Serum calcium levels are usually only mildly elevated during pregnancy in women with PHPT. A significant proportion of cases go undiagnosed. Mild hypercalcemia in gestational PHPT is generally not associated with an increased risk of obstetrical complications.
Objective: Hypothyroidism during pregnancy has been associated with adverse obstetrical outcomes. Most studies have focused on subjects with a mild or subclinical disorder. The aims of the present study were to determine the relative rate of severe thyroid dysfunction among pregnant women with hypothyroidism, identify related factors and analyse the impact on pregnancy outcomes. Design: A retrospective case series design was employed. Methods: The study group included 101 pregnant women (103 pregnancies) with an antenatal serum TSH level O20.0 mIU/l identified from the 2009-2010 computerised database of a health maintenance organisation. Data were collected from the medical records. Pregnancy outcomes were compared with those of a control group of 205 euthyroid pregnant women during the same period. Results: The study group accounted for 1.04% of all insured pregnant women with recorded hypothyroidism during the study period. Most cases had an autoimmune aetiology. All women were treated with levothyroxine (L-T 4 ) during pregnancy. Maximum serum TSH level measured was 20.11-150 mIU/l (median 32.95 mIU/l) and median serum TSH level 0.36-75.17 mIU/l (median 7.44 mIU/l). The mean duration of hypothyroidism during pregnancy was 21.2G13.2 weeks (median 18.5 weeks); in 36 cases (34.9%), all TSH levels during pregnancy were elevated. Adverse pregnancy outcomes included abortions in 7.8% of the cases, premature deliveries in 2.9% and other complications in 14.6%, with no statistically significant differences from the control group. Median serum TSH level during pregnancy was positively correlated with the rate of abortionsCpremature deliveries and rate of all pregnancy-related complications (P!0.05). Conclusions: Abortions and premature deliveries occur infrequently in women with severe hypothyroidism. Intense follow-up and L-T 4 treatment may improve pregnancy outcomes even when target TSH levels are not reached.
The relative proportion of adrCS to pitCS is rising, probably because of an increasing detection of cortisol-secreting adrenal incidentalomas associated with milder hypercortisolism. There is no difference between pitCS and adrCS in the severity of hypercortisoluria, although significant clinical differences were found.
The incidence of CS is higher than previously suggested. The consistently increasing number of UFC tests being performed has not been accompanied by a similar increase in CS detection rate. The expected yield of routine UFC testing before bariatric surgery is low.
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