Definition of Thyroid scan
Our Thyroid scan Main Article provides a comprehensive look at the who, what, when and how of Thyroid scan
Thyroid scan: An image taken of the thyroid gland
after radioactive iodine is taken by mouth. The thyroid gland is in
front of the neck:
Thyroid scanning is a nuclear medicine procedure. As the thyroid
gland accumulates radioactive
material (usually, radioactive technetium or iodine), the gland
produces an image.
Thyroid scanning is used to
determine how active the thyroid is in manufacturing thyroid hormone.
This can determine whether inflammation of the thyroid gland
(thyroiditis) is present. It can also detect the presence and degree
of overactivity of the gland (hyperthyroidism) or, conversely, it can
determine the presence and degree of underactivity of the gland
(hypothyroidism).
Thyroid scanning is helpful in evaluating thyroid
nodules, particularly after a fine needle aspiration biopsy of
a nodule has failed to provide a definitive diagnosis. A
scan will reveal whether a thyroid nodule is functioning or
nonfunctioning. A functioning nodule actively takes up iodine to
produce thyroid hormone and produces a localized "hot" area on the
image of the thyroid gland. A nonfunctioning nodule does not take up
iodine and so produces a "cold" area on the image of the thyroid
gland. Functioning or "hot" nodules only rarely are from cancer.
Nearly all thyroid cancers are nonfunctioning or "cold" nodules.
Moreover, even among "cold" nodules, cancer is infrequent (less than
5 percent of cases).
Common Misspellings: thyriod scan, athyroid scan, throid scan
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