Publications by authors named "E N Shavrova"

It is well recognized that the use of external irradiation of the head and neck to treat patients with various non-thyroid disorders increases their risk of developing papillary thyroid carcinoma years after radiation exposure. An increased risk of thyroid cancer has also been reported in survivors of the atomic bombs in Japan, as well as in Marshall Island residents exposed to radiation during the testing of hydrogen bombs. More recently, exposure to radioactive fallout as a result of the Chernobyl nuclear reactor accident has clearly caused an enormous increase in the incidence of childhood thyroid carcinoma in Belarus, Ukraine, and, to a lesser extent, in the Russian Federation, starting in 1990.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: The long-term effects of ionising radiation, including radioiodine, on thyroid function are not well known. We compared thyroid immunity and function in two groups of children from Belarus, one of whom was exposed to the radioactive fallout of Chernobyl.

Methods: We measured serum free thyroxine 4 (free T4), free T3, and thyrotropin hormone (TSH) and the prevalence of thyroid autoantibodies (antithyroglobulin and antithyroperoxidase), in 287 children or adolescents living in Hoiniki (average caesium contamination of 5.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

After the Chernobyl nuclear accident (April 26, 1986), childhood thyroid carcinoma had a great increase in Belarus and Ukraine, as a consequence of the exposure to iodine radioactive fallout. The epidemiological and clinical features of the disease were studied in 472 patients less than 21 yr old at diagnosis, with differentiated thyroid carcinoma, representing 97.7% of all thyroid carcinomas diagnosed in Belarus between May, 1986, and December, 1995.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

To provide diagnosis of recurrent herpetic stomatitis (RHS), non-direct immunoperoxidase (IP) and immunofluorescent (IF) methods were used, and to assess the immunoreactivity--complement fixation reaction (CFR), lymphocyte blasttransformation reaction (LBTR) as well as the passive hemagglutination reaction (PHR). A total of 21 patients with clinically assessed diagnosis of RHS was examined. The IP method obtained results were compared with those obtained with use of IF method.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF