A 25-year-old woman was admitted to our hospital with goiter. The diagnosis was Grave's disease. Diagnostic transthoracic echocardiography revealed a hyperdynamic stage of the heart with right ventricular dilation. Doppler echocardiography showed mild to moderate tricuspid regurgitation and elevated systolic right ventricular pressure. Right heart catheterization revealed high cardiac output (9.49 l/min) and pulmonary hypertension (57 mmHg) with increased pulmonary vascular resistance and total pulmonary resistance. No intracardiac shunts were detected. Since neither thiomazole nor propylthiouracil was effective and both caused side effects, she underwent subtotal thyroidectomy. After the surgery, pulmonary hypertension improved and cardiac output normalized, but without normalization of pulmonary vascular resistance and total pulmonary resistance. Reversible pulmonary hypertension may occur in patients with hyperthyroidism. Increased pulmonary blood flow and sustained high pulmonary artery resistance were suspected as the causes of pulmonary hypertension. In addition, pulmonary endothelial dysfunction as a result of sustained increased pulmonary blood flow could be another cause of pulmonary hypertension.

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