Objective: To longitudinally evaluate the timing of maternal thyroid underfunction occurrence in mildly iodine-deficient (ID) pregnant women, and ultimately assess the benefit of thyroid function testing at early gestation only in identifying maternal thyroid underfunction.
Participants/methods: Serum free-thyroxine and TSH were measured in 220 consecutive women once in early pregnancy (by week 12) and twice per trimester subsequently. Anti-thyroperoxidase and anti-thyroglobulin were also determined at initial and final observation.
Context: Mild to moderate iodine deficiency during pregnancy can cause transient maternal hypothyroidism and impaired mental development of the progeny. These unfavorable effects are preventable by iodine supplementation. In Europe, however, less than 50% pregnant women receive iodine-containing supplements, thus representing dietary iodized salt the only carrier of iodine for most women in this life stage.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: We prospectively evaluated the effects of 12 months thyrotropin suppressive levo-thyroxine (L-T4) therapy in terms of changes in both thyroid nodule size and cytological features and considered whether thyroid nodule size changes actually resulted in (or were the result of) cytological changes.
Design And Patients: We studied 142 consecutive patients with benign 'cold' solitary thyroid nodules. For the purposes of the study, we divided our patients into three groups according to their initial cytological nodule classification as follows: group 1, including 88 colloid nodules (CN); group 2, including 30 hyperplastic nodules (HN); and group 3, including 24 adenomatous nodules (AN).