Title of article
Persistence of goitre in children post-salt iodization in Islamic Republic of Iran: autoimmune status
Author/Authors
Dabbaghmanesh, M.H. shiraz university of medical sciences - Endocrine and Metabolism Research Centre - Department of Internal Medicine, شيراز, ايران , Sadegholvaad, A. shiraz university of medical sciences - Endocrine and Metabolism Research Centre - Department of Internal Medicine, شيراز, ايران , Ejtehadi, F. shiraz university of medical sciences - Endocrine and Metabolism Research Centre - Department of Internal Medicine, شيراز, ايران , Omrani, G.R. shiraz university of medical sciences - Endocrine and Metabolism Research Centre - Department of Internal Medicine, شيراز, ايران
From page
584
To page
590
Abstract
We evaluated the prevalence of autoimmune thyroiditis in a random sample of 1188 schoolchildren aged 8–13 years with normalized iodine intake in the Islamic Republic of Iran. The prevalence of goitre was 39.6%; the majority had palpable but non-visible goitre. Of a subsample of 500 children, median urinary iodine excretion (18/8 μg/dL) indicated normal iodine intake. Thyroid peroxidase (TPO) antibody was positive in 3.7% of children and was significantly correlated with the prevalence of goitre and hypothyroidism. No correlation was seen between urinary iodine excretion and positive TPO antibody, mean TPO antibody, hypothyroidism or prevalence of goitre. Autoimmune thyroiditis explains some cases of goitre but other goitrogenic factors need to be evaluated.
Journal title
Eastern Mediterranean Health Journal
Journal title
Eastern Mediterranean Health Journal
Record number
2641068
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