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Autoimmune thyroid disease

Current Opinion in Rheumatology, 2012
Autoimmune thyroid disorders (AITDs) are the most common organ-specific autoimmune disorders. The genetics as well as clinical and laboratory manifestations of AITDs are reviewed.We discuss the association between specific rheumatologic disorders and AITDs and manifestations of AITDs that mimic rheumatologic disorders.
Nikolaos, Stathatos, Gilbert H, Daniels
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Chronic Autoimmune Thyroiditis

New England Journal of Medicine, 1996
In 1912, Hashimoto described four women in whom the thyroid gland was enlarged and appeared to have been transformed into lymphoid tissue (“struma lymphomatosa”).1 Although the patients were not initially hypothyroid, they became so after thyroid surgery.
C M, Dayan, G H, Daniels
openaire   +2 more sources

Juvenile Autoimmune Thyroiditis

Journal of Pediatric Endocrinology and Metabolism, 2007
Autoimmune thyroiditis is a frequent cause of goiter in children and studies point to the increasing prevalence of juvenile autoimmune thyroiditis (JAT) in children and adolescents. Clinically, JAT can manifest, depending on the presence or absence of goiter, as either a goitrous form or atrophic form.
Sripathy, Gopalakrishnan   +1 more
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Autoimmune Thyroid Disease

Clinics in Laboratory Medicine, 1993
A considerable proportion of the thyroid diseases is due to aberrant immune reactions toward thyroid antigens. Autoreactivity is considered to be a normal process controlled by several suppressor mechanisms. Malfunction of these suppressor mechanisms may result in autoimmune disease.
P, Mooij, H A, Drexhage
openaire   +2 more sources

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