Searchable abstracts of presentations at key conferences in endocrinology
Endocrine Abstracts (2016) 41 EP1047 | DOI: 10.1530/endoabs.41.EP1047

ECE2016 Eposter Presentations Thyroid (non-cancer) (120 abstracts)

Rhabdomyolysis case based on hypothyroidism

Ihsan Ates


Ankara Numune Training and Research Hospital, Department of Internal Medicine, Ankara, Turkey.


Muscle involvement in hypothyroidism is a rare complication. These patients are often present with decreased muscle mass, cramps and myalgia. With these clinical symptoms increasing muscle enzyme suggests the rhabdomyolysis table. Rhabdomyolysis based on hypothyroidism is not a common condition. In this report, a case which detected rhabdomyolysis based on deep hypothyroidism will be discussed.

Seventy-two years old male patient applied to our clinic with the complaints of increasingly widespread muscle pain, muscle weakness and leg cramps. The patient who had total thyroidectomy based on multinodular goiter did not proceed using levothyroxine after surgery. There was no known drug, alcohol or smoking history. The patient’s vital signs during the application; body temperature 37.3°C, pulse 55/min, blood pressure 130/95 mm Hg, respiratory rate 13/min. On physical examination, cardiac and respiratory were normal, dry skin, decreased turgor tone, bilateral lower ekstremitre trace edama and palpation tenderness in the legs were available. In examined laboratory findings; urea:50 mg/dl (17–43), creatinine:1.8 mg/dl (0.5 to 1.2), calcium:6.6 mg/dl, phosphorus:5.2 mg/dl, uric acid:6.9 mg/dl, AST:94 IU/l (10–50), LDH:796 U/l (240–480), CK total:4370 U/l (<190), troponin I:0.021 ng/ml (0 to 0.15), CK-MB:8 U/l (7–25). TSH> 100 μIU/ml (0.34 to 5.6), free thyroxine<0.15 ng/dl (0.61 to 1.12), free triiodothyronine:1.04 pg/ml. 0.6 mcg/kg of levothyroxine treatment was started considiring that the patient has rhabdomyolysis based on deep hypothyroidism. Creatinine and CK returned completely back to normal range at the end of three weeks levothyroxine treatment. Rhabdomyolysis myoglobin is characterized by muscle cells element escaping into the circulation which include electrolyte and sarcoplasmic proteins. Rhabdomyolysis also known as injuries, crush syndrome, may also present rare with hypothyroidism while it is a situation usually seen after major trauma. Rhabdomyolysis based on deep hypothyroidism, developed in this patient who did not proceed using levothyroxine after total thyroidectomy in this case report.

Article tools

My recent searches

No recent searches.

My recently viewed abstracts