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The spectrum of thyroid disorders in an iodine-deficient community: the Pescopagano survey.

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TLDR
In the present survey of an iodine-deficient community, a progressive increase with age of goiter prevalence, thyroid nodularity, and functional autonomy was observed, twice as high as that reported in iodine-sufficient areas, mainly due to an increased frequency of toxic nodular goiter.
Abstract
We carefully assessed thyroid status and goiter by ultrasound in 1411 subjects virtually representing the entire resident population of Pescopagano, an iodine-deficient village of Southern Italy. Median urinary iodine excretion was 55 microg/L. The prevalence of goiter was 16.0% in children and 59.8% in adults. Thyroid nodularity was 0.5% in children and progressively increased with age to 28.5% in the 56- to 65-yr-old group. The prevalence of present or past hyperthyroidism was 2.9%, including 9 cases with toxic diffuse goiter and 20 with toxic nodular goiter. Functional autonomy was rare in children, progressively increased with age up to 15.4% in the elderly, and was related to nodular goiter. The prevalences of overt and subclinical hypothyroidism in the adults were 0.2% and 3.8%, respectively. Serum autoantibodies to thyroglobulin and thyroperoxidase were detected in 12.6% of the entire population. The prevalence of diffuse autoimmune thyroiditis was 3.5%, being very low in children. Thyroid cancer was found in only 1 case. In conclusion, in the present survey of an iodine-deficient community, a progressive increase with age of goiter prevalence, thyroid nodularity, and functional autonomy was observed. Hyperthyroidism was twice as high as that reported in iodine-sufficient areas, mainly due to an increased frequency of toxic nodular goiter. Although low titer serum thyroid antibodies were relatively frequent, the prevalences of both overt and subclinical autoimmune hypothyroidism were not different from those observed in iodine-sufficient areas.

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American association of Clinical Endocrinologists, American college of endocrinology, and Associazione Medici Endocrinologi medical guidelines for clinical practice for the diagnosis and management of thyroid nodules - 2016 update

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Iodine-deficiency disorders

TL;DR: Introduction of iodised salt to regions of chronic iodine-deficiency disorders might transiently increase the proportion of thyroid disorders, but overall the small risks of iodine excess are far outweighed by the substantial risk of iodine deficiency.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The spectrum of thyroid disease in a community: the whickham survey

TL;DR: TSH levels above 6 mu/1 were shown to reflect a significant lowering of circulating thyroxine levels and showed a strong association with thyroid antibodies in both sexes, independent of age.
Journal ArticleDOI

The disorders induced by iodine deficiency.

TL;DR: Iodine deficiency constitutes one of the most common preventable causes of mental deficiency in the world today and most of the affected populations live in mountainous areas in preindustrialized countries, but 50 to 100 million people are still at risk in Europe.
Journal ArticleDOI

[Volumetric analysis of thyroid lobes by real-time ultrasound (author's transl)].

TL;DR: Thyroid volume as measured by real-time ultrasound in cadavers was compared with direct measurements obtained by submersion, finding the best calculated volume was obtained by multiplying with the optimised correction factor f = 0.479.
Journal ArticleDOI

The epidemiology of thyroid disease and implications for screening.

TL;DR: The burden of thyroid disease in the general population is enormous as mentioned in this paper, as many as 50% of people in the community have microscopic nodules, 3.5% have occult papillary carcinoma, 15% have palpable goiters, 10% demonstrate an abnormal thyroid-stimulating hormone level, and 5% of women have overt hypothyroidism or hyperthyroidism.
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