Graves' disease may present clinically with one or more of these characteristic signs: • Rapid heartbeat (80%) • Diffuse palpable goiter with audible
bruit (70%) • Tremor (40%) •
Exophthalmos (protuberance of one or both eyes), periorbital edema (25%) • Fatigue (70%), weight loss (60%) with increased appetite in young people and poor appetite in the elderly, and other symptoms of hyperthyroidism/
thyrotoxicosis • Heat intolerance (55%) • Tremulousness (55%) • Palpitations (50%) Two signs are truly diagnostic of Graves' disease (i.e., not seen in other hyperthyroid conditions): exophthalmos and non-pitting edema (
pretibial myxedema). Goiter is an enlarged thyroid gland and is of the diffuse type (i.e., spread throughout the gland). Diffuse goiter may be seen with other causes of hyperthyroidism, although Graves' disease is the most common cause of diffuse goiter. A large goiter will be visible to the naked eye, but a small one (mild enlargement of the gland) may be detectable only by physical examination. Occasionally, goiter is not clinically detectable, but may be seen only with
computed tomography or
ultrasound examination of the thyroid. Another sign of Graves' disease is hyperthyroidism, that is, overproduction of the thyroid hormones T3 and T4. Normal thyroid levels are also seen, and occasionally hypothyroidism, which may assist in causing goiter (though it is not the cause of Graves' disease). Hyperthyroidism in Graves' disease is confirmed, as with any other cause of hyperthyroidism, by measuring elevated blood levels of free (unbound) T4. Other useful laboratory measurements in Graves' disease include thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH, usually undetectable in Graves' disease due to
negative feedback from the elevated T3 and T4), and protein-bound
iodine (elevated).
Serologically detected thyroid-stimulating antibodies, radioactive iodine uptake, or thyroid
ultrasound with Doppler, all can independently confirm a diagnosis of Graves' disease.
Biopsy to obtain histological testing is not normally required, but may be obtained if thyroidectomy is performed. The goiter in Graves' disease is often not nodular, but
thyroid nodules are also common. Differentiating common forms of hyperthyroidism, such as Graves' disease, single
thyroid adenoma, and
toxic multinodular goiter is important to determine proper treatment.
Eye disease Thyroid-associated ophthalmopathy (TAO), or thyroid eye disease (TED), is the most common extrathyroidal manifestation of Graves' disease. It is a form of
idiopathic lymphocytic orbital inflammation, and although its pathogenesis is not completely understood, autoimmune activation of orbital
fibroblasts, which in TAO express the
TSH receptor, is thought to play a central role.
Hypertrophy of the extraocular muscles,
adipogenesis, and deposition of nonsulfated
glycosaminoglycans and hyaluronate, causes expansion of the orbital fat and muscle compartments, which within the confines of the bony orbit may lead to
dysthyroid optic neuropathy, increased
intraocular pressures, proptosis, venous congestion leading to chemosis and periorbital edema, and progressive remodeling of the orbital walls. Other distinctive features of TAO include lid retraction, restrictive myopathy, superior limbic keratoconjunctivitis, and
exposure keratopathy. Severity of eye disease may be classified by the mnemonic: "NO SPECS": • Class 0: No signs or symptoms • Class 1: Only signs (limited to upper lid retraction and stare, with or without lid lag) • Class 2: Soft tissue involvement (
oedema of
conjunctivae and lids, conjunctival injection, etc.) • Class 3:
Proptosis • Class 4:
Extraocular muscle involvement (usually with
diplopia) • Class 5: Corneal involvement (primarily due to
lagophthalmos) • Class 6: Sight loss (due to optic nerve involvement) Typically, the natural history of TAO follows Rundle's curve, which describes a rapid worsening during an initial phase, up to a peak of maximum severity, and then improvement to a static plateau without, however, resolving back to a normal condition. ==Management==