Assessment of the value of quantitative thyroid scintigraphy for determination of thyroid function in dogs

2012 ◽  
Vol 53 (5) ◽  
pp. 278-285 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. E. Shiel ◽  
M. Pinilla ◽  
H. McAllister ◽  
C. T. Mooney
Author(s):  
Ruthvika Kundoor ◽  
Burri Sandhya Rani

Background: AUB is any abnormal uterine bleeding in the absence of any palpable pelvic pathology and demonstrable extra genital causes. AUB is responsible for 10% of gynaecological complaints. Thyroid hormone is very important to affect the menstrual pattern. The objective of this study was to evaluate thyroid function test in women with AUB and to assess the menstrual pattern in women with thyroid dysfunction.Methods: The present study was conducted in the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Laxmi Narasimha Hospital, Hanamkonda, Hyderabad, Telangana, India 80 women of reproductive age group between 15-45 years women with menstrual disorders like menorrhagia, oligomenorrhea, hypomenorrhea, polymenorrhea, metrorrhagia, and amenorrhea. Quantitative determination of T3, T4, and TSH by CLIA estimated in autoanlyser.Results: About 80 women participated in the study in which Most of the subjects belong to 26-30 years of age group. Maximum patients i.e. 41 (51.2%) patients were para one to 2. Commonest cause bleeding pattern was menorrhagia 41.25%. 15 apparently normal patients with AUB belonged to the category of subclinical hypothyroidism (15%). Hormonal levels revealing profound hypothyroidism in patients without any symptoms was present in only 10% of cases. 2.5% of cases had hyperthyroidism though they were clinically normal. Patients who were sub-clinically hypothyroid were maximally presenting as polymenorrhoea (50%) and menorrhagia (12.1%) and only 6.27% of patients had oligomenorrhoea. Patients who were profound hypothyroid were predominantly having polymenorrhagia (83.3%) and (62.5%) of patients had oligomenorrhoea.Conclusions: So, biochemical evaluation of thyroid functioning should be made mandatory in all provisionally diagnosed cases of AUB to detect thyroid dysfunction.


1998 ◽  
pp. 562-564 ◽  
Author(s):  
R Luboshitzky ◽  
G Qupti ◽  
A Ishai ◽  
M Dharan

A 27-year-old woman with no previous personal or family history of thyroid disease was referred to us for the evaluation of thyroid nodule, five months postpartum. Thyroid scintigraphy demonstrated a left cold nodule. Fine needle aspiration cytology of the nodule showed a mixture of colloid, follicular cells and lymphocytes, suggesting lymphocytic thyroiditis. Thyroid function tests were normal and thyroid autoantibodies were negative. After two months the thyroid nodule was not palpated and thyroid scintigraphy returned to normal. Thyroid function tests remained normal twelve months after delivery. These findings suggest that postpartum thyroiditis may present as a localized transient form and should be considered in the differential diagnosis of painless solitary nodule that appears postpartum.


1982 ◽  
Vol 100 (3) ◽  
pp. 373-381 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. A. Scherbaum ◽  
G. Stöckle ◽  
J. Wichmann ◽  
P. A. Berg

Abstract. In a region of endemic goitres, 200 untreated patients in whom thyroid microsomal (MCHA) and/or thyroglobulin (TGHA) antibodies have been detected were analyzed and other organ specific autoantibodies were tested. Thyroid function was assessed by a TRH test in all of them. Patients with previous thyroid disease and patients with clinical or biochemical signs of thyrotoxicosis were excluded. In 58 (29%) of the patients diseases coexisted in which a high incidence of autoimmune reactions has been recognized. In the absence of the corresponding clinical disease, 13.7% of the patients had antibodies to parietal cells of the stomach, 3.1% had antibodies to adrenal cortex, 1% to steroid producing gonadal cells, 1% to pancreatic islet cells, and 0.5% of the patients had antibodies to striated muscle fibrils. The incidence of associated organ-specific autoantibodies was no higher in patients with hypothyroidism (36.4%) compared with patients who had a normal thyroid function (27.9%). The determination of a 'significant' thyroid antibody titre is discussed. In 24.5% of the 200 patients a form of hypothyroidism was recognized. Fifty of the patients with TGHA titres ≥ 6400, and 56.2% of those with MCHA ≥ 102400 were hypothyroid. Patients with such titres of thyroid antibodies should be examined and followed up. Patients with associated islet cell or adrenal antibodies should be reinvestigated and followed up observing their glucose tolerance and adrenocortical function, respectively.


1976 ◽  
Vol 85 (2) ◽  
pp. 286-290 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ake Widström ◽  
Per Magnusson ◽  
Hakan Hellqvist ◽  
Olle Hallberg ◽  
Harald Ruber

Eighty-six cases of carcinoma of the thyroglossal duct have been reported in the literature, most of these being well-differentiated adenocarcinomas. Three new cases of the latter type are presented. Cases where carcinoma of the thyroglossal duct is suspected should be investigated with fine-needle biopsy, thyroid scintigraphy, skeletal and pulmonary X-ray, determination of TSH, T 3, PBI and blood serum calcium. The treatment of well-differentiated adenocarcinomas is a combination of surgical and medical procedures.


1980 ◽  
Vol 95 (2) ◽  
pp. 151-157 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Dessypris ◽  
G. Wägar ◽  
F. Fyhrquist ◽  
T. Mäkinen ◽  
M. G. Welin ◽  
...  

Abstract. Blood cortisol, ACTH, thyroxine, triiodothyronine, reverse triiodothyronine, thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH) and vasopressin concentrations were determined in 9 runners (29–56 years old) and one 80 year old man taking part in a non-competitive Marathon in Athens, Greece on October 1976. After the run the mean concentrations of cortisol, ACTH and vasopressin showed a significant rise. The thyroid function variables and TSH did not differ from the control values. There was a significant correlation between the cortisol and ACTH levels after the race and also between their increments from the corresponding base values. A significant correlation was found between the physical fitness (as measured by indirect determination of Vo2max) and the post-race cortisol levels. One of the well trained runners with a fairly good running time had the highest post-race values for 6 of 7 hormones studied.


1984 ◽  
Vol 5 (9) ◽  
pp. 259-272
Author(s):  
Thomas P. Foley

The diagnostic evaluation of the patient with thyromegaly will be determined by the clinical history and an examination of the thyroid gland (Table 9). In most instances the diagnosis will not be in doubt, and only a few tests will be necessary. For example, the euthyroid adolescent female with an asymmetrically or symmetrically enlarged, firm thyroid gland has a presumptive diagnosis of CLT, and only tests of thyroid function (T4 and TSH) and thyroid antibodies may be needed for confirmation. Similarly, the patient with clinical symptoms and signs of hyperthyroidism, exophthalmus, and a diffusely enlarged, soft thyroid gland has a presumptive diagnosis of Graves disease. The necessary tests include only a measurement of T4, an estimate of free T4, and WBC and differential counts prior to the initiation of antithyroid drug therapy. [See table in the PDF file] In the absence of an obvious diagnosis, the clinician will select the specific diagnostic tests depending upon the examination of the thyroid gland. The cause of smooth, symmetrical, diffuse enlargement of the thyroid gland can be suspected with careful history for familial disease, history of exposure to goitrogens and goitrogenic drugs, and the determination of thyroid antibodies in serum. If the clinical history is suggestive of hyperthyroidism, the tests of thyroid function tests should include determination of serum T3 concentration; if the history is compatible with euthyroidism or hypothyroidism, thyroid function tests should include determination of serum TSH concentration for the presence of compensated primary hypothyroidism. If results of these tests are normal, no additional tests are necessary, and the patient should be reassured and seen again in six months. If the patient has a test that is negative for thyroid antibodies and an elevation of serum TSH concentration, a radioactive [123I]iodide uptake and perchlorate discharge test will be helpful in the diagnosis of familial dyshormonogenesis. The patient with constitutional symptoms of inflammatory disease, history of a recent upper tract respiratory infection, and a tender or nontender enlarged thyroid gland may have subacute thyroiditis; a low or absent uptake of radioiodine with high-normal or elevated T4 and T3 concentrations will be suggestive of that diagnosis. In patients with thyromegaly and mild symptoms of hyperthyroidism, a TRH test will help to discriminate hyperthyroxinemia secondary to increased or abnormal serum thyroxine binding proteins from early Graves disease, factitious hyperthyroidism, toxic thyroiditis, and TSH-mediated hyperthyroidism. The T3 suppression test is a definitive diagnostic test for early, mild Graves disease. The euthyroid patient with mild-to-moderate thyromegaly and tests that are negative for thyroid antibodies usually deserves no further diagnostic evaluation, but should be followed with a presumptive diagnosis of idiopathic goiter or mild CLT. On follow-up evaluation, initially at six-month intervals and subsequently at yearly intervals, the patient should have a clinical and biochemical assessment until thyromegaly regresses and the gland is normal in size and consistency. The patient with a nontender, firm, irregular enlargement of the thyroid gland usually has CLT. If results of thyroid function tests are normal and tests for thyroid antibodies are negative, the patient should be seen again in four to six months and serum thyroid antibody determinations again performed. Another test that may give abnormal results in patients with CLT is the perchlorate discharge test. The approach to the patient with the solitary thyroid nodule differs from that of the previously described clinical presentations. The most important studies for the patient with a thyroid nodule are those designed to determine the structure and consistency of the thyroid gland, namely, ultrasonography to distinguish between solid and cystic lesions, and the radionuclide scan to determine whether the nodule is functioning (hot) or nonfunctioning (cold). To assure that the thyroid nodule is not associated with a nonsurgical lesion such as Hashimoto thyroiditis, serum thyroid antibody determinations are important. As malignancy of the thyroid gland is usually not associated with abnormalities of thyroid function, it is important to perform laboratory tests to exclude hyperthyroidism (a serum T3 determination) and hypothyroidism (a serum TSH determination) at the time of initial evaluation. Additional tests are usually not necessary unless the patient had mild hyperthyroidism with an autonomously functioning nodule, in which case the T3 suppression test and TRH test are often useful; rarely, the TSH stimulation test is helpful in determing whether thyroid tissue throughout the remainder of the gland is suppressed. A solitary, solid, nonfunctioning (cold) nodule requires excisional biopsy.


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