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Goitre

A goitre, or goiter, is a swelling in the neck resulting from an enlarged thyroid gland.[1][2] A goitre can be associated with a thyroid that is not functioning properly.

Goitre
Other namesGoiter
Diffuse hyperplasia of the thyroid
SpecialtyEndocrinology

Worldwide, over 90% of goitre cases are caused by iodine deficiency.[3] The term is from the Latin gutturia, meaning throat. Most goitres are not cancerous (benign), though they may be potentially harmful.

Signs and symptoms edit

A goitre can present as a palpable or visible enlargement of the thyroid gland at the base of the neck. A goitre, if associated with hypothyroidism or hyperthyroidism, may be present with symptoms of the underlying disorder. For hyperthyroidism, the most common symptoms are associated with adrenergic stimulation: tachycardia (increased heart rate), palpitations, nervousness, tremor, increased blood pressure and heat intolerance. Clinical manifestations are often related to hypermetabolism (increased metabolism), excessive thyroid hormone, an increase in oxygen consumption, metabolic changes in protein metabolism, immunologic stimulation of diffuse goitre, and ocular changes (exophthalmos).[4] Hypothyroid people commonly have poor appetite, cold intolerance, constipation, lethargy and may undergo weight gain. However, these symptoms are often non-specific and make diagnosis difficult.[citation needed]

According to the WHO classification of goitre by palpation, the severity of goitre is currently graded as grade 0, grade 1, grade 2.[5]

Causes edit

Worldwide, the most common cause for goitre is iodine deficiency, commonly seen in countries that scarcely use iodized salt. Selenium deficiency is also considered a contributing factor. In countries that use iodized salt, Hashimoto's thyroiditis is the most common cause.[6] Goitre can also result from cyanide poisoning, which is particularly common in tropical countries where people eat the cyanide-rich cassava root as the staple food.[7]

Cause Pathophysiology Resultant thyroid activity Growth pattern Treatment Incidence and prevalence Prognosis
Iodine deficiency Hyperplasia of thyroid to compensate for decreased efficacy Can cause hypothyroidism Diffuse Iodine Constitutes over 90% cases of goitre worldwide[3] Increased size of thyroid may be permanent if untreated for around five years
Congenital hypothyroidism Inborn errors of thyroid hormone synthesis Hypothyroidism
Goitrogen ingestion
Adverse drug reactions
Hashimoto's thyroiditis Autoimmune disease in which the thyroid gland is gradually destroyed. Infiltration of lymphocytes. Hypothyroidism Diffuse and lobulated[8] Thyroid hormone replacement Prevalence: 1 to 1.5 in a 1000 Remission with treatment
Pituitary disease Hypersecretion of thyroid stimulating hormone, almost always by a pituitary adenoma[9] Diffuse Pituitary surgery Very rare[9]
Graves' disease—also called Basedow syndrome Autoantibodies (TSHR-Ab) that activate the TSH-receptor (TSHR) Hyperthyroidism Diffuse Antithyroid agents, radioiodine, surgery Will develop in about 0.5% of males and 3% of females Remission with treatment, but still lower quality of life for 14 to 21 years after treatment, with lower mood and lower vitality, regardless of the choice of treatment[10]
Thyroiditis Acute or chronic inflammation Can be hyperthyroidism initially, but progress to hypothyroidism
Thyroid cancer Usually uninodular Overall relative 5-year survival rate of 85% for females and 74% for males[11]
Benign thyroid neoplasms Usually hyperthyroidism Usually uninodular Mostly harmless[12]
Thyroid hormone insensitivity Secretional hyperthyroidism,
Symptomatic hypothyroidism
Diffuse

Diagnosis edit

 
Goitre with toxic adenoma

Goitre may be diagnosed via a thyroid function test in an individual suspected of having it.[13]

Types edit

A goitre may be classified either as nodular or diffuse. Nodular goitres are either of one nodule (uninodular) or of multiple nodules (multinodular).[14] Multinodular goiter (MNG) is the most common disorder of the thyroid gland.[15]

Growth pattern
  • Uninodular goitre: one thyroid nodule; can be either inactive, or active (toxic) – autonomously producing thyroid hormone.
  • Multinodular goitre: multiple nodules;[16] can likewise be inactive or toxic, the latter is called toxic multinodular goitre and associated with hyperthyroidism. These nodules grow up at varying rates and secrete thyroid hormone autonomously, thereby suppressing TSH-dependent growth and function in the rest of gland. Inactive nodules in the same goitre can be malignant.[17] Thyroid cancer is identified in 13.7% of the patients operated for multinodular goitre.[18]
  • Diffuse goitre: the whole thyroid appearing to be enlarged due to hyperplasia.
Size
  • Class I: the goitre in normal posture of the head cannot be seen; it is only found by palpation.
  • Class II: the goitre is palpable and can be easily seen.
  • Class III: the goitre is very large and is retrosternal (partially or totally lying below the sternum), pressure results in compression marks.

Treatment edit

Goitre is treated according to the cause. If the thyroid gland is producing an excess of thyroid hormones (T3 and T4), radioactive iodine is given to the patient to shrink the gland. If goitre is caused by iodine deficiency, small doses of iodide in the form of Lugol's iodine or KI solution are given. If the goitre is associated with an underactive thyroid, thyroid supplements are used as treatment. Sometimes a partial or complete thyroidectomy is required.[19]

Epidemiology edit

 
Disability-adjusted life year for iodine deficiency per 100,000 inhabitants in 2002.[20]
  no data
  fewer than 50
  50–100
  100–150
  150–200
  200–250
  250–300
  300–350
  350–400
  400–450
  450–500
  500–800
  more than 800

Goitre is more common among women, but this includes the many types of goitre caused by autoimmune problems, and not only those caused by simple lack of iodine.[21]

Iodine mainly accumulates in the sea and in the topsoil. Before iodine enrichment programs, goiters was common in areas with repeated flooding or glacial activities, which erodes the topsoil. It is endemic in populations where the intake of iodine is less than 10 µg per day.[22]

Examples of such regions include the alpine regions of Southern Europe (such as Switzerland), the Himalayans, the Great Lakes basin, etc. As reported in 1923, all the domestic animals have goiter in some of the glacial valleys of Southern Alaska. It was so severe in Pemberton Meadows that it was difficult to raise young animals there.[23]

History edit

 
Goitre and congenital iodine deficiency syndrome in Styria, copper engraving, 1815
 
Woman in Miesbacher Tracht wearing a goitre choker

Chinese physicians of the Tang dynasty (618–907) were the first to successfully treat patients with goitre by using the iodine-rich thyroid gland of animals such as sheep and pigs—in raw, pill, or powdered form.[24] This was outlined in Zhen Quan's (d. 643 AD) book, as well as several others.[24] One Chinese book, The Pharmacopoeia of the Heavenly Husbandman, asserted that iodine-rich sargassum was used to treat goitre patients by the 1st century BC, but this book was written much later.[24]

In the 12th century, Zayn al-Din al-Jurjani, a Persian physician, provided the first description of Graves' disease after noting the association of goitre and a displacement of the eye known as exophthalmos in his Thesaurus of the Shah of Khwarazm, the major medical dictionary of its time.[25][26] The disease was later named after Irish doctor Robert James Graves, who described a case of goitre with exophthalmos in 1835. The German Karl Adolph von Basedow also independently reported the same constellation of symptoms in 1840, while earlier reports of the disease were also published by the Italians Giuseppe Flajani and Antonio Giuseppe Testa, in 1802 and 1810 respectively,[27] and by the English physician Caleb Hillier Parry (a friend of Edward Jenner) in the late 18th century.[28]

Paracelsus (1493–1541) was the first person to propose a relationship between goitre and minerals (particularly lead) in drinking water.[29] Iodine was later discovered by Bernard Courtois in 1811 from seaweed ash.[30]

Goitre was previously common in many areas that were deficient in iodine in the soil. For example, in the English Midlands, the condition was known as Derbyshire Neck. In the United States, goitre was found in the Appalachian,[31][32] Great Lakes, Midwest, and Intermountain regions. The condition is now practically absent in affluent nations, where table salt is supplemented with iodine. However, it is still prevalent in India, China,[33] Central Asia, and Central Africa.

Goitre had been prevalent in the alpine countries for a long time. Switzerland reduced the condition by introducing iodized salt in 1922. The Bavarian tracht in the Miesbach and Salzburg regions, which appeared in the 19th century, includes a choker, dubbed Kropfband (struma band) which was used to hide either the goitre or the remnants of goitre surgery.[34]

Society and culture edit

In the 1920s wearing bottles of iodine around the neck was believed to prevent goitre.[35]

Notable cases edit

Heraldry edit

The coat of arms and crest of Die Kröpfner, of Tyrol showed a man "afflicted with a large goitre", an apparent pun on the German for the word ("Kropf").[39]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Thyroid Nodules and Swellings". British Thyroid Foundation. 11 September 2019.
  2. ^ "Goitre - NHS Choices". NHS Choices. 19 October 2017.
  3. ^ a b Hörmann R (2005). Schilddrüsenkrankheiten Leitfaden für Praxis und Klinik (4., aktualisierte und erw. Aufl ed.). Berlin. pp. 15–37. ISBN 3-936072-27-2.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  4. ^ Porth CM, Gaspard KJ, Noble KA (2011). Essentials of pathophysiology: Concepts of altered health states (3rd ed.). Philadelphia, PA: Wolters Kluwer/Lippincott Williams & Wilkins.
  5. ^ "Goitre as a determinant of the prevalence and severity of iodine deficiency disorders in populations". World Health Organization. 2014.
  6. ^ Mitchell RS, Kumar V, Abbas AK, Fausto N (2007). Robbins Basic Pathology (8th ed.). Philadelphia: Saunders. ISBN 978-1-4160-2973-1.
  7. ^ "Toxicological Profile For Cyanide" (PDF). Atsdr.cdc.gov. (PDF) from the original on 28 July 2004. Retrieved 16 March 2017.
  8. ^ Babademez MA, Tuncay KS, Zaim M, Acar B, Karaşen RM (November 2010). "Hashimoto thyroiditis and thyroid gland anomalies". The Journal of Craniofacial Surgery. 21 (6): 1807–9. doi:10.1097/SCS.0b013e3181f43e32. PMID 21119426.
  9. ^ a b Thyrotropin (TSH)-secreting pituitary adenomas. By Roy E Weiss and Samuel Refetoff. Last literature review version 19.1: January 2011. This topic last updated: July 2, 2009
  10. ^ Abraham-Nordling M, Törring O, Hamberger B, Lundell G, Tallstedt L, Calissendorff J, Wallin G (November 2005). "Graves' disease: a long-term quality-of-life follow up of patients randomized to treatment with antithyroid drugs, radioiodine, or surgery". Thyroid. 15 (11): 1279–86. doi:10.1089/thy.2005.15.1279. PMID 16356093.
  11. ^ Numbers from EUROCARE, from Page 10 in: Grünwald F, Biersack HJ (2005). Thyroid cancer. Berlin: Springer. ISBN 978-3-540-22309-2.
  12. ^ Bukvic BR, Zivaljevic VR, Sipetic SB, Diklic AD, Tausanovic KM, Paunovic IR (August 2014). "Improvement of quality of life in patients with benign goiter after surgical treatment". Langenbeck's Archives of Surgery. 399 (6): 755–64. doi:10.1007/s00423-014-1221-7. PMID 25002182. S2CID 34137703.
  13. ^ "Goitre". nhs.uk. 19 October 2017. Retrieved 27 March 2019.
  14. ^ "Nodular Goiter - an overview | ScienceDirect Topics". www.sciencedirect.com. Retrieved 6 March 2022.
  15. ^ Feingold, K. R.; et al. (2000). "Multinodular Goiter". MDText.com. PMID 25905424.
  16. ^ Frilling A, Liu C, Weber F (2004). "Benign multinodular goiter". Scandinavian Journal of Surgery. 93 (4): 278–81. doi:10.1177/145749690409300405. PMID 15658668. S2CID 38834260.
  17. ^ "Toxic multinodular goitre - Symptoms, diagnosis and treatment | BMJ Best Practice". bestpractice.bmj.com.
  18. ^ Gandolfi PP, Frisina A, Raffa M, Renda F, Rocchetti O, Ruggeri C, Tombolini A (August 2004). "The incidence of thyroid carcinoma in multinodular goiter: retrospective analysis". Acta Bio-Medica. 75 (2): 114–7. PMID 15481700.
  19. ^ "Goiter – Simple". The New York Times.
  20. ^ "Mortality and Burden of Disease Estimates for WHO Member States in 2002" (xls). World Health Organization. 2002.
  21. ^ 1
  22. ^ , World Health Organization - 2014
  23. ^ Kimball, O. P. (February 1923). "The Prevention of Simple Goiter". American Journal of Public Health. 13 (2): 81–87. doi:10.2105/ajph.13.2.81-a. ISSN 0271-4353. PMC 1354367. PMID 18010882.
  24. ^ a b c Temple R (1986). The Genius of China: 3,000 Years of Science, Discovery, and Invention. New York: Simon and Schuster, Inc. pp. 134–5. ISBN 0-671-62028-2.
  25. ^ Basedow's syndrome or disease at Who Named It? – the history and naming of the disease
  26. ^ Ljunggren JG (August 1983). "[Who was the man behind the syndrome: Ismail al-Jurjani, Testa, Flagani, Parry, Graves or Basedow? Use the term hyperthyreosis instead]". Läkartidningen. 80 (32–33): 2902. PMID 6355710.
  27. ^ Giuseppe Flajani at Who Named It?
  28. ^ Hull G (June 1998). "Caleb Hillier Parry 1755-1822: a notable provincial physician". Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine. 91 (6): 335–8. doi:10.1177/014107689809100618. PMC 1296785. PMID 9771526.
  29. ^ "Paracelsus" Britannica
  30. ^ Davy, Humphry (1 January 1814). "VI. Some experiments and observations on a new substance which becomes a violet coloured gas by heat". Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. 104: 74–93. doi:10.1098/rstl.1814.0007. S2CID 109845199.
  31. ^ "Iodine Deficiency".
  32. ^ Hollingsworth, Dorothy R. (1977). "Kentucky Appalachian Goiter Without Iodine Deficiency". American Journal of Diseases of Children. 131 (8): 866–869. doi:10.1001/archpedi.1977.02120210044010. PMID 888801.
  33. ^ "In Raising the World's I.Q., the Secret's in the Salt", article by Donald G. McNeil, Jr., December 16, 2006, The New York Times
  34. ^ Wissen, Planet (16 March 2017). "Planet Wissen".
  35. ^ "ARCHIVED – Why take iodine?". Nrc-cnrc.gc.ca. 30 September 2011. Retrieved 1 November 2012.
  36. ^ Lahita RG, Yalof I (20 July 2004). Women and Autoimmune Disease. HarperCollins. p. 158. ISBN 978-0-06-008149-2.
  37. ^ Altman LK (14 September 1991). "A White House Puzzle: Immunity Ailments". The New York Times. Doctors Say Bush Is in Good Health
  38. ^ Altman LK (28 May 1991). "The Doctor's World; A White House Puzzle: Immunity Ailments". The New York Times.
  39. ^ Fox-Davies AC (1904). The Art of Heraldry: An Encyclopædia of Armory. New York and London: Benjamin Blom, Inc. p. 413.

goitre, goitre, goiter, swelling, neck, resulting, from, enlarged, thyroid, gland, goitre, associated, with, thyroid, that, functioning, properly, other, namesgoiterdiffuse, hyperplasia, thyroidspecialtyendocrinologyworldwide, over, goitre, cases, caused, iodi. A goitre or goiter is a swelling in the neck resulting from an enlarged thyroid gland 1 2 A goitre can be associated with a thyroid that is not functioning properly GoitreOther namesGoiterDiffuse hyperplasia of the thyroidSpecialtyEndocrinologyWorldwide over 90 of goitre cases are caused by iodine deficiency 3 The term is from the Latin gutturia meaning throat Most goitres are not cancerous benign though they may be potentially harmful Contents 1 Signs and symptoms 2 Causes 3 Diagnosis 3 1 Types 4 Treatment 5 Epidemiology 6 History 7 Society and culture 7 1 Notable cases 7 2 Heraldry 8 See also 9 ReferencesSigns and symptoms editA goitre can present as a palpable or visible enlargement of the thyroid gland at the base of the neck A goitre if associated with hypothyroidism or hyperthyroidism may be present with symptoms of the underlying disorder For hyperthyroidism the most common symptoms are associated with adrenergic stimulation tachycardia increased heart rate palpitations nervousness tremor increased blood pressure and heat intolerance Clinical manifestations are often related to hypermetabolism increased metabolism excessive thyroid hormone an increase in oxygen consumption metabolic changes in protein metabolism immunologic stimulation of diffuse goitre and ocular changes exophthalmos 4 Hypothyroid people commonly have poor appetite cold intolerance constipation lethargy and may undergo weight gain However these symptoms are often non specific and make diagnosis difficult citation needed According to the WHO classification of goitre by palpation the severity of goitre is currently graded as grade 0 grade 1 grade 2 5 nbsp Goitre Class II WHO grade 2 nbsp Goitre Class III WHO grade 2Causes editWorldwide the most common cause for goitre is iodine deficiency commonly seen in countries that scarcely use iodized salt Selenium deficiency is also considered a contributing factor In countries that use iodized salt Hashimoto s thyroiditis is the most common cause 6 Goitre can also result from cyanide poisoning which is particularly common in tropical countries where people eat the cyanide rich cassava root as the staple food 7 Cause Pathophysiology Resultant thyroid activity Growth pattern Treatment Incidence and prevalence PrognosisIodine deficiency Hyperplasia of thyroid to compensate for decreased efficacy Can cause hypothyroidism Diffuse Iodine Constitutes over 90 cases of goitre worldwide 3 Increased size of thyroid may be permanent if untreated for around five yearsCongenital hypothyroidism Inborn errors of thyroid hormone synthesis HypothyroidismGoitrogen ingestionAdverse drug reactionsHashimoto s thyroiditis Autoimmune disease in which the thyroid gland is gradually destroyed Infiltration of lymphocytes Hypothyroidism Diffuse and lobulated 8 Thyroid hormone replacement Prevalence 1 to 1 5 in a 1000 Remission with treatmentPituitary disease Hypersecretion of thyroid stimulating hormone almost always by a pituitary adenoma 9 Diffuse Pituitary surgery Very rare 9 Graves disease also called Basedow syndrome Autoantibodies TSHR Ab that activate the TSH receptor TSHR Hyperthyroidism Diffuse Antithyroid agents radioiodine surgery Will develop in about 0 5 of males and 3 of females Remission with treatment but still lower quality of life for 14 to 21 years after treatment with lower mood and lower vitality regardless of the choice of treatment 10 Thyroiditis Acute or chronic inflammation Can be hyperthyroidism initially but progress to hypothyroidismThyroid cancer Usually uninodular Overall relative 5 year survival rate of 85 for females and 74 for males 11 Benign thyroid neoplasms Usually hyperthyroidism Usually uninodular Mostly harmless 12 Thyroid hormone insensitivity Secretional hyperthyroidism Symptomatic hypothyroidism DiffuseSarcoidosis Amyloidosis Hydatidiform mole Cysts Acromegaly Pendred syndromeDiagnosis edit nbsp Goitre with toxic adenomaGoitre may be diagnosed via a thyroid function test in an individual suspected of having it 13 Types edit A goitre may be classified either as nodular or diffuse Nodular goitres are either of one nodule uninodular or of multiple nodules multinodular 14 Multinodular goiter MNG is the most common disorder of the thyroid gland 15 Growth patternUninodular goitre one thyroid nodule can be either inactive or active toxic autonomously producing thyroid hormone Multinodular goitre multiple nodules 16 can likewise be inactive or toxic the latter is called toxic multinodular goitre and associated with hyperthyroidism These nodules grow up at varying rates and secrete thyroid hormone autonomously thereby suppressing TSH dependent growth and function in the rest of gland Inactive nodules in the same goitre can be malignant 17 Thyroid cancer is identified in 13 7 of the patients operated for multinodular goitre 18 Diffuse goitre the whole thyroid appearing to be enlarged due to hyperplasia SizeClass I the goitre in normal posture of the head cannot be seen it is only found by palpation Class II the goitre is palpable and can be easily seen Class III the goitre is very large and is retrosternal partially or totally lying below the sternum pressure results in compression marks Treatment editGoitre is treated according to the cause If the thyroid gland is producing an excess of thyroid hormones T3 and T4 radioactive iodine is given to the patient to shrink the gland If goitre is caused by iodine deficiency small doses of iodide in the form of Lugol s iodine or KI solution are given If the goitre is associated with an underactive thyroid thyroid supplements are used as treatment Sometimes a partial or complete thyroidectomy is required 19 Epidemiology edit nbsp Disability adjusted life year for iodine deficiency per 100 000 inhabitants in 2002 20 no data fewer than 50 50 100 100 150 150 200 200 250 250 300 300 350 350 400 400 450 450 500 500 800 more than 800Goitre is more common among women but this includes the many types of goitre caused by autoimmune problems and not only those caused by simple lack of iodine 21 Iodine mainly accumulates in the sea and in the topsoil Before iodine enrichment programs goiters was common in areas with repeated flooding or glacial activities which erodes the topsoil It is endemic in populations where the intake of iodine is less than 10 µg per day 22 Examples of such regions include the alpine regions of Southern Europe such as Switzerland the Himalayans the Great Lakes basin etc As reported in 1923 all the domestic animals have goiter in some of the glacial valleys of Southern Alaska It was so severe in Pemberton Meadows that it was difficult to raise young animals there 23 History edit nbsp Goitre and congenital iodine deficiency syndrome in Styria copper engraving 1815 nbsp Woman in Miesbacher Tracht wearing a goitre chokerChinese physicians of the Tang dynasty 618 907 were the first to successfully treat patients with goitre by using the iodine rich thyroid gland of animals such as sheep and pigs in raw pill or powdered form 24 This was outlined in Zhen Quan s d 643 AD book as well as several others 24 One Chinese book The Pharmacopoeia of the Heavenly Husbandman asserted that iodine rich sargassum was used to treat goitre patients by the 1st century BC but this book was written much later 24 In the 12th century Zayn al Din al Jurjani a Persian physician provided the first description of Graves disease after noting the association of goitre and a displacement of the eye known as exophthalmos in his Thesaurus of the Shah of Khwarazm the major medical dictionary of its time 25 26 The disease was later named after Irish doctor Robert James Graves who described a case of goitre with exophthalmos in 1835 The German Karl Adolph von Basedow also independently reported the same constellation of symptoms in 1840 while earlier reports of the disease were also published by the Italians Giuseppe Flajani and Antonio Giuseppe Testa in 1802 and 1810 respectively 27 and by the English physician Caleb Hillier Parry a friend of Edward Jenner in the late 18th century 28 Paracelsus 1493 1541 was the first person to propose a relationship between goitre and minerals particularly lead in drinking water 29 Iodine was later discovered by Bernard Courtois in 1811 from seaweed ash 30 Goitre was previously common in many areas that were deficient in iodine in the soil For example in the English Midlands the condition was known as Derbyshire Neck In the United States goitre was found in the Appalachian 31 32 Great Lakes Midwest and Intermountain regions The condition is now practically absent in affluent nations where table salt is supplemented with iodine However it is still prevalent in India China 33 Central Asia and Central Africa Goitre had been prevalent in the alpine countries for a long time Switzerland reduced the condition by introducing iodized salt in 1922 The Bavarian tracht in the Miesbach and Salzburg regions which appeared in the 19th century includes a choker dubbed Kropfband struma band which was used to hide either the goitre or the remnants of goitre surgery 34 Society and culture editIn the 1920s wearing bottles of iodine around the neck was believed to prevent goitre 35 Notable cases edit Former U S President George H W Bush and his wife Barbara Bush were both diagnosed with Graves disease and goitres within two years of each other The disease caused hyperthyroidism and cardiac dysrhythmia 36 37 Scientists said that absent an environmental cause the odds of both a husband and wife having Graves disease might be 1 in 100 000 or as low as 1 in 3 000 000 38 Heraldry edit The coat of arms and crest of Die Kropfner of Tyrol showed a man afflicted with a large goitre an apparent pun on the German for the word Kropf 39 See also editDavid Marine conducted substantial research on the treatment of goitre with iodine Endemic goitre Struma ovarii a kind of teratoma Thyroid hormone receptorReferences edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Goiters nbsp Look up goitre in Wiktionary the free dictionary Thyroid Nodules and Swellings British Thyroid Foundation 11 September 2019 Goitre NHS Choices NHS Choices 19 October 2017 a b Hormann R 2005 Schilddrusenkrankheiten Leitfaden fur Praxis und Klinik 4 aktualisierte und erw Aufl ed Berlin pp 15 37 ISBN 3 936072 27 2 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Porth CM Gaspard KJ Noble KA 2011 Essentials of pathophysiology Concepts of altered health states 3rd ed Philadelphia PA Wolters Kluwer Lippincott Williams amp Wilkins Goitre as a determinant of the prevalence and severity of iodine deficiency disorders in populations World Health Organization 2014 Mitchell RS Kumar V Abbas AK Fausto N 2007 Robbins Basic Pathology 8th ed Philadelphia Saunders ISBN 978 1 4160 2973 1 Toxicological Profile For Cyanide PDF Atsdr cdc gov Archived PDF from the original on 28 July 2004 Retrieved 16 March 2017 Babademez MA Tuncay KS Zaim M Acar B Karasen RM November 2010 Hashimoto thyroiditis and thyroid gland anomalies The Journal of Craniofacial Surgery 21 6 1807 9 doi 10 1097 SCS 0b013e3181f43e32 PMID 21119426 a b Thyrotropin TSH secreting pituitary adenomas By Roy E Weiss and Samuel Refetoff Last literature review version 19 1 January 2011 This topic last updated July 2 2009 Abraham Nordling M Torring O Hamberger B Lundell G Tallstedt L Calissendorff J Wallin G November 2005 Graves disease a long term quality of life follow up of patients randomized to treatment with antithyroid drugs radioiodine or surgery Thyroid 15 11 1279 86 doi 10 1089 thy 2005 15 1279 PMID 16356093 Numbers from EUROCARE from Page 10 in Grunwald F Biersack HJ 2005 Thyroid cancer Berlin Springer ISBN 978 3 540 22309 2 Bukvic BR Zivaljevic VR Sipetic SB Diklic AD Tausanovic KM Paunovic IR August 2014 Improvement of quality of life in patients with benign goiter after surgical treatment Langenbeck s Archives of Surgery 399 6 755 64 doi 10 1007 s00423 014 1221 7 PMID 25002182 S2CID 34137703 Goitre nhs uk 19 October 2017 Retrieved 27 March 2019 Nodular Goiter an overview ScienceDirect Topics www sciencedirect com Retrieved 6 March 2022 Feingold K R et al 2000 Multinodular Goiter MDText com PMID 25905424 Frilling A Liu C Weber F 2004 Benign multinodular goiter Scandinavian Journal of Surgery 93 4 278 81 doi 10 1177 145749690409300405 PMID 15658668 S2CID 38834260 Toxic multinodular goitre Symptoms diagnosis and treatment BMJ Best Practice bestpractice bmj com Gandolfi PP Frisina A Raffa M Renda F Rocchetti O Ruggeri C Tombolini A August 2004 The incidence of thyroid carcinoma in multinodular goiter retrospective analysis Acta Bio Medica 75 2 114 7 PMID 15481700 Goiter Simple The New York Times Mortality and Burden of Disease Estimates for WHO Member States in 2002 xls World Health Organization 2002 1 Goitre as a determinant of the prevalence and severity of iodine deficiency disorders in populations World Health Organization 2014 Kimball O P February 1923 The Prevention of Simple Goiter American Journal of Public Health 13 2 81 87 doi 10 2105 ajph 13 2 81 a ISSN 0271 4353 PMC 1354367 PMID 18010882 a b c Temple R 1986 The Genius of China 3 000 Years of Science Discovery and Invention New York Simon and Schuster Inc pp 134 5 ISBN 0 671 62028 2 Basedow s syndrome or disease at Who Named It the history and naming of the disease Ljunggren JG August 1983 Who was the man behind the syndrome Ismail al Jurjani Testa Flagani Parry Graves or Basedow Use the term hyperthyreosis instead Lakartidningen 80 32 33 2902 PMID 6355710 Giuseppe Flajani at Who Named It Hull G June 1998 Caleb Hillier Parry 1755 1822 a notable provincial physician Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine 91 6 335 8 doi 10 1177 014107689809100618 PMC 1296785 PMID 9771526 Paracelsus Britannica Davy Humphry 1 January 1814 VI Some experiments and observations on a new substance which becomes a violet coloured gas by heat Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London 104 74 93 doi 10 1098 rstl 1814 0007 S2CID 109845199 Iodine Deficiency Hollingsworth Dorothy R 1977 Kentucky Appalachian Goiter Without Iodine Deficiency American Journal of Diseases of Children 131 8 866 869 doi 10 1001 archpedi 1977 02120210044010 PMID 888801 In Raising the World s I Q the Secret s in the Salt article by Donald G McNeil Jr December 16 2006 The New York Times Wissen Planet 16 March 2017 Planet Wissen ARCHIVED Why take iodine Nrc cnrc gc ca 30 September 2011 Retrieved 1 November 2012 Lahita RG Yalof I 20 July 2004 Women and Autoimmune Disease HarperCollins p 158 ISBN 978 0 06 008149 2 Altman LK 14 September 1991 A White House Puzzle Immunity Ailments The New York Times Doctors Say Bush Is in Good Health Altman LK 28 May 1991 The Doctor s World A White House Puzzle Immunity Ailments The New York Times Fox Davies AC 1904 The Art of Heraldry An Encyclopaedia of Armory New York and London Benjamin Blom Inc p 413 Retrieved from 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