PATIENT NO. 20 (continued)
ient has been asymptomatic and apparently
ge the patien
i
Follow-Up:3 Since dischar
(3 mg levothyroxine daily) has been
therapy
euthyroid even though his thyroid
has been noted.
nodules
thyroid
of
sporadic. No recurrence
PATIENT NO,

64

AGE

SEX

41

F

DATE

HOSPITAL

Hospital of Medical Research Center, BNL

June, 1965

This 41 year old Marshallese woman was admitted to the hospital for evaluation of
a thyroid nodule that was discovered during the 1965 annual medical survey of
the Rongelap people.

A l em nodule was discovered in the right lobe of
History of Present Illness:
It was firm, non-tender, and no
in March, 1965.
woman
this
of
gland
the thyroid
She was one of a group of 64 Rongelap people
cervical lymph nodes were palpable.

who had been exposed to fallout 11 years ago. She had received an estimated dose
of 175 rads of whole body gamma exposure and in addition radiation exposure to
her skin and some internal absorption of radioactive materials.

Absorption of

radioiodines from the fallout gave an estimated dose to the thyroid gland of 150160 rads,

in addition to the 175 rads from gamma radiation.

She had early

nausea and vomiting believed to be associated with her radiation exposure and her
blood elements were depressed to about one-half normal levels. She developed
"beta burns" of the skin beginning about two weeks after exposure, mainly on the

These lesions healed within several weeks and her blood elements
back of her neck.
Since that time
returned to near normal levels by about one year after exposure.
she has remained in relatively good health with no serious illnesses or injuries.
She has
She has had nine children, four of them born since the fallout exposure.
A PBI taken in March was 10.0 wg% (high normal
apparently remained euthyroid.
for the Marshallese) and serum cholesterol in 1958 was 249 mpi.
Physical Examination:
The patient was a well nourished, well developed female
of about her stated age of 41,
Pterygia were noted in the right eye.
In the
right lower pole of the thyroid there was a deeply fixed 1 em nodule that moved

with the thyroid on swallowing.

The overlying skin was not attached to the

nodule.
The nodule was very hard but not tender and no other nodules were palpable.
Regional adenopathy was not noted.
The blood pressure was normal,
There were no

other significant findings on physical examination,

Laboratory and X-Ray Data:
Thyroid Work-up revealed the following:
Lodine
fractionation;
total iodine 8.6 ug%, iodoprotein fraction 4.5 we%, thyronine
fraction (T4 + T3 iodine) 3.4 ug%, PBI 7.5 weg%, serum cholesterol 239 mg% (esters

183 mgZ). Basal metabolic rate -27%. Thyroxin autoantibodies titer under 1:16.
Thyroid scan showed large "cold" nodule replacing the lower pole of the right

lobe of the thyroid gland with nodularity also involving the left lobe, lower
pole area.
Chest x-ray showed no active disease,
Thyroid uptake study using 1327
showed a 6-hour uptake of 22.3% with urinary excretion of 33%.
After three days

of treatment with TSH (I.M.) thyroid uptake had increased to 33% at 5-1/2 hours.
PBI 8.0 we%.
Except for slightly low RBC (3,300,000) and hemoglobin (11.6 em%),
the blood count was normal.
Urinalysis was negative and the following blood

chemistry studies were negative:
bilirubin, cephalin flocculation, transaminase,
Ca, P, thymol turbidity, FBS, BUN, COo, Na, K.
Alkaline phosphatase was slightly
low (1,4 units); the globulin fraction of proteins was slightly elevated (4.26 gm%).

102

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