Thyroid medicine (most commonly Thyroxine or Levothyroxine) is a synthetic hormone used to treat an underactive thyroid (hypothyroidism).
In the medical world, we call it a "replacement hormone" because it does the job the thyroid gland isn't doing. However, as your story illustrates, it is a very unique and potentially "sneaky" medication when it comes to accidental overdose.
Here is a breakdown of what the medication is and why it was so dangerous for the toddler in your story:
1. What it does (The Function)
The thyroid gland controls the body’s metabolism—essentially the "speedometer" of the body.
Normal use: It keeps the heart rate, temperature, and energy levels stable.
In the medication: It is a synthetic version of the hormone
$T_4$.
2. Why it’s "The Great Mimicker" (The Danger)
Thyroxine is different from many other poisons (like paracetamol or cleaners) for two reasons:
The Lag Period: It takes time for the body to convert $T_4$ into the active $T_3$ hormone. This is why the 2-year-old was fine for 48 hours before suddenly developing a fever and high heart rate.
The "Hyper" State: An overdose puts the body into Thyrotoxicosis—essentially "overdrive."
The heart beats too fast, the body temperature spikes (fever), and the nervous system becomes extremely irritable.
3. Common Brand Names
Parents might recognize these names in their medicine cabinets:
Eltroxin
Thyronorm
Synthroid
Levo-T
