This method compares favorably with both surgery and radioiodine treatment, especially when the very low prevalence of posttreatment hypothyroidism is considered.
The aim of this study was to determine the prevalence of trapping-only nodules of the thyroid gland. The study was prospectively performed in patients bearing hot or warm thyroid nodules at pertechnetate scan in the presence of circulating thyrotropin (TSH) within the normal range. The study was restricted to these patients because nodules that suppress TSH are certainly autonomous. In 140 patients showing hot or warm nodules at 30-minute pertechnetate scintigraphy, and normal TSH levels, radioiodine scintigraphy was performed at 24 hours. The trapping-only pattern, i.e., the presence of a cold nodule in late radioiodine scintigraphy was observed in seven patients (5%). Five had benign thyroid nodules, one follicular carcinoma, and one extrathyroid metastases of papillary-follicular carcinoma. Despite controversy on this issue, trapping-only nodules of thyroid should be searched because they have risk of malignancy and must be differentiated from autonomous adenomas at the compensated stage. The search may be limited to patients with normal serum TSH.
Established methods for definitive ablation of autonomous thyroid nodules are surgery and radioiodine. Since it has been demonstrated that percutaneous ethanol injection can inactivate parathyroid adenomas and small hepatocellular carcinomas, we started a trial of this treatment in patients with autonomous thyroid nodules. Twenty-eight patients, 22 toxic and 6 nontoxic, all with undetectable thyrotropin serum levels and suppressed extranodular tissue on scintigraphy, were treated. Treatment consisted of percutaneous intranodular ethanol injection under ultrasound guidance. The total amount of alcohol injected ranged from 0.4 to 2.2 times the estimated nodule volume, divided into 4 to 9 injections performed at 2 to 7 day intervals. Most patients were treated with a single cycle of injections, but 7 of them required 2 cycles. The signs and symptoms of hyperthyroidism disappeared in all cases. Apparently complete cure (normal serum free thyroid hormones, thyrotropin in basal conditions and after thyrotropin releasing hormone, reactivation of extranodular tissue on scintigraphy with nodule no longer visible) was obtained in 17 patients (13 after 1 cycle and 4 after 2 cycles). Partial cure (normal serum free thyroid hormone levels, detectable thyrotropin levels with normal or blunted response to thyrotropin releasing hormone and partial reactivation of extranodular tissue on scintigraphy with nodule or parts of it still visible) was obtained in 10 patients (8 after 1 cycle and 2 after 2 cycles). In 1 patient with a very large nodule thyrotropin levels remained undetectable, but thyroid hormone levels eventually became normal. No recurrences were observed after a follow-up of 12 to 32 months (mean 20 months). No serious side effects were encountered. A clinically valuable result was obtained in all patients. These data suggest that this form of treatment could constitute an alternative to surgery and radioiodine for the ablation of autonomous thyroid nodules.
The hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal function was studied in 55 patients with various pituitary disorders. In particular, the consistency between the responses of plasma cortisol to exogenous ACTH and to insulin hypoglycemia was investigated in 5 patients in whom cortisol response to insulin was absent; four of these patients showed a cortisol response to ACTH of variable degree. These 4 patients had surgical or functional hypothalamus-pituitary disconnection and showed a preserved cortisol response to lysine vasopressin. These data demonstrate the unreliability of ACTH test in assessing hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal function in hypopituitary patients.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.