Literature DB >> 3257352

Community outbreak of thyrotoxicosis: epidemiology, immunogenetic characteristics, and long-term outcome.

J S Kinney1, E S Hurwitz, D B Fishbein, P D Woolf, P F Pinsky, D N Lawrence, L J Anderson, G P Holmes, C K Wilson, D J Loschen.   

Abstract

Between January and March 1984, the first community outbreak of transient thyrotoxicosis in the United States was documented in a seven-county area of southeastern Nebraska; 36 of the total 49 patients resided in York County (2.4 cases per 1,000 population). The median age of patients was 36 years, range six to 82 years; 51 percent were women. By definition, all patients were symptomatic, visited a physician, and had a newly identified elevated serum concentration of thyroxine or triiodothyronine of unknown cause. None had a goiter or a painful thyroid gland. Low 131I uptake measurements were found in all nine patients studied. Six patients were hospitalized; none died. Investigation of all 12 household contacts of eight selected patients revealed five additional persons with thyrotoxicosis and four with asymptomatic hyperthyroxinemia. A case-control study revealed that illness was associated with a significantly higher frequency of a reported recent respiratory viral-like condition. In another case-control study, the HLA-DR3 antigen was present in more case subjects (39 percent) than control subjects (14 percent). In addition, a significantly higher proportion of patients than control subjects purchased beef from one of the three supermarkets in York Country. Concomitant with the outbreak, the supermarket implicated in the outbreak purchased an unusually large quantity of beef (7,000 pounds) from a nonregular supplier in Nebraska, which had reportedly instituted the practice of trimming gullets (a procedure that removes the muscles from bovine larynx for beef) about three months earlier. Thus, it is concluded that the Nebraska outbreak, like one in Minnesota that occurred 18 months later, probably resulted from patients having eaten ground beef that was contaminated with bovine thyroid gland. This form of thyrotoxicosis, perhaps misdiagnosed as painless thyroiditis in the past, probably represents a previously under-recognized public health problem.

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Year:  1988        PMID: 3257352     DOI: 10.1016/0002-9343(88)90002-2

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Med        ISSN: 0002-9343            Impact factor:   4.965


  4 in total

Review 1.  Antidotes to coumarins, isoniazid, methotrexate and thyroxine, toxins that work via metabolic processes.

Authors:  D Nicholas Bateman; Colin B Page
Journal:  Br J Clin Pharmacol       Date:  2015-10-24       Impact factor: 4.335

2.  Intermittent and recurrent episodes of subclinical hypothyroidism, central hypothyroidism and T3-toxicosis in an elderly woman.

Authors:  Marta Cano Megías; Pedro Iglesias; Mercedes García Villanueva; Juan José Díez
Journal:  BMJ Case Rep       Date:  2012-08-18

Review 3.  Hepatitis C virus infection and thyroid autoimmune disorders: A model of interactions between the host and the environment.

Authors:  Francesca Pastore; Antonio Martocchia; Manuela Stefanelli; Pietro Prunas; Stefania Giordano; Lavinia Toussan; Antonio Devito; Paolo Falaschi
Journal:  World J Hepatol       Date:  2016-01-18

4.  Recurrent hamburger thyrotoxicosis.

Authors:  Malvinder S Parmar; Cecil Sturge
Journal:  CMAJ       Date:  2003-09-02       Impact factor: 8.262

  4 in total

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