methimazole and Thyroid-Nodule

methimazole has been researched along with Thyroid-Nodule* in 10 studies

Trials

2 trial(s) available for methimazole and Thyroid-Nodule

ArticleYear
Thyroid nodules treated with percutaneous radiofrequency thermal ablation: a comparative study.
    The Journal of clinical endocrinology and metabolism, 2012, Volume: 97, Issue:12

    Percutaneous radiofrequency thermal ablation (RTA) was reported as an effective tool for the management of thyroid nodules (TNs). The aim of this study was to investigate the effects of RTA and to establish whether they were treatment-related by comparison with a matched, untreated control group.. The study population included 40 patients with compressive TNs: 22 had nontoxic TNs, and 18 had toxic TNs and were treated with methimazole. In all patients, a fine-needle aspiration cytology was performed to exclude a thyroid malignancy.. Twenty patients were treated with RTA (group A), and 20 others did not receive any treatment (group B). At baseline, age, gender, and TN features did not differ significantly between groups. All patients were clinically, biochemically, and morphologically evaluated at baseline and after 1, 3, 6, and 12 months.. TN volume significantly decreased in group A (1.8 ± 0.3 ml at 12 months vs. 13.3 ± 1.8 ml at baseline; P < 0.0001) and remained stable in group B [11.7 ± 1.5 ml at 12 months vs. 11.2 ± 1.5 ml at baseline; P = not significant (NS)]. At 3-, 6-, and 12-month evaluations, TN volume was significantly lower in group A than in group B (P < 0.005). At the end of the follow-up, pressure symptoms were improved in all patients in group A but persisted unchanged in group B. In group A, hyperthyroidism completely recovered in 40% and improved in 40% of patients with toxic TNs, whereas it persisted in all patients with toxic TNs in group B. RTA was safe and well tolerated in all patients.. RTA induced a marked TN volume shrinkage resulting in parallel improvement of pressure symptoms. In most patients with toxic TNs, hyperthyroidism significantly improved as well. RTA may represent a valid therapeutic approach in patients with TNs not receiving conventional treatments.

    Topics: Adult; Aged; Aged, 80 and over; Antithyroid Agents; Biopsy, Fine-Needle; Catheter Ablation; Combined Modality Therapy; Female; Humans; Male; Matched-Pair Analysis; Methimazole; Middle Aged; Thyroid Nodule; Thyrotoxicosis; Treatment Outcome; Tumor Burden; Ultrasonography

2012
Role of colestipol in the treatment of hyperthyroidism.
    Journal of endocrinological investigation, 1998, Volume: 21, Issue:11

    The enterohepatic circulation of thyroxine (T4) and triiodothyronine (T3) is higher in thyrotoxicosis. Bile-salt sequestrants bind iodothyronines and thereby increase their fecal excretion. We, therefore, evaluated the effect of colestipol-hydrochloride administration on clinical and biochemical indices of patients with hyperthyroidism. In a prospective, controlled trial, ninety-two adult volunteers with Graves' disease, toxic autonomous nodule or toxic multinodular goiter were randomly assigned into the following treatment protocols: Group 1, 30 mg of methimazole (MMI) and 20 g of colestipol-hydrochloride (COL) daily; Group 2, 30 mg of MMI daily; and Group 3, 15 mg of MMI 20 g of COL daily. The patients were further classified into Group A, severe hyperthyroidism (baseline levels of total T3 (TT3) > or =5 nmol/l) and Group B, mild to moderate thyrotoxicosis (baseline levels of TT-3<5 nmol/l). Crook's clinical index, serum free T4 (FT4), TT3 and thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH) levels were determined before (WO), following one week (W1) and two weeks (W2) of treatment. Serum TT3 level decreased (mean+/-SE) at W1 by 40.8+/-2.6% of WO in Group1 and by 29.2+/-2.4% in Group 2 (p<0.001), and down further to 47.8+/-3.0% at W2 in Group 1, and 40.6+/-2.8% in Group 2 (p=0.01). Serum FT4 level decreased (mean+/-SE) from WO to W1 by 31.7+/-2.7% in Group 1 and by 16.2+/-3.1% in Group 2 (p=0.005), and down to 49.1+/-2.8% of WO at W2 in Group 1 and to 38.7+/-3.5% in Group 2 (p=0.07). In sub groups B COL was not effective in reducing thyroid hormone levels nor in ameliorating the clinical status of the patients. However, in Group A3 COL lowered FT4 (p=0.001) and TT3 (p=0.05) levels as compared to group A2. At W2 the clinical hyperthyroidism score improved faster in Group A1 (p<0.001) and Group A3 (p=0.012) as compared to the control Group A2. In conclusion, COL is an effective and well tolerated adjunctive agent in the treatment of hyperthyroidism. Its main effect is in severe cases of thyrotoxicosis, and in the first phase of treatment. As adjunctive COL treatment in hyperthyroidism allows reducing MMI dosage it may decrease the rate of dose dependent MMI side effects.

    Topics: Adult; Antithyroid Agents; Colestipol; Female; Goiter, Nodular; Graves Disease; Humans; Hyperthyroidism; Ion Exchange Resins; Male; Methimazole; Middle Aged; Prospective Studies; Thyroid Nodule; Thyrotropin; Thyroxine; Treatment Outcome; Triiodothyronine

1998

Other Studies

8 other study(ies) available for methimazole and Thyroid-Nodule

ArticleYear
A pregnant woman with an autonomously functioning thyroid nodule: a case report.
    Gynecological endocrinology : the official journal of the International Society of Gynecological Endocrinology, 2020, Volume: 36, Issue:12

    The epidemiology and natural history of autonomously functioning thyroid nodules (AFTNs) have not been elucidated. Here we report the pregnant Japanese woman with an AFTN.. The patient was a 31-year-old woman who was hospitalized due to the placenta previa associated with threatened abortion at the 16 weeks of her third pregnancy. At her second pregnancy, she was euthyroid but had a single, 2.3 cm nodule on her right thyroid lobe. Her thyroid hormone level was trended increased with her pregnancy progression, and the thyrotoxic state was remained after delivery. Before her third pregnancy, her hyper-vascular nodule enlarged to 3.4 cm at regular monitoring. When she visited our hospital, she was at 16 weeks of pregnancy and had thyrotoxicosis with negative TSH-receptor antibody. She delivered a baby weighing 2615 g without hypothyroidism at 39 weeks of pregnancy by natural delivery. After delivery, a. This case showed that hCG stimulation during pregnancy caused thyroid nodule enlargement and enhanced thyroid hormone production. The pregnancy could be the pathological stimulus and provides chance to diagnosis for AFTNs.

    Topics: Abortion, Threatened; Adult; Antithyroid Agents; Disease Progression; Female; Humans; Methimazole; Placenta Previa; Pregnancy; Pregnancy Complications; Radionuclide Imaging; Thyroid Nodule; Thyrotoxicosis

2020
Mini-invasive videoassisted thyroid lobectomy for neonatal hyperfunctioning adenoma related to a somatic TSHr gene mutation.
    Annales d'endocrinologie, 2012, Volume: 73, Issue:3

    We report here a case of a paediatric hyperthyroidism due to a micro-macro-follicular thyroid adenoma in the presence of heterozygous point mutation of TSH receptor (TSHr). We describe the case from the initial diagnosis, through laboratoristic examinations and imaging techniques, until the radical surgical treatment made by a mini-cervicotomic videoassisted technique. We also explained the genetic work-up from peripheral blood and thyroid adenoma tissue.

    Topics: Adenoma; Amino Acid Substitution; Exons; Hormone Replacement Therapy; Humans; Hyperplasia; Hyperthyroidism; Infant, Newborn; Male; Methimazole; Mutation, Missense; Receptors, Thyrotropin; Thoracic Surgery, Video-Assisted; Thyroid Neoplasms; Thyroid Nodule; Thyroidectomy; Thyroxine

2012
Burkitt-like lymphoma infiltrating a hyperfunctioning thyroid adenoma and presenting as a hot nodule.
    Thyroid : official journal of the American Thyroid Association, 2010, Volume: 20, Issue:9

    Most solitary hyperfunctiong regions on thyroid scan consist of benign tissue. Here we report a patient with a Burkitt-like lymphoma that was infilterated into a region containing a hyperfunctioning nodule.. A 56-year-old man was referred to our Endocrine Unit in May 2009 due to the incidental discovery of a large left thyroid lobe nodule by a computed tomography study. This had been performed to search for a primitive tumor in a patient with bone metastasis. He was clinically and biochemically thyrotoxic with no evidence of humoral thyroid autoimmunity. The nodule had a dyshomogenous appearance at neck ultrasonography, with multiple hypoechogenic areas and calcifications. (99m)-Technetium thyroid scintiscan revealed a hot nodule with suppression of the contralateral lobe. Fine-needle aspiration cytology indicated the presence of neoplastic cells not of thyroid origin. Remission of hyperthyroidism was obtained with methimazole, and the patient was submitted to left lobe thyroidectomy and istmectomy. Histological analysis of the surgical specimen led to a diagnosis of Burkitt-like large B-cell lymphoma harbored within a thyroid adenoma. After further staging, the final diagnosis was stage IV E Burkitt-like lymphoma with the involvement of the bone and the thyroid. This is the first description of an aggressive Burkitt-like lymphoma that infiltrated an hyperfunctioning thyroid adenoma, thus presenting as a hot nodule at thyroid scintiscan. In our patient there was no humoral or histological evidence of thyroid autoimmunity, thus suggesting a metastatic seeding of the lymphoma within the hyperfunctioning thyroid nodule.. Involvement of the thyroid gland by Burkitt-like lymphoma is extremely rare as is close localization of malignancy and a hyperfunctioning thyroid nodule. As highlighted by the present report, performing fine-needle aspiration cytology should be always considered in the clinical context of a metastatic disease of unknown origin or when there are ultrasonography signs suggesting malignancy, even when the nodule is hyperfunctioning.

    Topics: Adenoma; Antineoplastic Agents; Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols; Biopsy, Fine-Needle; Bone Neoplasms; Burkitt Lymphoma; Cyclophosphamide; Dexamethasone; Doxorubicin; Humans; Hyperthyroidism; Male; Methimazole; Middle Aged; Neoplasm Staging; Technetium; Thyroid Neoplasms; Thyroid Nodule; Vincristine

2010
Radiofrequency ablation for an autonomously functioning thyroid nodule.
    Thyroid : official journal of the American Thyroid Association, 2008, Volume: 18, Issue:6

    Topics: Adult; Antithyroid Agents; Catheter Ablation; Female; Humans; Methimazole; Minimally Invasive Surgical Procedures; Thyroid Gland; Thyroid Nodule; Thyrotoxicosis; Ultrasonography

2008
[A case of Plummer disease that appeared in older old age after 10-year course of subclinical hyperthyroidism].
    Nihon Ronen Igakkai zasshi. Japanese journal of geriatrics, 2007, Volume: 44, Issue:2

    A 81-year-old woman with a thyroid tumor and subclinical hyperthyroidism since ten years ago was admitted to our hospital for palpitations and hyperthyroidism (FT(4) 1.75 ng/dl, FT(3) 5.37 pg/ml, TSH<0.03 microIU/ml). Although thyroid stimulating antibody (TSAb) was transiently and mildly positive, anti-TSH receptor antibody (TRAb), microsome test, and thyroid test were negative. Thyroid echogram showed an isoechoic nodule in the left lobe (33 x 42 x 22 mm) and a small nodule (10 x 15 x 9 mm) in right lobe. Thyroid scintiscan showed a hyperfunctional (hot) nodule in left thyroid lobe with suppressed uptake in the remainder of the gland. The uptake rate of thyroidal radioiodine ((123)I) in 24 hours was within the normal range (7.3%). Based on the above findings, a diagnosis of Plummer disease was made. Since she refused invasive surgical or radioiodine treatment, she was treated with 10 mg thiamazole daily. After treatment with propranolol and thiamazole, the thyrotoxic symptoms disappeared and thyroid function returned to normal level. She had osteoporosis but she had neither atrial fibrillation nor cardiac symptoms. This was a rare case of Plummer disease that appeared in extremely old age after a long course of subclinical hyperthyroidism.

    Topics: Adenoma; Aged, 80 and over; Antithyroid Agents; Autoantibodies; Female; Humans; Hyperthyroidism; Methimazole; Osteoporosis, Postmenopausal; Thyroid Nodule; Thyrotropin

2007
Outcome of radioiodine-131 therapy in hyperfunctioning thyroid nodules: a 20 years' retrospective study.
    Clinical endocrinology, 2005, Volume: 62, Issue:3

    To investigate the risk of hypothyroidism after radioiodine (131I) treatment for hyperfunctioning thyroid nodules.. Retrospective analysis of patients treated with 131I for hyperfunctioning thyroid nodules and followed up for a maximum of 20 years.. A total of 346 patients treated with 131I in the years 1975-95, for a single hyperfunctioning nodule.. Hypothyroidism was defined as TSH levels > 3.7 mU/l. Kaplan-Meier survival analysis was used to analyse permanence of euthyroidism after 131I. A stepwise Cox proportional hazard model was used to identify factors influencing the progression to hypothyroidism.. The cumulative incidence of hypothyroidism was 7.6% at 1 year, 28% at 5 years, 46% at 10 years and 60% at 20 years. Age (P < 0.01), 24-th 131I uptake (P < 0.05) and previous treatment with methimazole (MMI, P < 0.1) were associated with a faster progression towards hypothyroidism, while thyroid and nodule size, thyroid status at diagnosis and degree of extranodular thyroid parenchymal suppression had no influence. In hyperthyroid patients with partial parenchymal suppression, however, previous MMI treatment was the most important prognostic factor (P < 0.01).. After 20 years of follow-up, 60% of patients treated with 131I for a single hyperfunctioning nodule are hypothyroid. Factors increasing the risk of hypothyroidism are age, 131I uptake and MMI pretreatment. The prognostic value of this last factor, however, depends on the degree of suppression of the extranodular thyroid parenchyma at the scan.

    Topics: Adult; Age Factors; Aged; Antithyroid Agents; Disease Progression; Epidemiologic Methods; Female; Humans; Hyperthyroidism; Hypothyroidism; Iodine Radioisotopes; Male; Methimazole; Middle Aged; Radiation Injuries; Thyroid Gland; Thyroid Nodule; Thyrotropin; Treatment Outcome

2005
Ultrasound-guided fine-needle capillary biopsy of thyroid nodules, coupled with on-site cytologic review, improves results.
    Thyroid : official journal of the American Thyroid Association, 2004, Volume: 14, Issue:5

    Fine-needle aspiration biopsy represents the most reliable test for cytologic evaluation of thyroid nodules. However, inadequate samples may occur leading to a repetition of the procedure with the consequence of patients' discomfort and poor compliance. In this paper, we present results from biopsy of thyroid nodules obtained by combining: (1) ultrasound (US) guidance, (2) no-aspiration technique, and (3) on-site review of specimens. A total of 465 nodules were biopsied in 307 patients. Solitary nodules and multinodular goiter were present in 36.8% and 63.1% of patients, respectively. After collection, each sample was smeared in duplicates, one of which was stained with hematoxylin and checked on-site by a cytopathologist. In cases of inadequate smears, biopsies were immediately repeated. All slides were then processed for final cytologic results, which were reported as benign in 427 nodules (91.8%), malignant in 12 nodules (2.5%), with follicular proliferation or suspicious for malignancy in 23 nodules (4.9%). Inadequate final cytology was reported in 3 nodules (0.6%). No statistically significant relationship was found between nodule size and adequacy of specimens. We conclude that the combination of US guidance, capillary collection with no-aspiration technique, and on-site review of slides, characterizes an advantageous method for thyroid nodule fine-needle biopsy.

    Topics: Biopsy, Fine-Needle; Diagnosis, Differential; Female; Humans; Male; Methimazole; Middle Aged; Propylthiouracil; Reproducibility of Results; Sensitivity and Specificity; Thyroid Nodule; Thyroxine; Ultrasonography

2004
Thyroid scintigraphy during antithyroid treatment for autonomous nodules as a means of imaging extranodular tissue.
    Clinical nuclear medicine, 1993, Volume: 18, Issue:7

    The scintigraphic appearance of the thyroid gland after a course of methimazole treatment was studied in 22 patients with autonomous hot nodules. After 2-3 months of treatment the extranodular tissue was reactivated in almost every patient. This treatment constitutes an endogenous TSH stimulation test and may be used clinically in selected cases.

    Topics: Humans; Methimazole; Methods; Radionuclide Imaging; Thyroid Gland; Thyroid Nodule

1993