Disease of the Thyroid Gland: A Histopathological Perspective

Innocent Emmanuel *

Department of Histopathology, Jos University Teaching Hospital, Jos, Nigeria

Mansur Ramalan Aliyu

Department of Internal Medicine, Aminu Kano Teaching Hospital, Kano, Nigeria

Adam Ochigbo

Department of Histopathology, Jos University Teaching Hospital, Jos, Nigeria

Philip Akpa

Department of Histopathology, Jos University Teaching Hospital, Jos, Nigeria

Jagshak Barnabas Mandong

Federal Medical Center, Keffi, Nigeria

Barnabas Mafala Mandong

Department of Histopathology, Jos University Teaching Hospital, Jos, Nigeria

*Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.


Abstract

The thyroid is affected primarily by disease conditions which are variously classified and are not uncommon worldwide. They could lead to enlargement of the thyroid gland thereby earning the designation “goiter”. Globally, iodine deficiency has been identified as a major cause of goiter. This was a descriptive retrospective study of consecutive cases of thyroid specimen analyzed at the Histopathology Department of the Jos University Teaching Hospital, Jos, Nigeria, between January 2008 and December 2017. The aim of this work is to study thyroid disorders histologically, relating these findings to age and sex, and comparing same with previous reports.

The Hospital’s Medical records and the Histopathology Departments served as sources for extraction of patient’s data which included age, sex, and histological diagnosis. Archival slides were reviewed to confirm the diagnosis of the thyroid lesion.

Three hundred and eleven (311) cases of thyroid disease were diagnosed histologically at the Jos University Teaching Hospital during the study period. These lesions were broadly classified into developmental anomalies, hyperplasias, immune/inflammatory diseases, and neoplasm. They accounted for 1.9% (6 cases), 81.3% (253 cases), 3.9% (12 cases), and 12.9% (40 cases) of all cases respectively. The age range of the study population was 1 year to 70 years, with a mean age of 41.2±12.0 SD, and peak incidence at 30 years to 39 years. There were 25 males and 286 females making a male female (M/F) ratio of 1:10.2.

Thyroid disorders are essentially a female disease in our environment occurring commonly in the third and fourth decade of life.

Keywords: Goiter, iodine, Jos.


How to Cite

Emmanuel, Innocent, Mansur Ramalan Aliyu, Adam Ochigbo, Philip Akpa, Jagshak Barnabas Mandong, and Barnabas Mafala Mandong. 2019. “Disease of the Thyroid Gland: A Histopathological Perspective”. Asian Journal of Research and Reports in Endocrinology 1 (1):32-40. https://doi.org/10.9734/ajrre/2018/v1i110.

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