Sei sulla pagina 1di 5

10/29/2017 Thyroid Nodule Imaging: Overview, Radiography, Computed Tomography

This site is intended for healthcare professionals

Thyroid Nodule Imaging


Updated: Aug 12, 2015
Author: Ali Nawaz Khan, MBBS, FRCS, FRCP, FRCR; Chief Editor: Eugene C Lin, MD more...

OVERVIEW

Overview
Thyroid nodules are common, perhaps existing in almost half the population, as determined using
ultrasonography (US). Only 4-7% of thyroid nodules detected with US are palpable in the adult
population in the United States, with women affected more frequently than men. (See the images
below.)

Coned apical radiograph of the upper thorax shows curvilinear calcification in a thyroid adenoma, at the root of
the neck, on the right side.
View Media Gallery

https://emedicine.medscape.com/article/385301-overview 1/5
10/29/2017 Thyroid Nodule Imaging: Overview, Radiography, Computed Tomography

Sonogram demonstrates a benign cystic lesion in the thyroid, with a surrounding halo and ragged walls.
View Media Gallery

Technetium-99m pertechnetate thyroid scan shows a large cold nodule in the left lobe of the thyroid and a further,
smaller cold nodule in right lobe.
View Media Gallery

https://emedicine.medscape.com/article/385301-overview 2/5
10/29/2017 Thyroid Nodule Imaging: Overview, Radiography, Computed Tomography

A 56-year-old man underwent subtotal thyroidectomy for a familial medullary carcinoma 2 years previously. On
routine follow-up examination, a mass was felt in the thyroid. Coronal, T1-weighted magnetic resonance imaging
scan shows a carcinoma recurrence (R) and lymph node (L) metastases.
View Media Gallery

Although the thyroid is the most common endocrine organ to undergo malignant degeneration, thyroid
carcinoma accounts for only 1% of diagnosed neoplasms in the United States each year. [1, 2] Thyroid
cancer is rare; the annual detection rate of clinically significant thyroid cancer in the general population
is only 0.004%. Only 5-10% of thyroid cancers are clinically palpable. [3, 4]

Palpable nodules can be visualized as areas of increased (hot) or decreased (cold) tracer activity.
However, terms such as hot nodules and cold nodules are misleading unless the nodule can be
clearly delineated in several projections. A nonfunctioning (cold) nodule placed in the center of a lobe
with functioning normal tissue superficial to it may appear as warm on scans because of integrated
activity with depth. Unless oblique views are imaged, the presence of activity concentration cannot be
definitively determined. Therefore, nodules should be identified as being functioning (hot),
nonfunctioning (cold), or photon deficient. Hot nodules (which are typically adenomas) are more often
benign than cold lesions are.

The classification of thyroid neoplasms has been significantly revised in the last 20 years, and the
changes reflect an increased understanding of the prognosis and histologic characteristics of the
tumors. Among asymptomatic patients, 7-21% have palpable nodules found on routine clinical
examination. US can be used to identify many more nonpalpable nodules, and it can depict thyroid
cysts as small as 2 mm and solid nodules as small as 3 mm. [5, 6]

Sonograms in 40% of the general adult population demonstrate single or multiple nodules. In an
autopsy series, 49% of patients who had had clinically normal thyroid glands were found to have one
or more grossly visible nodules, whereas the incidence of malignancy in the same autopsy series was
2-4%. [7, 8]

At examination, the challenge is to differentiate the few clinically significant nodules from the many
benign ones. Thyroid nodules are usually clearly identified by using US. No single US criterion is

https://emedicine.medscape.com/article/385301-overview 3/5
10/29/2017 Thyroid Nodule Imaging: Overview, Radiography, Computed Tomography

reliable for differentiating all benign thyroid nodules from malignant ones, but many US features may
aid in predicting the benign or malignant nature of a given nodule. [9, 10, 11, 12, 13]

Preferred examination
Usually, US is the first modality used to investigate a palpable thyroid nodule and in searching for a
primary lesion in a patient with systemic metastases. US may be the only examination required in
cases of hemorrhagic cyst and multinodular goiter. Doppler US is an extension of US and provides
valuable information regarding the vascularity of nodules. Most intervention in the thyroid, such as
fine-needle aspiration (FNA) and guided thyroid ablation, are performed under US guidance.

Currently, scintigraphy is reserved for characterizing functioning nodules and for staging follicular and
papillary carcinomas. Lymphoma of the thyroid is the only gallium-67–avid thyroid nodule.

Plain radiographs are used to detect retrosternal thyroid extension, thyroid calcification, bony or
mediastinal lymph nodes, and lung metastases.

Computed tomography (CT) scanning is an effective method for detecting regional and distant
metastasis from thyroid cancer.

At the present time, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) has a limited role in characterizing thyroid
nodules, although it appears to be effective in the diagnosis of cervical lymph node metastasis.

Percutaneous needle aspiration remains the key procedure in the diagnosis of thyroid lymphoma;
however, thyroid lymphoma's differentiation from thyroiditis occasionally can be difficult. US helps in
diagnosing thyroid lymphoma most accurately, and CT helps in staging the disease most accurately.
However, MRI also can be useful in staging the lymphoma. A tissue-specific diagnosis of a lymphoma
can be achieved by using US-guided FNA. [14, 15]

Limitations of techniques

In the past, radionuclide imaging was performed to differentiate malignant from benign lesions. On
radionuclide imaging, 4% of hot nodules are shown to contain tumor, compared with 16% of cold
nodules. [16] Thus, radionuclide imaging is unreliable in excluding or confirming the presence of
cancer.

Technetium-99m pertechnetate, an inexpensive and readily available isotope, delivers a low dose of
radiation because of its 6-hour half-life; it has a favorable decay scheme without particulate emission.
A gamma camera using a 140-keV photon is ideal for imaging.

The disadvantages of technetium-99m pertechnetate studies are that they can delineate only the
trapping function and not organification, and 3-dimensional distortion occurs with pinhole imaging and
decreased sensitivity in the mediastinum.

Currently, iodine-123 is the radioisotope of choice. The 13.3-hour half-life, the 159-keV principal
photon, and the absence of particulate emission allow for good imaging with modest patient exposure.
However, this isotope is cyclotron produced and relatively expensive, and the short half-life
necessitates frequent shipments from the producer. Metastatic cancer is imaged well with iodine-123
because one half of papillary carcinomas and two thirds of follicular carcinomas are sufficiently iodine
avid to allow their visualization.

US is an alternative method and can be used to evaluate local tumor recurrence because, unlike
iodine-123 scintigraphy, it does not require the cessation of thyroid hormone therapy for as long as 5-6
weeks.
https://emedicine.medscape.com/article/385301-overview 4/5
10/29/2017 Thyroid Nodule Imaging: Overview, Radiography, Computed Tomography

Gallium-67 has not enabled sufficient differentiation between the degree of uptake in malignant
lesions and that of benign lesions to warrant its routine use, but it appears to be useful when thyroid
lymphoma is suspected. US is the most sensitive method for diagnosing intrathyroid lesions; it can
depict 2-mm cystic lesions and 3-cm solid intrathyroid lesions. The challenge is to differentiate a few
malignant nodules from common benign nodules, because no single US criterion can be used to
reliably differentiate all benign thyroid nodules from malignant ones. However, many US features may
aid in predicting the benign or malignant nature of a given nodule.

Similarly to MRI, CT is not sensitive in the prediction of intrathyroid lesions; however, it is useful for
evaluating lymphadenopathy, local tumor extension, and extension into the mediastinum or
retrotracheal region. Guided FNA provides specimens for cytologic studies. The procedure is safe and
inexpensive and provides direct information.

https://emedicine.medscape.com/article/385301-overview 5/5

Potrebbero piacerti anche