1. Switching from the tablet to the powder formulation of levothyroxine corrects severe hypothyroidism in a patient with lactose intolerance
- Author
-
Teruo, Jojima, Toshimitsu, Shinzawa, Eriko, Ohira, Shintaro, Sakurai, Takuya, Tomaru, Toshie, Iijima, Takahiko, Kogai, Isao, Usui, and Yoshimasa, Aso
- Subjects
Adult ,Iodine Radioisotopes ,Thyroxine ,Lactose Intolerance ,Endocrinology ,Hypothyroidism ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Humans ,Thyrotropin ,Female ,Thyroid Neoplasms ,Powders ,Tablets - Abstract
We describe a case of a 38-year-old woman who, after radioactive iodine therapy for Graves' disease, developed severe hypothyroidism despite receiving a high dose of levothyroxine (L-T4) tablet as replacement therapy. Her thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH) remained to be high despite the dose of L-T4 tablets to 400 μg/day after treatment for hypothyroidism, and the patient complained of general malaise and edema of the legs. Reduced intestinal absorption of L-T4 is the most common cause of failure to achieve the therapeutic target in hypothyroid patients receiving replacement therapy. She was admitted to our hospital for severe hypothyroidism due to resistance to treatment with L-T4 tablet. Our patient was found to have lactose intolerance (LI) by a detailed examination during hospitalization. Therefore, we assumed that LI was impairing intestinal absorption of L-T4 tablet in our patient, leading to severe hypothyroidism. The patient was switched to the powder formulation of L-T4 at the same daily dose, and serum levels of thyroid-stimulating hormone and thyroid hormones normalized. This is the case in which hypothyroidism due to reduced absorption of L-T4 tablet in a patient with LI was resolved by switching to L-T4 powder formulation.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF