| Literature DB >> 34489870 |
Shir Lynn Lim1, Kangjie Wang2, Pak Ling Lui3, Kollengode Ramanathan4,5, Samantha Peiling Yang2,6.
Abstract
Thyroid storm is a rare but life-threatening endocrinological emergency with significant mortality ranging from 10-30% with multi-organ involvement and failure. In view of the rarity of this condition and efficacy of established first line medical treatment, use of extra-corporeal treatments are uncommon, not well-studied, and its available evidence exists only from case reports and case series. We describe a 28-year-old man who presented with an out-of-hospital cardiac arrest secondary to thyroid storm. Despite conventional first-line pharmacotherapy, he developed cardiogenic shock and circulatory collapse with intravenous esmolol infusion, as well as multi-organ failure. He required therapeutic plasma exchange, concurrent renal replacement therapy, and veno-arterial extra-corporeal membrane oxygenation, one of the few reported cases in the literature. While there was clinical stabilization and improvement in tri-iodothyronine levels on three extra-corporeal systems, he suffered irreversible hypoxic-ischemic brain injury. We reviewed the use of early therapeutic plasma exchange and extra-corporeal membrane oxygenation, as well as the development of other novel extra-corporeal modalities when conventional pharmacotherapy is unsuccessful or contraindicated. This case also highlights the complexities in the management of thyroid storm, calling for caution with beta-blockade use in thyrocardiac disease, with close monitoring and prompt organ support.Entities:
Keywords: continuous renal replacement therapy; extra-corporeal membrane oxygenation; multi-organ failure; out-of-hospital cardiac arrest; therapeutic plasma exchange; thyroid storm
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34489870 PMCID: PMC8417732 DOI: 10.3389/fendo.2021.725559
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Endocrinol (Lausanne) ISSN: 1664-2392 Impact factor: 5.555
Figure 1Timeline of key clinical events. T4, thyroxine; T3, tri-iodothyronine; TSH, thyroid-stimulating hormone; NG, nasogastric; IV, intravenous; PTU, propylthiouracil; NaI, sodium iodide; VA-ECMO, veno-arterial extra-corporeal membrane oxygenation; CRRT, continuous renal replacement therapy; TPE, therapeutic plasma exchange; MMZ, methimazole.
Figure 2Concurrent CRRT, VA-ECMO and TPE. O2, oxygen, CO2, carbon dioxide, others as per .
Summary of cases with use of ECMO and other extra-corporeal systems in patients with severe thyrotoxicosis or thyroid storm.
| Study | Patient gender | Patient age | Indication for ECMO | Duration of ECMO | Pre-ECMO LVEF | Post-ECMO LVEF | Other extra-corporeal system used | Biochemical response after extra-corporeal treatment | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Koh et al. ( | Male | 44 | PEA collapse with shock | ~3 days | 20-25% | – | TPE (4 cycles), CRRT | fT4 from 57 to 22pmol/L; | Survived. |
| Wong et al. ( | Male | 44 | Recurrent PEA collapse | 3 days | 20% | 35% | TPE (3 days) | fT4 from 61.3 to 22.0pmol/L; | Survived. |
| Eyadiel et al. ( | Female | 27 | Cardiogenic shock | 6 days | <10% |
| TPE (3 cycles) | Survived. | |
| Manuel et al. ( | Male | 26 | PEA collapse with shock | 24 hours | – |
| TPE (2 cycles) |
| Survived. |
| Chao et al. ( | Male | 47 | Refractory shock | 19-115.6 hours (mean 82 hours) | 20-40% | 38-64% (mean 55%) on day 6 | – | – | Expired, from multi-organ failure |
| Male | 43 | – | Expired, from hepatic failure | ||||||
| Female | 37 |
| Survived | ||||||
| Male | 42 | Survived | |||||||
| Female | 33 | Survived | |||||||
| Hsu et al. ( | Male | 47 | Cardiogenic shock | 19 hours | 32% | – | – | – | Expired |
| Male | 43 | PEA collapse | 114 hours | 20% | 64% | fT4 31.1pmol/L at baseline; | Survived | ||
| Female | 37 | PEA collapse | 94 hours | 32% | 60% | fT4 96.5 improved to 19.3pmol/L | Survived | ||
| Male | 42 | Shock | 102 hours | 29% | 58% | fT4 57.9 improved to 18.3pmol/L | Survived | ||
| White et al. ( | Female | 57 | PEA collapse | 10 days | <10% | 20-30% | – | Clinical improvement. | Survived |
| Pong et al. ( | Male | 33 | Cardiogenic shock | 4 days | 10% | 51% | – | fT4 55pmol/L, normalized after 1 week | Survived |
| Female | 35 | Cardiogenic shock | 4 days | 17% | 52% | – | fT4 44pmol/L, normalized after 4 days | Survived | |
| Allencheril et al. ( | Male | 29 | PEA collapse | 7 days | <20% | 45-49% | – | Clinical improvement. | Survived |
| Kiriyama et al. ( | Female | 54 | Cardiogenic shock | 18 days | <20% |
| – |
| Survived |
| Kim et al. ( | Male | 52 | Cardiogenic shock | 6 days | <20% | 40% | – |
| Survived |
| Genev et al. ( | Female | 37 | Cardiogenic shock | 8 days | 30% | 35% | – | fT4 from 60.5 to 12.9pmol/L; | Survived |
| Voll et al. ( | Female | 35 | Recurrent PEA collapse with shock | 3 days | <20% |
| – |
| Survived. |
| Chao et al. ( | Female | 35 | PEA collapse | 65 hours | 5% | 65% | – |
| Survived |
| Al-Saadi et al. ( | Male | 29 | Cardiac arrest | 6 days | <20% | – | – |
| Survived |
| Kauth et al. ( | Male | 53 | PEA collapse | 12 days | – |
| – |
| Survived |
| Karahalios et al. ( | Female | 29 | PEA collapse | 2 weeks |
|
| – |
| Survived |
| Starobin et al. ( | Male | 33 | Cardiogenic shock | – | 10% |
| – | – | Survived |
‘*’ denotes incomplete data from articles, while ‘-’ denotes absence of reported data.