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Does Thyroid Dysfunction Have a Role in the Etiology of Vocal Fold Edema? [PDF]

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Kravos A   +3 more
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TRIIODOTHYRONINE

Clinical Endocrinology, 1973
After 20 years in the wilderness, 3,5,3′‐triiodo‐l‐thyronine (T3) has come back home, for it is exactly 20 years since Gross & Pitt‐Rivers (1952) first drew attention to its presence in human serum. A few years later Pitt‐Rivers et al. (1955) demonstrated its formation from thyroxine (T4) given to patients with athyreotic myxoedema, and in 1957 ...
T, Sakurada   +3 more
openaire   +4 more sources

Triiodothyronine in pregnancy

American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology, 1967
Abstract The radioactive T 3 uptake test is a relatively simple laboratory procedure which indirectly measures circulating T 3 , the active fraction of the thyroid hormone. The present study applies this test to the three trimesters of pregnancy, the postpartum period, and to inevitable and incomplete abortions.
P D, Abbott, H I, Kantor, R R, Rember
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PROPRANOLOL, TRIIODOTHYRONINE, REVERSE TRIIODOTHYRONINE AND THYROID DISEASE

Clinical Endocrinology, 1979
SUMMARYPropranolol alone was given to sixteen hyperthyroid, and concomitantly with thyroxine therapy to ten hypothyroid patients. Following treatment of the hyperthyroid group for 1–2 weeks there was a significant decrease in serum triiodothyronine (T3) which correlated with the plasma propranolol steady state concentration.
J, Feely   +3 more
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Triiodothyronine in Diagnosis

Annals of Internal Medicine, 1973
Excerpt To the editor: Shenkman and associates (1) remind us that an elevated serum triiodothyronine (T3) concentration need not mean hyperthyroidism.
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