sodium-perchlorate and Thyroid-Diseases

sodium-perchlorate has been researched along with Thyroid-Diseases* in 3 studies

Reviews

1 review(s) available for sodium-perchlorate and Thyroid-Diseases

ArticleYear
[In vivo test of thyroid radioactive iodide uptake, pertechnetate 99m uptake and thyroid scintigraphy].
    Nihon rinsho. Japanese journal of clinical medicine, 1997, Volume: 55 Suppl 2

    Topics: Humans; Iodine Radioisotopes; Perchlorates; Radionuclide Imaging; Sodium Compounds; Sodium Pertechnetate Tc 99m; Thiocyanates; Thyroid Diseases; Thyroid Function Tests; Thyroid Gland; Triiodothyronine

1997

Other Studies

2 other study(ies) available for sodium-perchlorate and Thyroid-Diseases

ArticleYear
Neuro-otological findings in Pendred syndrome.
    International journal of audiology, 2003, Volume: 42, Issue:2

    Pendred syndrome is an autosomal recessive inherited disorder characterized by profound hearing impairment and inappropriate iodine release by the thyroid on perchlorate challenge. Thirty-three cases comprising members of 13 families and eight isolated cases were studied, with detailed audiological and vestibular investigation and computerized tomography. A uniform, profound, symmetrical sensorineural hearing loss was identified in all cases. Approximately one-third of the group reported progressive hearing impairment, in childhood or adolescence, associated with head injury, infection, or delayed secondary hydrops. Ninety per cent of the cases scanned showed dilated vestibular aqueducts, and all cases with progression of the hearing impairment demonstrated this structural abnormality. Approximately one-third of the cases had normal vestibular function, but a further third demonstrated a unilateral peripheral deficit, while the remaining third showed bilateral vestibular hypofunction. There was no intra-familial concordance of vestibular findings, and no correlation between vestibular abnormality and presence or absence of a dilated vestibular aqueduct, with or without a Mondini malformation. In older children and adults, Pendred syndrome was associated with a profound, symmetrical, sensorineural auditory impairment, and a variety of vestibular abnormalities, which are not uniform within families, or correlated with structural labyrinthine deformities.

    Topics: Adolescent; Adult; Audiometry, Pure-Tone; Child; Ear, Inner; Female; Hearing Loss, Sensorineural; Humans; Iodine; Male; Middle Aged; Perchlorates; Reflex, Acoustic; Severity of Illness Index; Sodium Compounds; Syndrome; Thyroid Diseases; Vestibule, Labyrinth

2003
Prevalence of thyroid diseases in Nevada counties with respect to perchlorate in drinking water.
    Journal of occupational and environmental medicine, 2001, Volume: 43, Issue:7

    Perchlorate is well-known to inhibit the uptake of iodine by the thyroid and has been shown to do so at doses in the milligrams-per-day range and higher. Perchlorate has been found in the water supply of Clark County (Las Vegas), Nevada, at 4 to 24 micrograms/L (parts per billion) and may provide exposure dosages in the tens of micrograms per day. An analysis of the Medicaid database from Nevada was undertaken to determine whether an increase in the prevalence of any thyroid disease was associated with that level of perchlorate content. The prevalence of persons being seen for thyroid disease or for specific thyroid diseases (goiter, nodule, thyrotoxicosis, congenital hypothyroidism, acquired hypothyroidism, thyroiditis, and other thyroid disorders) and for thyroid cancer among the Medicaid-eligible population of each county was calculated for the 2-year period 1997 to 1998. The prevalences in Clark County were compared with those in Washoe County (i.e., Reno), the second most populous county in the state, and with those for the rest of the state. There was no evidence of an increased rate of thyroid disease (or of any specific thyroid disease) associated with perchlorate exposure. Generally, the prevalences in the metropolitan parts of the state were lower than for the rest of the state, particularly for acquired hypothyroidism. This analysis found no evidence that perchlorate-containing drinking water at the given level increased the prevalence of acquired hypothyroidism or of any other thyroid condition.

    Topics: Humans; Medicaid; Nevada; Perchlorates; Prevalence; Sodium Compounds; Thyroid Diseases; Water Pollution; Water Supply

2001