Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0011168 (
dysphagia
)
15,644
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Patients with large benign goiters often present local compressive symptoms that require surgical treatment, including
dysphagia
, neck tightness, and airway obstruction. In contrast, patients with such goiters who remain asymptomatic may be observed after exclusion of malignancy. The use of levothyroxine (LT4) to reduce the volume of the goiter is still a controversial treatment for large goiters, and the optimal surgical procedure for multinodular goiter is still debatable. Radioiodine is a safe and effective treatment option when used alone or in combination with recombinant human
TSH
. This review discusses current therapeutic options to treat diffuse and multinodular non-toxic benign goiters.
...
PMID:Which Is the Ideal Treatment for Benign Diffuse and Multinodular Non-Toxic Goiters? 2724 69
65 years old male patient received 4 mg/day methylprednisolone baseline therapy and 50 mg/week etanercept treatment for 5 years due to rheumatoid arthritis. The patient experienced pain in neck, and developed weakness, fever and
dysphagia
. He had normal blood count but accelerated erythrocyte sedimentation rate (88 mm/hour), elevated CRP (49.3 mg/l) and hyperthyroidism (
TSH
0.006 mIU/l, fT4 27.22 pmol/l, fT3 5.61 pmol/l). The autoimmune origin could be excluded because of normal values of antibodies against thyreoidea peroxidase and
TSH
receptor. The ultrasound investigation showed focal hypoechogenic structure and low vascularisation. Based on the laboratory and ultrasound results as well as clinical signs etanercept related subacute thyroiditis was supposed. As part of the treatment we interrupted the etanercept treatment and gave 16 mg methylprednisolone for 5 days, then 8 mg for 7 days, after that the patient received the daily 4 mg of methylprednisolone as baseline therapy. After rapid improvement the symptoms got worse again so we repeated the administration of methylprednisolone treatment with a higher dose (16 mg/day for 5 days then 8 mg/day for two months). Thyroid functions and the inflammatory markers got normalized. We conclude the necessity of monitoring the thyroid function during etanercept treatment thus avoiding this rare but serious side effect. Orv Hetil. 2017; 158(39): 1550-1554.
...
PMID:[Etanercept-induced subacute thyroiditis. Case report and literature review]. 2894 61
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