


Symptoms of Hyperthyroidism

Hyperthyroidism symptoms reflect the hypermetabolic state — essentially, everything speeds up. Symptoms range from mild (often attributed to stress or anxiety) to severe and debilitating.

Classic Symptoms

SystemSymptoms
MetabolicWeight loss despite normal/increased appetite, heat intolerance, increased sweating
CardiovascularRapid heartbeat (tachycardia), palpitations, atrial fibrillation, shortness of breath
Nervous SystemAnxiety, nervousness, irritability, tremor, difficulty concentrating, insomnia
MusculoskeletalMuscle weakness (especially thighs), fatigue despite feeling “wired”
GastrointestinalIncreased bowel movements, diarrhea
Skin/HairWarm, moist skin; fine tremor of fingers; thinning hair
ReproductiveMenstrual irregularities (light periods), decreased libido, erectile dysfunction
Eyes (Graves’)Staring appearance, lid lag, eye irritation, bulging (in Graves’ ophthalmopathy)

Understanding the Symptoms

Weight loss: Despite eating normally or even more than usual, patients often lose weight — sometimes dramatically. The increased metabolic rate burns more calories. However, some patients actually gain weight because their appetite increases more than their metabolism.

Cardiovascular symptoms: The heart is exquisitely sensitive to thyroid hormone. Hyperthyroidism increases heart rate, contractility, and oxygen demand. Palpitations are common. Atrial fibrillation occurs in 10-25% of hyperthyroid patients, more commonly in older adults. Heart failure can develop, particularly in those with underlying heart disease.

Anxiety and nervousness: Patients often feel “keyed up,” restless, or anxious. They may be irritable, emotionally labile, or have difficulty relaxing. These symptoms frequently lead to misdiagnosis as an anxiety disorder.

Tremor: A fine, rapid tremor of the hands is characteristic. It’s most easily seen when the patient extends their hands and spreads their fingers, sometimes with a piece of paper placed on top to amplify the movement.

Heat intolerance: Increased metabolic heat production makes patients feel hot when others are comfortable. They may prefer cooler environments and sweat easily.

Fatigue: Paradoxically, despite the hypermetabolic state, patients often feel exhausted. They may feel “tired but wired” — exhausted yet unable to rest.

Symptoms in Special Populations

Elderly patients: May present atypically with “apathetic hyperthyroidism” — depression, fatigue, weight loss, and cardiovascular symptoms (especially atrial fibrillation) without the typical nervousness and hyperactivity. This presentation is easily missed.

Children: May present with behavioral changes, declining school performance, accelerated growth, and delayed puberty.

Thyroid Storm

Thyroid storm is a rare but life-threatening extreme of hyperthyroidism, usually triggered by stress (infection, surgery, trauma, childbirth, iodine load) in someone with untreated or poorly controlled hyperthyroidism. Features include:

Thyroid storm is a medical emergency with significant mortality if not treated immediately.


Effects on Blood Work

Thyroid Function Tests

TSH: Suppressed (low or undetectable) in primary hyperthyroidism. This is the most sensitive indicator. The excess thyroid hormone feeds back to the pituitary, shutting down TSH production.

Free T4: Elevated in most cases of hyperthyroidism. Confirms thyroid hormone excess when TSH is suppressed.

Free T3: Also elevated. Some patients have “T3 toxicosis” — elevated T3 with normal T4. T3 is often disproportionately elevated in Graves’ disease.

Pattern interpretation:

TSHFree T4Free T3Interpretation
LowHighHighOvert hyperthyroidism
LowNormalHighT3 toxicosis
LowNormalNormalSubclinical hyperthyroidism
Normal/HighHighHighTSH-secreting pituitary adenoma or thyroid hormone resistance

Antibodies and Cause Identification

TSI (Thyroid-Stimulating Immunoglobulins) or TRAb: Positive in Graves’ disease. These are the pathogenic antibodies that cause the condition. Helpful for diagnosis and may predict relapse risk.

TPO antibodies: May be positive in Graves’ disease and thyroiditis but less specific than TSI for Graves’.

Other Laboratory Findings

Lipid panel:

Liver enzymes: Mild elevation of ALT, AST, and alkaline phosphatase may occur

Glucose: May be mildly elevated; hyperthyroidism can worsen glucose control in diabetics

Calcium: May be mildly elevated due to increased bone turnover

Complete blood count: Usually normal; mild anemia possible


Diagnosis

Initial Testing

TSH: The first test for suspected hyperthyroidism. Suppressed TSH indicates thyroid hormone excess (or very rarely, central hypothyroidism, which is clinically different).

Free T4 and Free T3: If TSH is suppressed, these confirm and quantify the hormone excess.

Determining the Cause

Once hyperthyroidism is confirmed, identifying the cause guides treatment:

TSI or TRAb antibodies: Positive in Graves’ disease. If strongly positive with typical clinical features, often sufficient for diagnosis.

Radioactive iodine uptake (RAIU) and scan: A key test for differentiating causes:

Thyroid ultrasound: Evaluates thyroid size, nodules, and blood flow. Increased blood flow (thyroid inferno) suggests Graves’ disease.

When to Test

Consider hyperthyroidism testing in patients with:


Health Consequences of Untreated Hyperthyroidism

Cardiovascular Complications

The heart is particularly vulnerable to thyroid hormone excess:

Atrial fibrillation: Occurs in 10-25% of hyperthyroid patients, increasing with age. The irregular heart rhythm increases stroke risk. AF may be the presenting feature of hyperthyroidism, especially in older adults.

Heart failure: High-output heart failure can develop as the heart works harder to meet increased metabolic demands. Pre-existing heart disease worsens the risk.

Other arrhythmias: Premature beats, supraventricular tachycardia, and rarely, ventricular arrhythmias.

Angina: Increased cardiac workload and oxygen demand can provoke angina in those with coronary artery disease.

Bone Disease

Thyroid hormone excess accelerates bone turnover, leading to net bone loss:

Other Complications

Muscle weakness: Thyrotoxic myopathy can cause significant proximal muscle weakness, making it difficult to climb stairs or rise from a chair.

Neuropsychiatric effects: Anxiety, depression, cognitive impairment; rarely, thyroid-related psychosis.

Pregnancy complications: Uncontrolled hyperthyroidism increases risk of miscarriage, preterm delivery, preeclampsia, fetal growth restriction, and fetal thyroid dysfunction.


Treatment

Treatment options for hyperthyroidism include antithyroid medications, radioactive iodine ablation, and surgery. The choice depends on the underlying cause, severity, patient age, comorbidities, preferences, and specific circumstances such as pregnancy or significant eye disease. All three approaches are effective, and the “best” choice varies by individual situation.

Antithyroid Medications

Thionamide medications — methimazole and propylthiouracil (PTU) — block thyroid hormone synthesis by inhibiting the enzyme thyroid peroxidase, which is essential for incorporating iodine into thyroid hormone.

Methimazole: The preferred antithyroid drug in most situations.

Propylthiouracil (PTU):

How treatment works: These medications reduce new hormone synthesis but don’t immediately lower existing hormone levels. Circulating T4 has a half-life of about 7 days, so it takes 4-8 weeks to see full effect as existing hormone is metabolized. Beta-blockers are often used during this period to control symptoms.

Once hyperthyroidism is controlled, medication may be continued for 12-18 months in Graves’ disease to allow for possible remission. In toxic nodular disease, antithyroid medications control but don’t cure — they’re used as bridge to definitive treatment or long-term in patients who can’t have definitive treatment.

Remission in Graves’ disease: About 30-50% of patients with Graves’ disease who complete a 12-18 month course of antithyroid medication achieve long-term remission (defined as remaining euthyroid after stopping medication). Predictors of remission include: smaller goiter, milder hyperthyroidism, shorter duration of disease, lower TSI levels, and non-smoker status. The rest relapse (often within the first year of stopping medication) and require definitive treatment.

Side effects of antithyroid medications:

Comparing Treatment Options

FactorAntithyroid MedicationsRadioactive IodineSurgery
MechanismBlocks hormone synthesisDestroys thyroid tissueRemoves thyroid tissue
Speed of effect4-8 weeksWeeks to monthsImmediate
Cure rate30-50% remission (Graves’)>90%>95%
HypothyroidismRare (if dose appropriate)Expected (most patients)Expected (if total thyroidectomy)
Main advantageNon-invasive; chance of remissionDefinitive; non-surgicalDefinitive; immediate; tissue for pathology
Main disadvantageRelapse common; medication side effectsMay worsen eye disease; radiation precautionsSurgical risks; requires experienced surgeon
PregnancyCan be used (with precautions)ContraindicatedPossible in second trimester
Graves’ eye diseaseNeutralMay worsen (especially smokers)Neutral or may improve

Beta-Blockers

Beta-blockers (propranolol, atenolol, metoprolol) don’t treat hyperthyroidism itself but rapidly control symptoms — particularly rapid heart rate, palpitations, tremor, and anxiety. They’re used as adjunctive therapy while waiting for antithyroid medications to take effect or as symptom control in thyroiditis.

Radioactive Iodine (RAI) Therapy

Radioactive iodine-131 is taken orally and concentrated by the thyroid, where it delivers radiation that destroys thyroid tissue over weeks to months.

Indications: Definitive treatment for Graves’ disease (particularly after antithyroid medication failure or relapse), toxic nodular goiter, and toxic adenoma.

Outcome: Most patients become hypothyroid after RAI — this is expected and intentional. Hypothyroidism is easily treated with levothyroxine replacement. RAI effectively “cures” the hyperthyroidism but substitutes a controlled hypothyroid state.

Considerations:

Surgery (Thyroidectomy)

Surgical removal of most or all of the thyroid provides definitive treatment.

Indications:

Outcome: Total thyroidectomy causes permanent hypothyroidism requiring lifelong levothyroxine. Near-total thyroidectomy may leave minimal tissue, but hypothyroidism is still common.

Risks: Hypocalcemia (if parathyroid glands are damaged), recurrent laryngeal nerve injury (voice changes), bleeding, infection. Risks are minimized when performed by experienced thyroid surgeons.

Treatment of Thyroiditis

Thyroiditis-induced thyrotoxicosis is typically transient and self-limited. Treatment is supportive:


Living with Hyperthyroidism

The long-term outlook for hyperthyroidism is excellent with proper treatment. Most patients achieve good control and live normal, unrestricted lives.

After Definitive Treatment

Most patients who undergo radioactive iodine or surgery become hypothyroid and require lifelong levothyroxine replacement. This is not a treatment failure — it’s the expected and desired outcome, trading difficult-to-control hyperthyroidism for easily managed hypothyroidism. With proper levothyroxine replacement:

The key is consistent medication adherence and regular monitoring to ensure appropriate dosing.

Monitoring

Regular follow-up ensures ongoing control and early detection of problems:

Graves’ Eye Disease Management

Eye disease may persist, improve, or worsen independently of thyroid function. Management is multidisciplinary, often involving endocrinology and ophthalmology:

General measures:

Mild eye disease:

Moderate-to-severe or active eye disease:

Lifestyle Considerations

Diet: No specific diet treats hyperthyroidism. However:

Exercise: Once thyroid levels are controlled, normal exercise is encouraged. During uncontrolled hyperthyroidism, vigorous exercise should be limited due to cardiovascular stress.

Stress management: Stress may trigger or exacerbate Graves’ disease in susceptible individuals. Stress reduction techniques may be helpful, though evidence for their effect on thyroid disease is limited.


Hyperthyroidism in Special Populations

Pregnancy

Hyperthyroidism in pregnancy requires careful management to protect both mother and fetus:

Risks of uncontrolled hyperthyroidism:

Management:

Postpartum: Women with Graves’ disease may experience relapse postpartum as immune suppression of pregnancy reverses. Close monitoring is needed.

Elderly Patients

Hyperthyroidism in older adults presents unique challenges:

Subclinical Hyperthyroidism

Subclinical hyperthyroidism — suppressed TSH with normal Free T4 and T3 — represents a milder form that may or may not progress:


Prevention and Early Detection

True prevention of hyperthyroidism is limited because the main causes (Graves’ disease, autonomous nodules) develop through mechanisms not fully understood or preventable. However, early detection prevents complications:

Risk Factor Awareness

Know if you have increased risk:

Symptom Recognition

Seek evaluation if you experience:

Screening

Routine population screening for hyperthyroidism is not recommended. However, testing is appropriate for:

Modifiable Factors

While most causes can’t be prevented, some factors may reduce risk or severity:


Key Takeaways

Hyperthyroidism is a common and treatable condition that, if undetected, can lead to significant cardiovascular and bone complications. Early diagnosis through TSH testing and appropriate treatment effectively controls the condition.

Key points to remember:

If you have symptoms suggestive of hyperthyroidism, ask your healthcare provider about thyroid testing. Early detection and treatment prevent complications and restore quality of life.

Frequently Asked Questions
What’s the difference between Graves’ disease and hyperthyroidism?

Hyperthyroidism is the condition (overactive thyroid); Graves’ disease is the most common cause of hyperthyroidism (an autoimmune disorder causing the overactivity). You can have hyperthyroidism from causes other than Graves’ disease.

Will I need lifelong treatment?

It depends on the treatment approach. Antithyroid medications may achieve remission in some Graves’ patients. However, radioactive iodine and surgery typically result in hypothyroidism requiring lifelong thyroid hormone replacement — which is straightforward and effective.

Can hyperthyroidism come back after treatment?

After antithyroid medications alone, 50-70% of Graves’ patients eventually relapse. After RAI or surgery, true recurrence is uncommon, though inadequate ablation or incomplete surgery can leave residual hyperthyroid tissue.

Is Graves’ disease hereditary?

There’s a genetic component — autoimmune thyroid disease runs in families. However, having a family member with Graves’ disease doesn’t mean you’ll develop it; genetic susceptibility plus environmental triggers are needed.

Why do my eyes bother me even though my thyroid is treated?

Graves’ ophthalmopathy has its own course, somewhat independent of thyroid function. Eye disease can persist, progress, or even develop after hyperthyroidism is controlled. Continued smoking, RAI treatment, and unstable thyroid levels can worsen eye disease.

Can hyperthyroidism cause weight gain?

Usually hyperthyroidism causes weight loss. However, some patients actually gain weight because their appetite increases more than their metabolism. After treatment, as metabolism normalizes, patients may gain weight — sometimes prompting concern that medication dosing is wrong when it’s actually appropriate.

Is radioactive iodine safe?

RAI has been used for over 70 years with a well-established safety record. It is not associated with increased cancer risk at therapeutic doses. The main “side effect” is the expected hypothyroidism. Temporary radiation precautions are needed, and it’s contraindicated in pregnancy.

Can I get pregnant with hyperthyroidism?

Hyperthyroidism should be controlled before conception if possible. Uncontrolled hyperthyroidism increases pregnancy risks. Antithyroid medications can be used during pregnancy (PTU in first trimester, methimazole thereafter). RAI is contraindicated during pregnancy and for 6 months before conception.

Why do I still feel unwell even though my levels are normal?

It can take time for symptoms to fully resolve even after labs normalize. If symptoms persist long-term, discuss with your doctor — occasionally dose adjustments help, and sometimes other conditions coexist.

Should I avoid iodine in my diet?

Excessive iodine can exacerbate hyperthyroidism. Avoid high-iodine supplements (kelp, seaweed) and be cautious with iodine-containing contrast agents. Normal dietary iodine from iodized salt and food is generally fine.

References

This article provides comprehensive educational information about Hyperthyroidism based on current clinical guidelines and peer-reviewed research. It does not replace personalized medical advice. Consult qualified healthcare professionals for diagnosis and treatment decisions specific to your situation.

Key Sources:

  1. Ross DS, et al. 2016 American Thyroid Association Guidelines for Diagnosis and Management of Hyperthyroidism and Other Causes of Thyrotoxicosis. Thyroid. 2016;26(10):1343-1421. https://www.liebertpub.com/doi/10.1089/thy.2016.0229
  2. De Leo S, et al. Hyperthyroidism. The Lancet. 2016;388(10047):906-918. https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(16)00278-6/fulltext
  3. Kahaly GJ, et al. 2018 European Thyroid Association Guideline for the Management of Graves’ Hyperthyroidism. European Thyroid Journal. 2018;7(4):167-186. https://www.karger.com/Article/FullText/490384
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  5. Burch HB, Cooper DS. Management of Graves Disease: A Review. JAMA. 2015;314(23):2544-2554. https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jama/fullarticle/2474179
  6. American Thyroid Association. Hyperthyroidism (Overactive). https://www.thyroid.org/hyperthyroidism/
  7. Bartalena L, et al. The 2021 European Group on Graves’ Orbitopathy (EUGOGO) Clinical Practice Guidelines for the Medical Management of Graves’ Orbitopathy. European Journal of Endocrinology. 2021;185(4):G43-G67. https://eje.bioscientifica.com/view/journals/eje/185/4/EJE-21-0479.xml
  8. National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases. Hyperthyroidism (Overactive Thyroid). https://www.niddk.nih.gov/health-information/endocrine-diseases/hyperthyroidism
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