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Thyroid Disorders

Primary Care: Clinics in Office Practice
This article includes a review of information primary care physicians need to know direct their evaluation and treatment of thyroid disorders that include sick euthyroid, hyperthyroidism, hypothyroidism, and subclinical thyroid disorders.
Gauri, Dhir   +2 more
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Management of Thyroid Disorders

JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1963
THERE IS PROBABLY no field of medicine in which there are so many different opinions and practices as in that of diseases of the thyroid gland. In some clinics, most thyroid disorders are treated by surgical means and in others medical management is employed. It would seem profitable to review this unusual situation and to attempt to trace its origins.
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Thyroid Disorders in Pregnancy

Endocrinology and Metabolism Clinics of North America, 2011
Maternal hypothyroidism, thyroid antibody positivity, and hyperthyroidism may pose significant risks in terms of pregnancy complications and fetal adverse effects. Treatment of hyperthyroidism with thionamides remains the standard of care during pregnancy. Radioiodine use is contraindicated in pregnancy, including in the treatment of thyroid carcinoma,
Dorota A, Krajewski, Kenneth D, Burman
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Thyroid Disorders in Athletes

Current Sports Medicine Reports, 2009
Maintaining performance levels in athletes remains challenging when metabolic disturbances may be suspected clinically. In athletes there are reported deviations from normal range lab values and multiple factors that may lead to clinical suspicion of thyroid disease, including hypothyroidism, hyperthyroidism, and thyroiditis.
Thomas J, Duhig, Douglas, McKeag
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Management of Thyroid Disorders

Postgraduate Medicine, 1973
Tests of thyroid function not only indicate the presence of thyroid disorders but in some instances also locate the cause. When the diagnosis is primary hypothyroidism, dosage of thyroid should be low initially and increased to full replacement level gradually. Propranolol shows promise in the treatment of hyperthyroidism.
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Postirradiation Thyroid Disorders

The American Journal of Nursing, 1979
In 1958, when Suzanne was almost two, she developed cancer. A slight swelling of her neck and a puzzling fever that recurred in spite of vigorous medical treatment had been the only harbingers of the disease. After weeks of observation, antibiotics, and tuberculin testing, Suzanne was hospitalized for complete head and neck x-rays, barium swallow, bone
J H, Guimond, S G, Wilson
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Inflammatory thyroid disorders

Otolaryngologic Clinics of North America, 2003
Inflammatory thyroid disorders encompass a broad spectrum of diseases that are generally self-limited, and relatively easy to diagnose and manage. Autoimmune subtypes are by far the most commonly encountered diagnoses and create the most confusion because of simultaneous overlap and the potential for interconversion among the subtypes.
Joseph C, Sniezek, Thomas B, Francis
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Disorders of thyroid morphogenesis

Best Practice & Research Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism, 2017
Developmental anomalies of the thyroid gland, defined as thyroid dysgenesis, underlie the majority of cases of congenital hypothyroidism. Thyroid dysgenesis is predominantly a sporadic disorder although a reported familial enrichment, variation of incidence by ethnicity and the monogenic defects associated mainly with athyreosis or orthotopic thyroid ...
Rasha, Abu-Khudir   +3 more
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Thyroid Disorders

Pediatrics In Review, 2021
Guido, Alarcon   +2 more
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Thyroid Disorders and Hypercoagulability

Seminars in Thrombosis and Hemostasis, 2011
Various abnormalities of coagulation and fibrinolysis, ranging from subclinical laboratory abnormalities to clinically significant disorders of hemostasis, but rarely major hemorrhage or thromboembolism, may occur in patients with thyroid diseases. This review discusses the relationships between thyroid dysfunction and the coagulation/fibrinolytic ...
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