View clinical trials related to Thyroid.
Filter by:The incidence of autoimmune diseases (celiac disease, type 1 diabetes, thyroid disease) have increased over the past 30 years. Although most autoimmune diseases have a strong link to different risk genes, the rapid increase is thought to be due to changes in environmental factors. There is currently no cure for autoimmune diseases, but the treatment is lifelong and either involves suppressing the inflammation and / or substituting the organs that are affected to maintain vital functions. Being able to predict who is affected and identifying factors that trigger autoimmunity is necessary for developing new treatment methods that prevent the occurrence of autoimmune diseases. The bacterial flora's composition in the gut can affect both the intestinal barrier properties and the immune system's response to various dietary components. An adverse composition of the intestinal flora can activate parts of the immune system that are involved in chronic inflammation in celiac disease and inflammatory bowel disease. Probiotics are defined as living microorganisms which, when ingested in sufficient amounts, produce a health effect (FAO / WHO). The aim of the study is to investigate whether a daily oral intake of a mixture of L.paracasei and L.plantarum can affect the autoimmune process in children who are screened positive for any of the autoantibodies associated with development of celiac disease, type 1 diabetes and / or thyroid disease. Our hypothesis is that lactobacilli can directly regulate the autoimmune process in the small intestinal mucosa by stimulating regulatory T-cells, but also by affecting the permeability of the small intestinal mucosa by of antigen that stimulates specific T-cells.
This study aims to determine whether thyroid hormone levels are predictive of cardiac remodeling following myocardial infarction and the prognosis in patients with STEMI receiving primary percutaneous coronary intervention.
In this randomized controlled trial the investigators want to assess if, compared to controls, the administration of one single low-dose of rocuronium would increase the occurrence of absent or weak (i.e. amplitude <100 μV) signal at V1 and R1, indicating a residual NMBA activity. In addition, we also recorded: 1) the occurrence of difficult laryngoscopy; 2) the time-to-intubation; 3) the occurrence of difficult intubation; 4) the number of intubation attempts; 5) the intubation failure rate; 6) the need for oxygenation between intubation attempts; 7) the lowest peripheral saturation in oxygen (SpO2); 8) the number of severe desaturations; 9) the time-to-V1 and 10) the number of post-surgical complications.
The aim of the present study is to evaluate the prognostic value of intra-operative indocyanine staining scoring concerning 24 hours post-operative PTH levels and the possible advantages that its' use can give in terms of clinical practice compared to conventionally operated patients.
The patient's position is important for ensuring patient comfort and preventing complications after thyroidectomy. This study was carried out to determine the effects of different degrees of head-of-bed elevation on the respiratory pattern and drainage following thyroidectomy and to provide suggestions for evidence-based clinical practice.
Physiological changes necessitate the use of pregnancy-specific reference ranges for TSH and FT4 to diagnose thyroid dysfunction during pregnancy. Although many centers use fixed upper limits for TSH of 2.5 or 3.0 mU/L, this may lead to overdiagnosis or even overtreatment. The new guidelines of the American Thyroid Association have considerably changed recommendations regarding thyroid function reference ranges in pregnancy accordingly. Any hospital or physician that is still using the 2.5 or 3.0 mU/l cut-off for TSH during pregnancy should evaluate their own lab-specific cut-offs. The investigator's objective is to establish a rational reference range of serum TSH for diagnosis of subclinical hypothyroidism in the first and second trimester of pregnant women in west Black Sea region in Turkey.
It has been well accepted that maternal thyroid dysfunction has adverse affects on both mothers and fetuses. However, the dramatical changes during pregnancy make the interpretation of thyroid function test (TFT, i.e. free triiodothyronine [FT3], free thyroxine [FT4] and thyrotropin [TSH]) very difficult. Previous studies have shown that the level of thyroid hormones differs from non-pregnant population and varies from gestational ages. Moreover, studies have shown the agreement among different instrument platforms was quite low. This study is aimed to determine gestational age specific TFT reference ranges of the local pregnant population for all available platforms currently used under Hospital Authority and Department of Health.
Performing a phenome-wide association study (PheWAS) identifying clinical diagnoses associated with a polygenic predictor of Thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH) levels identified by a previously published genome-wide association study (GWAS). PheWAS will be applied in an electronic-health-record (EHR) cohort including North American (n: 37,154) and European participants using 1,318 phenotypes.
The Nutritarian Women's Health Study (NWHS) is a long-term hybrid effectiveness-implementation study on the effect of the Nutritarian Diet on the occurrence, recurrence, and progression of chronic diseases (including all forms of cancer and cardiometabolic risk factors).
The goal of this study is to evaluate the role of intraoperative continous and intermittent neuromonitoring and intraoperative parathormone (PTH) to predict postoperative nerve morbidity and hypocalcemia.