Document detail
ID

doi:10.1186/s13044-023-00177-1...

Author
Raeymaeckers, Steven Tosi, Maurizio Sol, Bastiaan De Mey, Johan
Langue
en
Editor

BioMed Central

Category

Medicine & Public Health

Year

2023

listing date

8/23/2023

Keywords
thyroid thyroid malignancy tirads sclerotherapy doxycycline lesion
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Abstract

Background The literature considers sclerotherapy to be a safe and effective treatment for benign thyroid cysts.

No subsequent diagnostic problems have been reported as a complication.

We report the occurrence of focal inflammation after said therapy, mimicking a thyroid malignancy.

Case presentation We report a case of a young male with a solitary strongly suspicious lesion in the thyroid.

The patient had undergone prior sclerotherapy of a thyroid cyst with Doxycycline.

The lesion appeared to be a focal area of inflammation and thus iatrogenic in nature.

Systemic use of doxycycline is known to sometimes cause a non-immune chemical thyroiditis, dubbed as black thyroid due to the intense black discoloration of the thyroid.

It might be that the instillation of doxycycline was responsible for a similar, more localized area of thyroiditis.

Conclusions For the work-up of a solitary suspicious thyroid lesion, the medical history of the patient should always be considered.

In case of prior ipsilateral sclerotherapy, a reactive inflammatory response may mimic thyroid malignancy.

A fine needle aspiration should be performed to exclude thyroid cancer.

Treatment is not necessary; the process appears to be self-limiting as evidenced in the follow-up of this case.

Raeymaeckers, Steven,Tosi, Maurizio,Sol, Bastiaan,De Mey, Johan, 2023, Sonographic changes in the thyroid gland after sclerotherapy with doxycycline can be mistaken for thyroid cancer, BioMed Central

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