Background: Three different strategies to manage transient hypocalcemia after total thyroidectomy were compared to evaluate cost-effectiveness. The reliability of total serum calcium (TSCa), ionized calcium (ICa), and intact parathyroid hormone (iPTH) were investigated to achieve this goal.
Methods: A multicenter, prospective randomized study was carried out with 169 patients.
Giant cell lesions of bone share similar clinical, radiological, and histological features. The most challenging differential diagnosis is between giant cell tumor (GCT) and brown tumor (BT) secondary to hyperparathyroidism. Differential diagnosis is based on determining serum calcium concentration and other markers of calcium metabolism.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe authors present their statistical results in terms of maximum velocity and resistive Index of the inferior thyroid artery in a group of 200 patients, all with different diseases of the gland, but without hyperthyroidism. Measurements were taken in the first tract of the inferior thyroid artery, deep and posterior to the common carotid, without encountering any significant difficulties in 83% of cases, the determinations taking less than one minute; in some patients stretching or rotation of the neck was necessary in order to obtain a good result. The maximum systolic velocities were in agreement with those reported in the literature, but statistical analysis showed a significant correlation between systolic peak and certain groups or types of disease and, albeit less reliably, between the Resistive Index and type of disease.
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