Clinical features
An insidious onset with vague, non-specific and diverse features is characteristic. Diagnosis is often made incidentally. Mild cases may be completely asymptomatic.
General:
- fatigue, weight gain, and cold intolerance; less commonly, goitre and hyperlipidaemia
Dermatological:
- dry, scaly, cold and thickened skin; malar flush imposed against a generally pale complexion; alopecia with coarse and brittle hair; occasionally, vitiligo
Neuromuscular:
- hoarse voice; aches and pains in the muscles and joints; syndromes such as carpal tunnel and cerebellar ataxia; deafness; depression or more bizarre psychiatric features - myxoedema madness; delayed ankle jerk reflex
Haematologic:
- anaemia - usually normocytic, normochromic; but may be microcytic and hypochromic due to blood loss from menorrhagia; or macrocytic due to vitamin B12 deficiency associated with pernicious anaemia
Cardiovascular:
- bradycardia, angina, cardiac failure, pericardial and pleural effusions
Gastrointestinal:
- constipation, ileus, ascites
Reproductive:
- impotence, menorrhagia, galactorrhoea, hyperprolactinaemia
Developmental:
- growth and mental retardation; delayed puberty
Related pages
- Diagram of the clinical features of hypothyroidism
- Metabolic myopathy in hypothyroidism
- Atypical clinical presentation in hypothyroidism
- Obesity
- Thyroid goitre
- Alopecia
- Vitiligo
- Hoarseness
- Carpal tunnel syndrome
- Tiredness
- Myxoedema coma
- Myxoedema madness
- Anaemia
- Arterial pulse (slow rate)
- Angina pectoris
- Congestive heart failure
- Pericardial effusion
- Pleural effusion
- Constipation
- Male impotence
- Menorrhagia
- Failure to thrive
- Developmental delay
- Galactorrhoea
- Hertoghe's sign
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