USMLE Prep - Medical Reference Library

Thyroid Storm — Emergency Management

System: Endocrinology • Reviewed: Aug 31, 2025 • Step 1Step 2Step 3

Synopsis:

Life threatening thyrotoxicosis with fever, tachyarrhythmia, CNS and GI symptoms; give beta blockade, thionamide, iodine (after thionamide), steroids, and supportive care.

Key Points

  • Stabilize ABCs; begin targeted evaluation without delaying life-saving therapy.
  • Use system-specific risk tools to guide testing and disposition.
  • Order high-yield tests first; escalate imaging when indicated.
  • Start evidence-based initial therapy and reassess frequently.

Algorithm

  1. Primary survey and vitals; IV access and monitors.
  2. Focused history/physical; identify red flags and likely etiologies.
  3. Order system-appropriate labs and imaging (see Investigations).
  4. Initiate guideline-based empiric therapy (see Pharmacology).
  5. Reassess response; arrange consultation and definitive management.

Clinical Synopsis & Reasoning

For Thyroid Storm Emergency Management, frame the differential by acuity and pathophysiology, then align diagnostics to the leading hypotheses. Prioritize stabilization while obtaining high‑yield studies such as BMP (Electrolytes/anion gap), Ketones (if DKA) (Ketoacidosis), ABG/VBG (Acid–base status). Incorporate bedside imaging and targeted labs to define severity and identify complications; synthesize results with clinical trajectory to refine the working diagnosis and disposition needs.


Treatment Strategy & Disposition

Initiate disease‑directed therapy alongside supportive care, titrating to objective response. Pharmacologic options commonly include Insulin, Dextrose, Electrolytes (K+, Mg2+). Use validated frameworks (e.g., Medication Sequence (Example)) to guide escalation and site of care. Address precipitating factors, de‑escalate empiric therapies with data, and arrange follow‑up for monitoring and risk‑factor modification; admit patients with instability, high risk of deterioration, or needs for close monitoring.


Epidemiology / Risk Factors

  • Diabetes and endocrine disorders depending on topic

Investigations

TestRole / RationaleTypical FindingsNotes
BMPElectrolytes/anion gapDerangements
Ketones (if DKA)KetoacidosisPositive
ABG/VBGAcid–base statusAcidosis/alkalosis

Medication Sequence (Example)

StepAgent / example
1Esmolol infusion or propranolol
2PTU load then q4–6h or methimazole
3Iodine (SSKI or Lugol) ≥1 h after thionamide
4Hydrocortisone 100 mg IV q8h

Pharmacology

MedicationMechanismOnsetRole in TherapyLimitations
Propranolol (IV/PO)β-blockade; ↓T4→T3 conversionMinutesAdrenergic symptomsBradycardia; ED use
Propylthiouracil (PTU)ThionamideHoursBlock hormone synthesis and conversionHepatotoxicity; ED use
Iodine solution (SSKI)Wolff–Chaikoff effectHoursGive >1 h after thionamideIodism; ED use
HydrocortisoneGlucocorticoidHours↓T4→T3 conversion; adrenal supportHyperglycemia; ED use

Prognosis / Complications

  • Improves with derangement correction; recurrence if triggers persist

Patient Education / Counseling

  • Explain red flags and when to seek emergent care.
  • Reinforce medication adherence and follow-up plan.

Notes

Avoid aspirin for fever. Use cardioselective beta blocker or short acting agent when HFrEF or asthma present; involve cardiology for AF with RVR.


References

  1. American Thyroid Association — Thyrotoxicosis Guidance — Link
  2. Endocrine Society resources — Thyroid Emergencies — Link