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タグ「ultrasound screening」

Childhood thyroid diseases around Chernobyl evaluated by ultrasound examination and fine needle aspiration cytology.

 

Title: Childhood thyroid diseases around Chernobyl evaluated by ultrasound examination and fine needle aspiration cytology.

Author: Ito M, Yamashita S, Ashizawa K, Namba H, Hoshi M, Shibata Y, Sekine I, Nagataki S, Shigematsu I. Department of Pathology, Nagasaki University School of Medicine, Japan.

Reference: Thyroid. 1995 Oct;5(5):365-8.

doi:

Keywords:

Abstract: Screening by ultrasound examination and fine-needle aspiration cytological biopsy (FNA) was conducted in five regions in Belarus, Ukraine, and Russia to investigate the prevalence of childhood thyroid diseases around Chernobyl. Gomel, Zhitomir, Kiev, and the western area of Bryansk are the administrative regions where severe radioactive contamination occurred. The subjects from Mogilev, where contamination was relatively low, served as controls. Among 55,054 subjects (26,406 boys and 28,648 girls), the prevalence of ultrasonographic thyroid abnormalities such as nodule, cyst, and abnormal echogenity was significantly higher in the regions with severe contamination than in Mogilev. Of the 1,396 children showing echographic thyroid abnormalities 197 were selected for FNA, and a sample was successfully obtained for diagnosis from 171 (51 boys and 120 girls) of the 197 subjects. The aspirate was insufficient for diagnosis in the remaining 26 subjects. Thyroid cancer was encountered in four children (2.3%) from the contaminated regions, two children being from Gomel. The other thyroid diseases were follicular neoplasm, 6.4%; adenomatous goiter, 18.7%; chronic thyroiditis, 31.0%; and cyst, 24.0%, suggesting that a major cause of thyroid nodularity is nonneoplastic changes, mainly chronic thyroiditis and cysts. These results will serve as an important data base for further analyses and suggest that childhood thyroid diseases, including both neoplasms and immunological disorders, are consequences of radioactive fallout.

URL: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/8563473

Ultrasound examination of thyroid diseases in children and adults living in Tula region of Russia

Title: Ultrasound examination of thyroid diseases in children and adults living in Tula region of Russia

Author: Parshin, Vladimir S / Yamashita, Shunichi / Tsyb, Anatoly F / Narkhova, Nadegda P / Tarassova, Galina P / Ilyin, Aleksey A

Reference: International Congress Series, 1234, p.231-237, May 2002

doi: 10.1016/S0531-5131(01)00612-4

Keywords: Thyroid diseases; Ultrasound screening; Carcinoma; Chernobyl

Abstract: A medical team consisting of 36 specialists has examined 36 454 children and adults living in Tula region of Russia, where Cs-137 ground contamination levels are from 3.2 to 5.6 Ci/km2. A procedure of ultrasound thyroid screening was divided to medical and computer parts. The medical part included registration through individual thyroid examination; ultrasound examination of the thyroid of each person; repeated ultrasound examination of individuals with thyroid abnormalities; fine-needle aspiration biopsy of the thyroid, if needed, under ultrasound guidance and blood drawing; and physical examination by endocrinologist. The “Chart of ultrasound screening” was elaborated to summarize ultrasound findings and to simplify the documentation. The computer-based information system assured: database maintenance; saving thyroid images in digital format; providing the patients with the results of their examinations; and obtaining health statistics data. In summary, in the group of 5–9 years of age, no thyroid carcinomas were found; in age group of 10–14 years—0.013%; in age group of 15–19 years—0.044%; in age group of 20–29 years—0.091%; in age group of 30–39 years—0.121%; in age group of 40–49 years—0.553%; in age group of 50–59 years—0.349%.

URL: http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0531513101006124

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