Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0001430 (adenoma)
21,222 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Failure of embryologic development of a lobe of the thyroid gland is a rare anomaly. In order to characterize this unusual entity, we report our experience in seven patients with thyroid hemiagenesis involving the left lobe in five and the right lobe in two patients. The diagnosis was made as a result of evaluation and treatment of a thyroid nodule (4), diffuse thyroid enlargement with thyrotoxicosis (2), and a simple goiter in a patient with a prior history of radiation treatment for facial acne. In five patients thyroid scintigraphy demonstrated unilateral absence of function, four of whom had an ultrasound exam of the neck that revealed a corresponding absence of thyroid tissue. In one patient the diagnosis was made incidentally on a screening ultrasound exam of the neck. Thyroid hemiagenesis was unsuspected preoperatively in one patient with Graves' disease because of marked hyperplasia of a single thyroid lobe and isthmus. Thyroid hemiagenesis was confirmed in four patients who underwent thyroidectomy. The presence of a thyroid isthmus was established in six patients. Postoperatively, all patients were treated with thyroid hormone. Associated thyroid pathology included adenoma (1), follicular carcinoma (1), colloid nodule (2), Graves' disease (2), and a simple goiter (1). In conclusion, the diagnosis of thyroid hemiagenesis should be considered in any patient with unilateral absence of function on thyroid scintigraphy and confirmed by ultrasonography. Recognition of this rare congenital anomaly is important to avoid unnecessary contralateral neck exploration with its potential morbidity and to insure that all patients receive careful follow-up and appropriate thyroid hormone therapy when necessary.
...
PMID:Congenital thyroid hemiagenesis. 779 46

The incidence of autoimmune disease of the thyroid approaches 10% in women. This autoimmune state, which predisposes to the development of thyroid neoplasia, especially in patients with subclinical hypothyroidism, combined with tumor growth and immunologic factors that occur in the pregnant state, account for the significant incidence of nodular thyroid disease in pregnancy. Thyroid carcinoma of follicular cell origin in a young woman can generally be expected to pursue a slow course with ample time for preoperative preparation and operative treatment. However, the pregnant state should be considered an exception and thyroid nodular disease with suspicious aspiration cytologic features should be managed with a certain degree of urgency. In an excellent article on the subject of pregnancy as a predisposing factor in thyroid neoplasia, Rosen and Walfish present a series of 30 patients with thyroid neoplasia arising during pregnancy. The incidence of thyroid carcinoma was 43% and the incidence of adenoma 37%, for an 80% overall incidence of neoplasia. Furthermore, during the course of the pregnancy, 20% of the patients showed marked increase in nodular growth, including a 26-year-old primiparous woman who developed a small nodule in the first trimester which proved to be cellular on needle aspiration biopsy. In spite of thyroid hormone treatment, the nodule grew markedly in the last trimester. At postpartum operation, the patient was found to have a papillary carcinoma with extensive unilateral neck and mediastinal node disease, which was clinically occult. These authors stress the importance of the operative treatment of thyroid neoplasia of pregnancy, either in the second trimester or immediately after delivery. We agree.
...
PMID:Nodular disease during pregnancy. 785 18

A sixty-one-year-old female was admitted to our hospital in October 1988 because of fever and a right neck mass associated with redness and tenderness. The size of the thyroid mass had gradually increased over 3 months. Two masses were detected in the thyroid by ultrasonography and MRI. She has positive thyroid autoantibodies, high CRP levels and high erythrocyte sedimentation rates. While she had normal white blood cell counts, massive neutrophils were obtained from her thyroid mass by aspiration biopsy, indicating acute suppurative thyroiditis. However, we could not find any bacteria to cause suppurative thyroiditis either in the blood or in thyroid aspirates. Serum levels of thyroid hormone were slightly elevated but she did not complain of any thyrotoxic symptoms. Radioactive iodine uptake (RAIU) of the thyroid gland was markedly decreased (2%/24h). Following treatment with antibiotics, her inflammation and symptoms immediately improved, and pus spontaneously ran from the collapsed thyroid mass. Then serum thyroid hormone levels and RAIU were normalized and the right thyroid mass disappeared. She was discharged in December 1988. There were no signs of recurrence of suppurative thyroiditis until now. She received a pharyngo-esophageal barium examination in search of the route of infection 4 times, but no fistula was revealed. However, as her left thyroid mass consistently remained thereafter, an operation of the left thyroid mass was performed in December 1989. The histologic examination of the resected thyroid revealed the coexistence of encapsulated follicular adenoma, minute papillary carcinoma and chronic thyroiditis. There are few reports of such a case having a combination of suppurative thyroiditis, thyroid cancer and chronic thyroiditis observed in an elderly female.
...
PMID:[A case of acute suppurative thyroiditis associated with thyroid papillary carcinoma]. 826 71

The potential efficacy of early repeat transsphenoidal surgery for persistent Cushing's disease has not previously been examined. On 222 patients with no prior pituitary treatment and a preoperative diagnosis of Cushing's disease, 29 (13%) remained hypercortisolemic after an initial transsphenoidal pituitary exploration. Seventeen of these 29 patients underwent further surgery 7 to 46 days after the initial transsphenoidal approach in order to completely excise suspected residual tumor. Patients were followed for 4 to 84 months (mean +/- standard deviation, 34 +/- 25 months) to document sustained remission or recurrence of Cushing's disease (a urine free cortisol level > 90 micrograms/day was considered evidence of recurrence). Of the 17 patients with repeat surgery, 12 (71%) had resolution of hypercortisolism (morning plasma cortisol level < 5 micrograms/dl); however, in three of these 12, hypercortisolism recurred 5, 12, and 24 months later. In 14 patients a lesion that appeared to be a tumor was identified during the initial procedure or on histological examination. Of these, 12 had immediate resolution of hypercortisolism and nine are still in remission. Three patients, in whom no adenoma could be identified during the initial surgery or an examination of the partial hypophysectomy specimen from the initial surgery, had persistent Cushing's syndrome after the second operation. Seven (41%) of the 17 patients developed hypopituitarism requiring treatment with thyroid hormone, gonadal steroid, or vasopressin replacement. The low incidence of identification of an adenoma on computerized tomography or magnetic resonance images (three of 17 patients), the failure to find a corticotrophic adenoma during the initial surgery (10 of 17 patients), and the failure of these 17 patients to respond to the initial transsphenoidal surgery suggest that they may comprise a subset of patients who are more difficult to treat successfully with surgery than most patients with Cushing's disease. Despite that, early reoperation induced immediate remission of hypercortisolism in 71% of cases, but did so at the expense of a high risk of hypopituitarism. However, since the alternative treatments (such as radiation therapy, long-term drug therapy, or bilateral adrenalectomy) also have potential adverse effects, early reoperation deserves consideration for the management of persistent Cushing's disease, especially when an adrenocorticotrophic hormone-secreting adenoma was partially excised during the first surgery.
...
PMID:Early repeat surgery for persistent Cushing's disease. 827 Oct 20

Thyroid adenoma is commonly associated with surgery and radiometabolic treatment; recently, according to previous successful reports, percutaneous ethanol injection therapy under sonographic guidance, has been introduced as an alternative. This technique has already been favourably used in the treatment of focal lesions, such as liver cancer and hyperparathyroidism. In our experience, we have treated with such therapy 69 patients affected by thyroid adenoma (55 females, 14 males; 28 pretoxic, 41 toxic). Ethanol (0.5-2.8 mL/mL nodular tissue) was injected, under sonographic guidance, in 4-9 sessions (1 weekly). Thyroid hormone profile was assessed during treatment and at 3 and 6 months follow-up. Apart from local transient pain in 21% sessions, two cases of pyrexia (38.5 degrees-1 day) and 3 cases of transient dysphonia, no relevant adverse effects were observed. A slight thyroid hormone increase was seen in both groups immediately following treatment. Six months after therapy a biochemical and clinical remission of hyperthyroidism was observed in 33 out of 41 toxic patients (80%); a significant increase of TSH levels was seen in both groups (p < 0.001). With follow-up, significant volume shrinkage (70-80% volume reduction--p < 0.0001) as well as structural alterations of the nodule, were consistently recorded at sonography, in both groups; a linear relationship (p < 0.0001) between pretreatment volume and volume reduction was found. At scintiscan functional activity of extranodular parenchyma was found in 75% of patients affected by pretoxic adenoma and in 63.1% of patients with toxic adenoma. These data confirm that percutaneous ethanol injection therapy is effective in obtaining functional ablation and in inducing remission of hyperthyroidism, when present; so it represents a valid and safe alternative to standard therapeutic tools of thyroid adenoma.
...
PMID:[Treatment of hyperfunctioning thyroid adenoma: current trends]. 833 Apr 72

The transformation of the normal fully differentiated thyroid follicular cell to the rapidly growing undifferentiated anaplastic thyroid carcinoma cell involves a number of stages which have been defined morphologically and are now being related to various growth pathways and to molecular biological defects. The two main factors involved in this transformation are growth stimulation and mutagenesis. Growth stimulation alone, through elevated TSH, can lead to the development of thyroid tumours, usually benign, and retaining TSH dependency in some cases. Mutagens alone, if growth is suppressed, do not produce tumours, the combination of mutagens and increased growth is a potent carcinogenic regime. Non-genotoxic carcinogenesis in the thyroid involves growth, without mutagenesis the agent often causes this through affecting one component of thyroid hormone synthesis or metabolism, leading to a fall in thyroid hormone levels and a rise in TSH. Growth stimulation increases the rate of cell division, and therefore increases the chance of a mutation. Continued growth increases the change of subsequent events, in particular loss of heterozygosity in a tumour suppressor gene. The main oncogenes involved in human thyroid carcinogens are ras in the follicular tumour pathway, and ret in the papillary carcinoma pathway. p53 is involved in the progression of either papillary or follicular adenoma to an undifferentiated carcinoma. In experimental thyroid carcinogenesis, ras is again involved, with a link between the mutagenic agent used and the type of ras gene showing mutation. Analysis of the involvement of different growth factors and oncogenes in thyroid carcinogenesis suggests that genes related to the two receptors concerned with normal TSH stimulated growth, TSH receptor and the IGF1 receptor may be involved in the progression of thyroid tumours of follicular pathology. Several tyrosine kinase receptors with unknown ligands or of uncertain physiological function are linked to papillary carcinoma. The recent large increase in papillary carcinoma of the thyroid in children exposed to fallout from the Chernobyl nuclear accident underlines the importance of understanding the pathobiology of thyroid neoplasia.
...
PMID:Mechanisms and pathogenesis of thyroid cancer in animals and man. 853 19

There have been many recent advances in our understanding of thyroid disease, including thyroid physiology, the molecular biology of thyroid neoplasms, guidelines for the management of surgical thyroid disease and the operative approach to thyroidectomy. The control of thyroid growth and function is better understood now that the thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH) receptor has been characterized as a G-protein coupled transmembrane receptor. The peripheral action of thyroid hormones is also better understood in terms of their interaction with nuclear thyroid hormone receptors. An adenoma-carcinoma sequence for the development of thyroid neoplasms has been proposed based on the characterization of a number of proto-oncogenes and tumour suppressor genes, and different pathways for the development of papillary and follicular thyroid carcinoma have been demonstrated. Fine needle biopsy has become, over the past few years, the principal diagnostic technique for evaluation of thyroid nodules, and has resulted in a significant reduction in the need for surgery for benign thyroid nodules. The approach to the management of thyroid carcinoma can now be based on comprehensive scoring systems for assigning patients to a particular risk group, the most recent of which is the MACIS system based on distant metastases (M), age (A), completeness of resection (C), invasion (I) and size (S). The capsular technique of thyroidectomy as described has now been shown to be the best method to preserve parathyroid blood supply, protect the recurrent laryngeal nerve and minimize the complications of thyroid surgery.
...
PMID:The aetiology, investigation and management of surgical disorders of the thyroid gland. 867 80

The recorded number of patients with central hyperthyroidism due to TSH-secreting pituitary adenoma doubled in the last few years after the introduction of ultrasensitive TSH assays in the assessment of thyroid function; however, information about the results and the criteria for cure after pituitary surgery is scanty. Seventeen patients with a TSH-secreting adenoma, diagnosed on the basis of detectable TSH levels in the face of high free thyroid hormone concentrations and pituitary lesion at neuroimaging, underwent pituitary surgery. Hypersecretion of other pituitary hormones was diagnosed in 5 of 17 patients. Four patients were initially misdiagnosed and treated with thyroid surgery or radioiodine therapy. The majority (86%) of hyperthyroid patients normalized thyroid hormone concentrations and regained euthyroidism, although pituitary imaging, alpha-subunit, and alpha-subunit/TSH molar ratio normalized in only 47%, 54%, and 58% of patients, respectively. Moreover, TSH secretion was normally suppressed by T3 in 40% of the patients. Interestingly, the finding of undetectable TSH levels 7 days after surgery was highly predictive of successful outcome. During long term follow-up, there was one relapse of hyperthyroidism. Early diagnosis of TSH-secreting adenomas permits a high rate of remission of hyperthyroidism after surgery. However, normalization of thyroid function alone does not necessarily reflect complete removal of the tumor, and more comprehensive criteria of cure based on pituitary imaging, hormone measurement, and suppression of TSH during T3 administration should be used. Lastly, all patients need an accurate long term follow-up to monitor the possible recurrence of the adenoma.
...
PMID:Criteria of cure and follow-up of central hyperthyroidism due to thyrotropin-secreting pituitary adenomas. 876 79

Percutaneous intranodular ethanol injection (PEI) has been proposed for the therapy of autonomously functioning thyroid nodules. In 1992, an Italian multicenter study was undertaken to confirm the usefulness and the feasibility of this procedure. The study included 429 patients: 242 (56.4%) were affected by a toxic adenoma (TA) and 187 (43.5%) by pretoxic adenoma (PTA). Free thyroid hormone levels (FT4, FT3) and thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH) were measured before and 3, 6, 12 months after the end of treatment; thyroid ultrasound and thyroid scintiscan were performed in the majority of patients before and after treatment. Patients underwent 2-12 sessions of ethanol injection under sonographic guidance (median 4). The total amount of ethanol administered per patient (1.5 mL/mL nodular volume) was 2-50 mL (mean +/- SD, 17 +/- 9 mL), and the amount per each injection was 1-8 mL (3.2 +/- 1.3 mL). The treatment was judged successful when both TSH and free thyroid hormone serum levels returned within the normal range and recovery of tracer uptake in extranodular tissue was observed at scintiscan, at any time during the follow-up period. The treatment was considered unsuccessful when no change was observed at scintiscan and/or serum TSH levels remained less than 0.4 mU/L. A successful treatment was achieved in 66.5% of patients with TA and in 83.4% of patients with PTA, when assessed after a 12-month follow-up. In all cases a reduction of the nodular size was observed. Almost all positive results were obtained in nodules whose initial volume was less than 15 mL; large nodules responded less favorably. The treatment was generally well tolerated, only transient side-effects, mainly local pain at the time of injection, were observed. Once normalization of scintigraphic image and of FT4, FT3 and TSH serum concentrations was achieved, no recurrence of hyperthyroidism nor development of hypothyroidism were observed for the length of the study. In conclusion, percutaneous ethanol injection for treatment of autonomously functioning thyroid nodules is effective and safe. Better results are obtained in patients with PTA than in patients with TA, particularly when the initial volume of the nodule is less than or equal to 15 mL. PEI may be considered as an alternative to surgery and to radioiodine for treatment of autonomously functioning thyroid nodules.
...
PMID:Treatment of solitary autonomous thyroid nodules by percutaneous ethanol injection: results of an Italian multicenter study. The Multicenter Study Group. 878 80

TSH-secreting adenoma is a rare entity; a series of 69 cases has been collected by Faglia in 1989 and 78 new cases were published from 1987 to 1994. We report two new cases which have been explored by octreotide scintigraphy before treatment with the SRIH analogue. An in vitro SRIH receptor study was also performed in the first patient. This patient, a young man, suffered from hyperthyroidism with enhanced FT3 and FT4 concentrations without decreased TSH values. Plasma alpha subunit level was slightly increased. He had a pituitary tumor, positive in Octreoscan but responded partially to treatment by SRIH analogue. The tumor was in part surgically removed and the SRIH receptors revealed a homogeneous density; their number was equal to those of GH-secreting tumor but their affinity was lower. The second patient, an elderly woman was not surgically treated because the octreotide treatment dramatically improved both tumor volume and thyroid hormone or alpha subunit levels. The tumor, associated to a probable meningioma, was also positive in Octreoscan and was characterized by a highly increased alpha subunit plasma level. These results are discussed by comparison with those of the literature.
...
PMID:[Thyreotropic adenoma: review of the literature. Apropos of 2 cases]. 894 14


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>