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Apr 30, 2007
Thyroid Eye Disease
Thyroid eye disease (TED), which is also known as Graves’ ophthalmopathy (GO) is an ophthalmologic condition primarily seen in people with autoimmune thyroid disorders. Thyroid eye disease can also occur in the absence of thyroid disease in a condition known as euthyroid Graves’ disease.
Types of Thyroid Eye Disease
There are two subtypes of thyroid eye disease:
- a more common condition related to abnormal thyroid hormone levels that resolves after abnormal thyroid hormone levels are corrected
- an autoimmune condition that runs a course independent of the thyroid disorder.
Who is Affected?
About 80 percent of all cases occur in patients with Graves’ disease. Another 10 percent of cases develop in patients with Hashimoto’s thyroiditis, and the remaining cases occur in patients without thyroid disorders although thyroid disease frequently develops later. Studies show that nearly all patients with Graves' disease will show transient signs of TED when sensitive imaging tests are used.
Signs and Symptoms
Usually, signs and symptoms are bilateral (both eyes are involved equally). Symptoms related to excess thyroid hormone levels are usually spastic and include dryness, tearing, eyelid retraction and proptosis or exophthalmos, a bulging of the eyeball. When thyroid hormone levels are too low, the primary complaint is periorbital edema, a condition of swelling affecting the entire eye and eyelid.
Autoimmune symptoms include congestion, eye muscle enlargement, inflammation, and infiltration of the orbital cavity with white blood cells and immune system chemicals. The orbital muscle may become restricted if congestion and inflammation interfere with its movement. This can cause eyelid lag, diplopia (double vision) and proptosis.
Other signs and symptoms include: erratic blinking, altered gaze, ophthalmoplegia (paralysis of eye muscle), edema, uneven pupil dilation in dim light, abnormal pigmentation of the upper eyelid, eye muscle spasm or twitching, redness, ptosis (drooping eyelid), blurriness, foreign body sensation, grittiness, strabismus, pain, staring appearance, light sensitivity (photophobia), tearing (lacrimation), visual impairment and vision loss.
Phases of Thyroid Eye Disease
- Active Phase: The active or inflammatory phase of autoimmune eye disease usually lasts from 3-6 months although it may last up to five years. During the active phase, symptoms can vary but they often worsen and are associated with an increase in TSH receptor antibodies.
- Plateau Phase: The plateau phase is characterized by decreased activity and reduced inflammation. Often, symptoms resolve during the plateau phase.
- Resolution Phase: During the resolution phase, the disease process is inactive and healing occurs. Changes that have occurred during the active phase that remain may succumb to fibrosis or scar formation although in most cases, complete healing occurs.
The Disease Course
The disease course in TED is unique to each individual. Some people have variable symptoms that wax and wane, increasing during exposures to environmental allergens and triggers. Others may have progressive symptoms, which worsen over time. In most cases, patients will experience a return to normal within 12 months.
Studies show that immune system chemicals known as cytokines and levels of TSH receptor antibodies parallel the disease course. For this reason, environmental triggers include radioiodine ablation used for hyperthyroidism may trigger or worsen symptom.
Treatment
Restoring thyroid levels to optimal levels can help resolve most symptoms of TED. In congestive eye disease, corticosteroids and other immunosuppressants are used to reduce inflammation. External beam orbital radiotherapy, used in a series of treatments, can also reduce symptoms although this treatment can cause fibrosis and cataract formation. Surgical treatments are not recommended unless vision is at risk or after the resolution phase has ended.
An avoidance of environmental triggers is important for reducing symptoms in TED and facilitating healing. Bioflavinoids, particularly flaxseed oil, and antioxidant vitamins also offer benefits for patients with TED. Lifestyle changes, including avoiding cigarette smoke are also important for healing TED.
Resource:
Elaine A. Moore, Thyroid Eye Disease, Understanding Graves’ Opthalmopathy, Sara Health Press, available at www.trafford.com, 2003.
Comments
Oct 15, 2008 11:43 AM
Guest :
I am 33 years old and have had graves eye disease for over 3 years, I read
about how it may fix itself and still have a bad case of it. they are still
irratable, red, swollen and vision is bad. Does anyone know how to
help?????? It puts a struggle on my life and I cant take much more. Maybe
theres something out there I dont know about, or someone that can help me
understand all this.
Oct 15, 2008 2:06 PM
Elaine Moore :
Hi, I'm sorry to hear that you still have active TED. Usually, unless
you've had radioiodine ablation, symptoms resolve within 18 months,
although the active phase of TED can last for up to 5 years. You can help
reduce symptoms by avoiding environmental triggers such as excess dietary
iodine and stress. It's also important to make sure your thyroid hormone
levels are optimal. You can find more information on TED on my website,
www.elaine-moore.com. Best, Elaine
Mar 30, 2009 8:04 PM
Elaine Moore :
Hi, I'm sorry to hear you developed TED.
The orbital
radiotherapy you're having is most likely to work in people who have shown
a good response to steroids. Unlike steroids, though, orbital radiotherapy
continues to work for up to 6 months after your last treatment. It also helps to avoid environmental triggers such as excess dietary
iodine and any known allergens and incorporate stress reduction techniques
such as yoga.
The active phase of TED is followed by a
resolution phase in which symptoms often resolve. Today, the need for
orbital decompression surgery is rare. Years ago, doctors rushed into
surgery without waiting for the immune system to settle down. Surgery
performed too early interferes with the natural healing process and can
lead to further surgeries. I hope to hear all your symptoms resolve after
your orbital radiotherapy is complete. Best, Elaine
Jun 15, 2009 7:13 PM
Elaine Moore :
Hi, I'm sorry your eyes are still bothering you. Sometimes, the active
phase of TED can last as long as 5 years. You can help by avoiding
wind and dust, taking 1000 mg flaxseed oil daily to help increase eye
moisture, avoiding environmental triggers such as excess dietary iodine in
fast and processed foods, cigarette smoke, aspartame, etc. Antioxidant
vitamins, particularly vitamin B complex and vitamin C can help and so can
eating more raw natural foods and less processed foods. Be sure that
your doctor is running FT4 and FT3 levels. These levels will help determine
the best type and amount of replacement hormone for you. The TSH results
are falsely decreased after RAI for a long time (lowered by thyroid
antibodies) and the TSH result can be misleading. Many people do
better on Armour, which contains T1, T2, T3 and T4 rather than
levothyroxine alone, which only contains T4. Best to you, Elaine
Aug 11, 2009 9:55 AM
Elaine Moore :
Hi, Grave's ophthalmopathy is fairly common after RAI because of the
dramatic increase in thyroid antibodies caused by this procedure. Lowering
thyroid antibodies and helping the immune system heal helps slow the
disease process. This condition is best treated by an ophthalmologist that
specializes in it. Treatment by a neurologist is unusual. Best, Elaine
Aug 27, 2009 11:10 AM
Elaine Moore :
Hi,
Flaxseed oil is especially effective for reducing eye
dryness in TED. This can prevent some of the complications when eyes don't
fully shut.
Surgery can help if your eye disease is no longer
active. Since RAI worsens TED I suspect you're still in the active phase of
the disease, which can last up to 5 years. With TED, symptoms often resolve
during the resolution phase of the disorder. If they don't, then orbital
decompression surgery may help. Best, Elaine
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