Thyroid calcification and its association with thyroid carcinoma

Calcification within the thyroid gland may occur in both benign and malignant thyroid disease, and its detection on ultrasonography is frequently dismissed by many clinicians as an incidental finding of little significance. As a tertiary referral center, most of our thyroid patients will have had thyroid ultrasonography before being referred to us, and in our experience, the incidence of malignancy in a thyroid nodule containing calcification seems to be higher than that in the average thyroid nodule. To assess this risk, we conducted this retrospective review.

[1]  D. Judge,et al.  Unusual calcification in mixed papillary and follicular carcinoma of the thyroid gland. , 1976, Radiology.

[2]  A. Ahuja,et al.  Metastatic cervical nodes in papillary carcinoma of the thyroid: ultrasound and histological correlation. , 1995, Clinical radiology.

[3]  Y. Yonekura,et al.  Real-Time Ultrasonography of Thyroid Nodules , 1986, Acta radiologica: diagnosis.

[4]  F. Komolafe Radiological patterns and significance of thyroid calcification. , 1981, Clinical radiology.

[5]  H. Hatabu,et al.  Cystic papillary carcinoma of the thyroid gland: a new sonographic sign. , 1991, Clinical radiology.

[6]  R. Kane,et al.  Thyroid nodules: sonographic-pathologic correlation. , 1984, Radiology.

[7]  S. Kakkos,et al.  Relative risk of cancer in sonographically detected thyroid nodules with calcifications , 2000, Journal of clinical ultrasound : JCU.

[8]  A. Ahuja,et al.  Role of ultrasound in the management of thyroid nodules. , 1992, American journal of surgery.

[9]  Tonsok Kim,et al.  Thyroid nodules: Re‐evaluation with ultrasound , 1995, Journal of clinical ultrasound : JCU.

[10]  S. Holtz,et al.  Calcification in papillary carcinoma of the thyroid. , 1958, The American journal of roentgenology, radium therapy, and nuclear medicine.