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Thyroid Eye Disease (TED)-Definition, Symptoms and Treatment

Definition of Thyroid Eye Disease

People with thyroid disease sometimes develop an eye condition that causes the immune system to attack the muscles and other tissues around the eyes. This inflammation can cause the eyeballs to bulge from their sockets. Rarely, it can be severe enough to cause vision loss.

There are many different names you might find for the autoimmune eye condition that is often seen in people with thyroid disease. These names include:

Graves’ eye disease or thyroid eye disease is an autoimmune condition in which immune cells attack the thyroid gland which responds by secreting an excess amount of thyroid hormone. As a result, the thyroid gland enlarges and excess hormones increase metabolism.

Thyroid eye disease

The hypermetabolic state is characterized by fast pulse/heartbeat, palpitations, profuse sweating, high blood pressure, irritability, fatigue, weight loss, heat intolerance, and loss of hair and alterations in hair quality. When the immune system attacks the tissues around the eyes, it causes the eye muscles or fat to expand.

Thyroid eye disease

Pathophysiology

The pathogenesis of TED is a complex immunological process involving the TSH-receptor, fibroblasts, adipocytes, and a cytokine-mediated immunologic response. Orbital fibroblasts are a key component in modulating the orbital inflammatory process.  Up-regulation and production of glycosaminoglycans and adipogenisis play a major role in orbital pathology.

Thyroid Eye Disease Risk factors

Causes of Thyroid Eye Disease

Mechanism of TED

TED is caused by an inflammatory response involving the tissues in and around the eye socket.

Symptoms

In Graves’ eye disease, the tissue around the eye is attacked, and the result is inflammation and swelling, causing:

Progressive swelling may cause:

The muscles around the eye are particularly susceptible to the attack of lymphocytes. As they tighten and lose their ability to stretch, these symptoms can occur:

As symptoms build, many patients fear they will lose their vision. Fortunately, patients almost never go blind from Graves’ eye disease.

Complications of Thyroid Eye Disease

Most people do not develop permanent complications. However, where treatment is delayed or where the thyroid eye disease has been severe, there can be lasting effects. They are also more likely in older people, in those who smoke and in people with diabetes. Possible complications include:

Complications from the disease

Complications from treatment

Side-effects from the immunosuppressive medicines and surgery:

Diagnosis and test

Thyroid eye disease is typically diagnosed based on medical history and presenting symptoms.

Difference between the normal eye and thyroid eye

Treatment and medications

It is common for thyroid eye disease to fluctuate within the first one to two years of the disease. Beyond this time, the disease tends to stabilize. Medical therapy (immunosuppression and radiotherapy) are more effective in the active phase of the disease while surgical treatment is usually reserved for patients in the inactive phase.

It is important for you to be seen and treated by a physician for the underlying thyroid disease throughout this period. Although thyroid eye disease tends to improve with good thyroid hormone control, this is not always the case, and consultation with an ophthalmologist is necessary.

Local Therapy

Tear substitutes and lubricants help to protect the surface of the eye from drying. Taping your eyelids closed at night is also helpful. Sleeping on extra pillows helps to reduce swelling around the eyes.

Double vision can be troublesome if it affects straightforward and down-looking positions (as in reading). Special lenses called prisms may relieve this.

Immunosuppression

Your physician will advise you on a suitable treatment for thyroid disease. Steroids are used in selected cases. The effect of steroids is temporary and once it is stopped, systems often rebound. Steroids cause many undesirable side effects when used over a long period of time.

While you are on steroid treatment, your physician will monitor you for side effects which include obesity, gastric symptoms and bleeding, aggravation of diabetes and high blood pressure and decreased resistance to infection.

Radiation

Radiation is an effective way of reducing swelling of tissue around the eye and relieving compression of the optic nerve. The therapeutic dose used is low and it is usually not associated with significant adverse effects.

Surgery      

When vision is threatened, early lid or orbital surgery may be necessary. Otherwise, surgery is usually reserved for stable, inactive disease with the following complications:

Thyroid eye disease should be treated by ophthalmic surgeons who specialise in conditions affecting the eyelids and socket.

Prevention of Thyroid Eye Disease

To prevent TED from getting worse? Three things you can do are:

Ask your doctor for advice on how to stop, or enroll on a quit-smoking program. Patients with TED who continue to smoke respond less well to treatments, but this disadvantage seems to disappear soon after giving up smoking. Also non-smokers or ex-smokers are more likely to be cured of their thyroid over-activity after a course of Carbimazole (CMZ) or Propylthiouracil (PTU) treatment, than smokers.

Avoid fluctuations in your thyroid levels– Particularly hypothyroidism. Make sure that you have thyroid blood tests regularly, and follow the advice given by your doctor about when and how to take your medication. This will make sure that your thyroid levels remain normal and steady, which will give your eyes the best chance of healing and improve the way you feel.

Selenium supplements- Evidence suggests that patients with mild active TED may benefit from a six month course of selenium supplements at a dose of 100mcg twice daily which you can buy over the counter.

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