「thyroid」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)

thyroid

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1語右で並び替え

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  • Cerebellar hypoplasia may be caused by thyroid abnormalities, environmental influences such
  • ldren treated with moderate dose of I-131 for thyroid adenomas had a detectable increase in thyroid
  • front parts of the contiguous margins of the thyroid and cricoid cartilages.
  • E1 is expressed transiently in the developing thyroid and the anterior pituitary gland.
  • sinus, the sinus nerves, the larynx, and the thyroid and parathyroid glands.
  • lindness, inability to swallow, diabetes, and thyroid and nervous system problems.
  • e iodine-131, which may lead to cancer of the thyroid, and it has been estimated that the incident
  • tumor with thymus-like differentiation of the thyroid, and sclerosing angiomatoid nodular transform
  • he expression of this gene is found in normal thyroid and brain tissues, as well as some tumors; an
  • It is highly expressed in the thyroid, and may contribute significantly to the rela
  • with the esophageal branches of the inferior thyroid arteries above, and with ascending branches f
  • Esophageal branches of inferior thyroid artery
  • , as it lies immediately deep to the superior thyroid artery.
  • Lovell died after a long battle with thyroid cancer on September 23, 1980.
  • Diagnosed with thyroid cancer in September 2008, she died in Boston
  • Medullary thyroid cancer almost always occurs, and cancer of th
  • aham's wife Sheelagh Nolan was diagnosed with thyroid cancer shortly after he became leader of the
  • n important growth driver in certain types of thyroid cancer
  • r who lost his voice for almost a year due to thyroid cancer which damaged a nerve on his vocal cor
  • heir lives, with ST also losing his mother to thyroid cancer when he was 15 years old.
  • It is highly expressed in medullary thyroid cancer and small cell lung cancer and may be
  • Thyroid cancer is a risk among some 200,000 immigrant
  • the link between an increase in the cases of thyroid cancer and France's atmospheric nuclear tests
  • The report quotes 4,000 cases of thyroid cancer resulting from the accident, mainly in
  • reatment of late-stage (metastatic) medullary thyroid cancer in adult patients who are ineligible f
  • patient treatment, for papillary carcinoma (a thyroid cancer considered by doctors to be one of the
  • th "Project Chernobyl", to diagnose and treat thyroid cancer associated with radiation exposure fro
  • sk factor used; and predicted excess cases of thyroid cancer range between 18,000 and 66,000 in Bel
  • Thyroid cancer
  • When she was in her 20s, she had thyroid cancer and had to have her thyroid removed.
  • Possible increases in thyroid cancer have been reported in the Czech Republ
  • s disease have failed to find any increase in thyroid cancer, even though there is linear increase
  • ages to eight persons with leukemia, one with thyroid cancer, and another with breast cancer".
  • nic tumors may include osteomas of the skull, thyroid cancer, epidermoid cysts, fibromas and sebace
  • or of Cooper, who is undergoing treatment for thyroid cancer, and former Minnesota State Senator Da
  • l leave the network to undergo treatments for thyroid cancer.
  • ine-131 (131I), a radionuclide that can cause thyroid cancer.
  • atic Cancer, Prostate Cancer, Skin Cancer and Thyroid Cancer.
  • There has also been a clinical trial for thyroid cancer.
  • 1 from Chernobyl [which increases the risk of thyroid cancer] was deposited outside the former Sovi
  • es of mutations are associated with papillary thyroid carcinoma (PTC), and the fusion oncoproteins
  • Medullary thyroid carcinoma (MTC) represent the most frequent i
  • us types of human cancer, including medullary thyroid carcinoma, multiple endocrine neoplasias type
  • They may appear in papillary thyroid carcinoma.
  • lasia, patellar luxation, legg-calve-perthes, thyroid, cardiac, congenital deafness, sebaceous aden
  • articular facet for the inferior cornu of the thyroid cartilage behind.
  • lage and tilting back the upper border of the thyroid cartilage lamina; the distance between the vo
  • On the thyroid cartilage it arises from the oblique line on
  • the arytenoid cartilages to the angle of the thyroid cartilage about midway between its upper and
  • between the tip of the superior cornu of the thyroid cartilage and the extremity of the greater co
  • Right lamina of thyroid cartilage removed.
  • nd the inferior cornu and lower lamina of the thyroid cartilage, and its action tilts the thyroid f
  • oint connecting the cricoid cartilage and the thyroid cartilage.
  • zymes, which catalyse T4-T3 conversion in the thyroid cell, liver, kidney, skeletal muscle, heart,
  • with microtubules in brain tissue and FRTL-5 thyroid cells, and is reported to have microtubule-as
  • me Cope also became the senior surgeon at the Thyroid clinic at Massachusetts General, and wrote 20
  • the fall of 2008, Pittsnogle learned he had a thyroid condition that slowed his metabolism, which m
  • erie siren sounds (they each claim it's for a thyroid condition).
  • d with autoimmune diseases such as autoimmune thyroid disease and multiple sclerosis, though this a
  • s now also the recommended screening tool for thyroid disease.
  • s and scientists who look after patients with thyroid disorders and who carry out research into the
  • rd is provided for nurses with an interest in thyroid disorders.
  • It's also a well-established thyroid disruptor
  • Per capita thyroid doses in the continental United States of iod
  • le, also, as preventives for gynecomastia and thyroid drugs are used as "hardeners".
  • Note dark image of the thyroid due to unwanted uptake of radioiodine from th
  • se found in people with diabetes mellitus and thyroid dysfunction.
  • ngenital hypothyroidism and cleft palate with thyroid dysgenesis.
  • ves played a leading role in the abolition of thyroid enlargement (goitre) which once disfigured ne
  • n by low internal sodium concentration in the thyroid epithelial cells, via facilitated diffusion,
  • ide (I-) across the basolateral membrane into thyroid epithelial cells.
  • s known that not all of the iodine content of thyroid extract was in the form of effective T4 and T
  • Replacement by thyroid extract in hypothyroidism was one of the most
  • Subsequently he successfully used thyroid extract to treat humans.
  • eatment of myxedema, with injections of sheep thyroid extract.
  • e content and potency in all of the available thyroid extracts on the American market.
  • d with monoiodotyrosine in the colloid of the thyroid follicle, triiodothyronine is formed.
  • The thyroid follicles can also be considered of acinar fo
  • In the thyroid, follicular and parafollicular cells are also
  • symporter on the basolateral membrane of the thyroid follicular cell.
  • hypothyroidism She is a patron of the British Thyroid Foundation.
  • for Eugene Hertoghe of Antwerp, a pioneer in thyroid function research.
  • The school also participated in studies of thyroid function in patients with Down Syndrome and t
  • However, they do not seem to alter thyroid function in humans at realistic amounts in th
  • reexisting cases of hypothyroidism, so yearly thyroid function tests are advisable for persons taki
  • te: "The brilliance of his research papers on thyroid function led to his being named chairman of t
  • on; chlorine dioxide has been shown to impair thyroid function and reduce T4 cell count in monkeys
  • clude full blood count, liver function tests, thyroid function tests, lipid profile, erythrocyte se
  • curate, readily available laboratory tests of thyroid function.
  • Over-stimulation of the thyroid gland with resulting nervousness may be exper
  • TSH stimulates the thyroid gland to secrete the hormones thyroxine (T4)
  • n this disease, the immune system attacks the thyroid gland and the soft tissues surrounding the ey
  • ined these practices, believing that only the thyroid gland could have a meaningful effect when con
  • Active transport of iodine into the thyroid gland is an important step in the process of
  • The thyroid gland starts developing in the oropharynx in
  • etween the initial area of development of the thyroid gland and its final position.
  • e secreted by the parafollicular cells of the thyroid gland in response to hypercalcemia, which low
  • working in Bern, he showed that removing the thyroid gland from dogs was fatal, and later showed t
  • ion of the bulbs reduces iodine uptake by the thyroid gland, which can lead to problems.
  • the nervous system, oral cavity, peritoneum, thyroid gland, mammary gland, uterus, and clitoris.
  • ral cell types of the pituitary gland, in the thyroid gland, and most likely in the adrenal gland.
  • d, the thymus gland, the pituitary gland, the thyroid gland, the spleen, and the two adrenal glands
  • Taurus - throat, neck, thyroid gland, vocal tract
  • s organification (oxidation of iodide) in the thyroid gland, the formation of thyroid hormones insi
  • Mercury - brain, central nervous system, thyroid gland, five senses, hands
  • (luminal) membrane of follicular cells in the thyroid gland.
  • muscular, it is termed the Levator muscle of thyroid gland.
  • ormed during the embryological descent of the thyroid gland.
  • called parafollicular cells or C cells-of the thyroid gland.
  • T4) and triiodothyronine (T3) hormones by the thyroid gland.
  • hich he was involved uncovered a tumor on his thyroid gland.
  • les on Tumors of the Thymus and Tumors of the Thyroid Gland.
  • The veins of the thyroid gland.
  • Other constituents of the dried thyroid glands besides the T4 and T3 (e.g., unmeasure
  • lear fission) were reportedly detected in the thyroid glands of sheep in the southeastern Australia
  • g protein which acts as a corepressor for the thyroid hormone receptor.
  • Amongst the most important functions of thyroid hormone receptors are regulation of metabolis
  • T3 in turn activates the thyroid hormone receptor which increases metabolic ra
  • ater in life, perhaps triggered by changes in thyroid hormone function and/or physical stress.
  • The Wolff-Chaikoff effect is a reduction in thyroid hormone levels caused by ingestion of a large
  • T3, through binding a nuclear thyroid hormone receptor, influences the expression o
  • It activates thyroid hormone by converting the prohormone thyroxin
  • unctions as a transcriptional corepressor for thyroid hormone and interacts with histone deacetylas
  • serum and cerebrospinal fluid carrier of the thyroid hormone thyroxine (T4) and retinol.
  • Thyroid hormone is critical for growth and brain deve
  • d by this gene is a member of the steroid and thyroid hormone receptor superfamily of transcription
  • iarrheal, anticancerous, nephroprotective and thyroid hormone regulating activity.
  • Drugs with thyroid hormone activity, alone or together with othe
  • Diiodotyrosine (DIT) is a precursor of thyroid hormone and results from iodization of monoio
  • elenocysteine-containing enzyme, and abnormal thyroid hormone metabolism.
  • lved with major metabolic pathways, including thyroid hormone metabolism and immune function.
  • se for glucocorticoids, estrogens, androgens, thyroid hormone (T3), calcitriol (the active form of
  • on factor 2, HSF1, HBXIP, TGS1, TUBB, TUBA4A, Thyroid hormone receptor beta, Retinoic acid receptor
  • m is also necessary for the conversion of the thyroid hormone thyroxine (T4) into its more active c
  • hain acyl coenzyme A dehydrogenase (MCAD) and thyroid hormone receptor genes.
  • ear receptors in the nucleus of the cell, the thyroid hormone receptors.
  • Thyroid hormone receptor beta (TR-beta) also known as
  • Thyroid hormone receptor alpha (TR-alpha) also known
  • tions of the β (beta) form (THRB gene) of the thyroid hormone receptor, of which over 100 different
  • index, which is total thyroxine multiplied by thyroid hormone uptake, which, in turn, is a measure
  • xanthins, caffeine, theobromine and thyroid hormone are phosphodiesterase inhibitors (enh
  • Thyroid hormone receptor beta
  • Further information: Thyroid hormone
  • Goitrin decrease the thyroid hormone production.
  • Certain mutations in the thyroid hormone receptor are associated with thyroid
  • Sometimes the phrase thyroid hormone resistance is used to identify cases
  • rT3, unlike T3, does not stimulate thyroid hormone receptors.
  • The thyroid hormone receptor is a type of nuclear recepto
  • It is indicated in the management of thyroid hormone resistance syndrome and is used, in c
  • The lack of thyroid hormone will lead to decreased negative feedb
  • s gene are known to be a cause of generalized thyroid hormone resistance (GTHR), a syndrome charact
  • Thyroid hormone resistance describes a rare syndrome
  • d and ipodate sodium are potent inhibitors of thyroid hormone release from thyroid gland, as well a
  • own as TRIAC or triiodothyroacetic acid) is a thyroid hormone analogue.
  • ning pituitary gland may also cause a lack of thyroid hormone, leading to central hypothyroidism.
  • , including prostanoid, retinoid, vitamin D3, thyroid hormone, and steroid receptors.
  • ptor forms homodimers with the retinoic acid, thyroid hormone, and vitamin D receptors, increasing
  • m produced by catechols and/or insulin and/or thyroid hormone, which lead to movement of potassium
  • ) is caused by mutation in the transporter of thyroid hormone, MCT8, also known as SLC16A2, is beli
  • ypically most or all tissues are resistant to thyroid hormone, so despite raised measures of serum
  • It is one of the several receptors for thyroid hormone, and has been shown to mediate the bi
  • e salts, which the body can easily convert to thyroid hormone.
  • edundancy, may mediate different functions of thyroid hormone.
  • Its activity is necessary for production of thyroid hormone.
  • 3,3'-Diiodothyronine is a metabolite of thyroid hormone.
  • Liothyronine is the most potent form of thyroid hormone.
  • hyronine, C15H12I3NO4, also known as T3, is a thyroid hormone.
  • This has the effect of increasing the thyroid's ability to trap more iodide, compensating f
  • e patients may have low levels of circulating thyroid hormones and secondary hypothyroidism as a re
  • Thyroid hormones are lipophilic substances that are a
  • thiocarbamate, that reduces the production of thyroid hormones such as thyroxine.
  • The thyroid hormones are essential to proper development
  • phenylalanine, tyrosine, tryptophan, and the thyroid hormones by the action of aromatic amino acid
  • oduce appropriate levels of TSH and levels of thyroid hormones may decline, although the TSH remain
  • al and developmental functions of steroid and thyroid hormones in living animals, and that corepres
  • rboxylated and deiodinated metabolites of the thyroid hormones thyroxine (T4) and 3,5,3'-triiodothy
  • Antibodies to thyroid hormones quite commonly occur in such disorde
  • d plays a central role in the biosynthesis of thyroid hormones T3 and T4.
  • It is used to replenish thyroid hormones in thyroid deficiency and hypothyroi
  • The system of the thyroid hormones T3 and T4.
  • amines, a new group of compounds derived from thyroid hormones
  • ts a variety of iodo-thyronines including the thyroid hormones T3 and T4.
  • n-specific crystallin protein that also binds thyroid hormones, is involved in the pipecolic acid p
  • portant in the activation and deactivation of thyroid hormones.
  • r where patients have developed antibodies to thyroid hormones.
  • involved in the activation or deactivation of thyroid hormones.
  • working to increase awareness of the risks of thyroid in pregnancy.
  • with current research-based information about thyroid in pregnancy.
  • the body of the hyoid bone, and below to the thyroid isthmus, or its pyramidal lobe.
  • Symptoms of high thyroid levels include headache, chest pain, irregula
  • Cancers related to GS commonly appear in the thyroid, liver and kidneys.
  • Chronic exposure may affect heart, thyroid, lungs, and kidneys.
  • The Thyroid lymph nodes are lymph nodes found near the th
  • se that have hyperthyroidism or are receiving thyroid medication.
  • glands such as the hypothalamus, hypophysis, thyroid, parathyroid and pancreas.
  • pituitary gland, pineal body or pineal gland, thyroid, parathyroids and adrenals, i.e., adrenal gla
  • of normal organification of iodine and normal thyroid peroxidase function.
  • zymatically coupled to form T3. The enzyme is thyroid peroxidase.
  • One component is thyroid peroxidase.
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