Availability:
Tab Carbimazole 5mg
Tab Propylthiouracil 50mg
*Methimazole and Carbimazole are interchangeable (10mg Carbimazole = 6mg Methimazole)
Thionamides:
- Thionamide compounds inhibit thyroid hormone synthesis.
- They are actively transported into the thyroid gland where they inhibit both the organification of iodine to tyrosine residues in thyroglobulin and the coupling of iodotyrosines
Methimazole
(MMI)
- MMI is usually preferred over PTU
because it reverses hyperthyroidism more quickly and has fewer side
effects.
- MMI requires an average of six
weeks to lower T4 levels to normal and is often given before radioactive
iodine treatment.
- MMI can be taken once per day.
- MMI is less likely than PTU to be associated with failure of radioiodine therapy when thionamides are given to normalize thyroid function before radioiodine treatment
Propylthiouracil
(PTU)
- PTU does not reverse
hyperthyroidism as rapidly as MMI and it has more side effects.
- Because of its potential for
liver damage, it is used only when MMI or carbimazole are not appropriate.
- PTU must be taken two to three
times per the day.
- indications for PTU:
- - In pregnant women during their first trimester
- - In patients with life-threatening thyrotoxicosis or thyroid storm (because of PTU's ability to inhibit peripheral conversion of T4 to T3)
- - In patients with adverse reactions to MMI (other than agranulocytosis) who are not candidates for radioiodine or surgery
Antithyroid
drugs during pregnancy
- PTU used to be the drug of choice
during pregnancy because it causes less severe birth defects than
methimazole.
- But experts now recommend that PTU be given during the first trimester only. This is because there have been rare cases of liver damage in people taking PTU.
- After the first
trimester, women should switch to methimazole for the rest of the
pregnancy.
- For women who are nursing,
methimazole is probably a better choice than PTU (to avoid liver side
effects).
Dosing
|
Carbimazole
|
PTU
|
Initial
|
|
|
Maintenance
|
|
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Monitoring
|
|
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Assessment
|
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Beta Blockers
- beta-blocker should be started (assuming there are no contraindications to its use) in most patients as soon as the diagnosis of hyperthyroidism is made, even before determining the cause of the hyperthyroidism.
- Beta-adrenergic blockade should be given to elderly patients with symptomatic thyrotoxicosis and to other thyrotoxic patients with resting heart rates in excess of 90 bpm or coexistent cardiovascular disease.
- leads to a decrease in heart rate, systolic blood pressure, muscle weakness, and tremor, as well as improvement in the degree of irritability, emotional lability, and exercise intolerance
- They should be continued until resolution of hyperthyroidism.
- relative/absolute contraindication - asthma or chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, severe peripheral vascular disease, Raynaud phenomenon, bradycardia, second or third degree heart block, and hypoglycemia-prone diabetics in whom the early warning symptoms of hypoglycemia may be masked
- Patients with relative contraindications to beta blockade may better tolerate beta1-selective drugs such as atenolol or metoprolol
References:
- My Blue Book
- Lexicomp
- Medscape
- http://www.uptodate.com
- https://www.aace.com/files/hyper-guidelines-2011.pdf
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