Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-dsjbd Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-23T21:47:07.371Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Mental Illnesses in Hypothyroid Patients

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 January 2018

C. M. Tonks*
Affiliation:
The Department of Psychiatry, University of Leeds, 15 Hyde Terrace, Leeds 2

Extract

The conjunction of hypothyroidism and mental illness has been of great interest to psychiatrists for almost a century. Sir William Gull (1873) noted mental changes in his original description of hypothyroidism, as did Ord (1878) when he coined the term myxoedema. Savage (1880) reported the first patient with myxoedema to be found in a mental hospital population.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Royal College of Psychiatrists, 1964 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Akelaitis, A. J. E. (1936). “Psychiatric aspects of myxedema.” J. new. merit. Dis., 33, 22.Google Scholar
Asher, R. (1949). “Myxoedema madness.” Brit. med. J., ii, 555.Google Scholar
Brockman, D. D., and Whitman, R. M. (1952). “Post-thyroidectomy psychoses.” J. nerv. ment. Dis., 116, 340.Google Scholar
Browning, T. B., Atkins, R. W., and Weiner, M. D. (1954). “Cerebral metabolic disturbances in hypothyroidism.” A.M.A. Arch. intern. Med., 93, 938.Google Scholar
Crowley, R. M. (1940). “Psychoses with myxedema.” Amer. J. Psychiat., 96, 1105.Google Scholar
Gull, W. W. (1873). “On a cretinoid state supervening in adult life in women.” Trans. din. Soc. Land., 7, 180.Google Scholar
Hun, H., and Prudden, T. M. (1888). “Myxoedema.” Amer. J. med. Sci., 96, 140.Google Scholar
Malden, M. (1955). “Hypothermic coma in myxoedema.” Brit. med. J., ii, 764.Google Scholar
Murray, G. R. (1891). “Note on the treatment of myxoedema by hypodermic injections of an extract of the thyroid gland of a sheep.” ibid., ii, 796.Google Scholar
Ord, W. M. (1878). “On myxoedema, a term proposed to be applied to an essential condition in the ‘cretinoid’ affection occasionally observed in middle-aged women.” Med.-chir. Trans., 61, 57.Google Scholar
Sasenbach, W., Madison, L., Ekenberg, S., and Ochs, L. (1954). “The cerebral circulation and metabolism in hypothyroidism and myxedema.” J. clin. Invest., 33, 1434.Google Scholar
Savage, G. H. (1880). “Myxoedema and its nervous symptoms.” J. Ment. Sci., 25, 517.Google Scholar
Scheinberg, P., Stead, E. A., Brannon, E. S., and Warren, J. V. (1950). “Correlative observations on cerebral metabolism and cardiac output in myxedema.” J. din. Invest., 29, 1139.Google Scholar
Wayne, E. J. (1960). “Clinical and metabolic studies in thyroid disease.” Brit. med. J., i, 78.Google Scholar
Wolff, J., and Goldberg, R. (1957). “Diseases of iodine metabolism”, in Biochemical Disorders in Human Disease (ed. Thompson, and King, ). London. p. 317.Google Scholar
Submit a response

eLetters

No eLetters have been published for this article.