Abstract

We report on a patient having McCune-Albright syndrome (MAS) associated with non-autoimmune hyperthyroidism associated with thyrotoxic crisis. Polyostotic fibrous dysplasia developed at age 8, and café-au-lait pigmentation was noted on the skin. At age 18, he developed hyperthyroidism with multiple adenomatous changes. The hyperthyroidism had been controlled with an antithyroid drug, but the antithyroid medication was discontinued by the patient at age 23. One year later, thyrotoxic crisis developed with fever, convulsions and loss of consciousness. Thyroid function tests showed serum concentrations of free T<sub>4</sub> of 5.1 ng/dl, and serum TSH of <0.1 μU/ml. Serum thyroglobulin concentrations were markedly increased (1,280 ng/ml). Three major thyroid-related autoantibodies (TSH receptor antibody, antithyroglobulin, and antimicrosomal antibodies) were not detected in serum. Serum GH concentrations were increased, and not suppressed by the glucose tolerance test, but increased paradoxically by TRH. The thyrotoxic crisis was ameliorated by treatment with a β-adrenergic receptor-blocking agent, glucocoroticoid, iodine, antithyroid drug, and antibiotics. The cause of thyroidal defect in our patient is not considered to be autoimmune hyperthyroidism, but hyperthyroidism due to constitutive activation of G<sub>s</sub>α by inhibition of its GTPase. This paper describes, as far as we know, the first case of MAS associated with thyrotoxic crisis. Because hyperthyroidism in this patient recurred quickly after discontinuation of the antithyroid drug, the mode of treatment for MAS-associated hyperthyroidism appears to be total surgical ablation or repetitive radioiodine therapy.

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