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Endocrine Abstracts (2017) 50 EP114 | DOI: 10.1530/endoabs.50.EP114

SFEBES2017 ePoster Presentations Thyroid (14 abstracts)

An interesting case of cryptogenic stroke in the setting of Graves' disease

Dana Ershaid 1 , Kofi Obuobie 1 , Khalid Ali 1 & Nadal Aker 2


1Aneurin Bevan Health Board - Royal Gwent Hospital, Cardiff, UK; 2Decatur Memorial Hospital, Decatur Illinois, USA.


Background: Ischemic stroke is an unusual but important complication of Graves’ Thyrotoxicosis that is induced by the hypoercoaguable state of thyrotoxicosis.

We present a 24-year old female patient admitted with a 3-day history of intermittent slurred speech associated with numbness of the right side of her mouth and face preceded by left sided headache.

She had a history of uncontrolled Graves’ disease secondary to noncompliance. Following on her last outpatient endocrine follow up; there was a plan for definitive treatment in the form of radioactive iodine.

She is a smoker of and a teetotaller. She has been on the combined contraceptive pill up until one week prior to presentation.

On examination, she was tachycardic with a normal blood pressure and a blood glucose of 7 mmol/l. She had mild dysarthria and right facial droop but no other focal neurological deficit. CT on admission showed a possible left frontal lobe infarct which was subsequently confirmed on MRI scan.

ECG showed sinus rhythm and her thyroid function test indicated uncontrolled thyrotoxicosis with a Free T4 of 22.5 pmol/L and a fully suppressed TSH.

The overall impression was that her stroke was likely cardioembolic in origin, probably due to thyrotoxicosis-induced atrial fibrillation. However we were unable to capture the atrial fibrillation during the admission and on a subsequent 24 hour tape. The decision was to anticoagulate with Apixiban even in the absence of documented paroxysmal atrial fibrillation.

Her dysarthria improved and she was discharged on a high dose of Carbimazole together with propranolol and Apixiban.

Investigations including a Carotid Doppler and Echocardiogram were both normal. A young stroke screen was performed including a vasculitic screen were all within the normal range.

Conclusion: Whether patients with thyrotoxic atrial fibrillation should be anticoagulated remains controversial and needs further evidence.

Volume 50

Society for Endocrinology BES 2017

Harrogate, UK
06 Nov 2017 - 08 Nov 2017

Society for Endocrinology 

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