PATIENT NO.
21

AGE
12

SEX
F

HOSPITAL
U. S$. Naval Hospital, Guam

DATE
August, 1964

This 12 year old female, native of Rongelap Atoll, was accidentaily subjected to
radioactive fallout from a nuclear explosion in 1954.
She subsequently suffered
hematopoietic depression and "beta burns of the skin that healed in several months."
Thereafter, she was subjectively and objectively in good health until March, 1964,
when examination revealed a grossly irregular (nodular) thyroid gland.
Protein
bound iodine was reported as normal, and the child was referred to this hospital

on August 17, 1964, for surgical management of the pathologic gland.

Admission studies revealed a normal physical examination except for four to five
hard nodules in the thyroid, with no palpable lymph nodes. Laboratory studies
were negative except for an unexplained leukocytosis of 15,700 (with a normal

smear) and a sedative rate of 38.

PBI was not repeated.

The increased likelihood of malignant degeneration in thyroid glands exposed to
radiation (whether x-irradiation or atomic blasts as in Japan), together with the
infrequency -£ nodular goiter during adolescence among these Island people, made
us faigly certain that we were dealing with a malignant tumor of the thyroid.
At operation on August 18, 1964, the gross picture was one of malignancy, with the
thyroid having a cobble-stone appearance and "feel," the nodules being for the most
part extremely indurated and unlike the findings in a nodular goiter.
It was
decided to remove the entire thyroid gland, with dissection of the anterior compartment of the neck, en bloc. The extreme irregularity of the thyroid gland, with
nodules being of different color and consistency, made identification of parathyroid tissue extremely difficult.
One parathyroid gland was identified after
its pedicle was divided (it was attached to the undersurface of the right lobe
of the thyroid gland), and this was implanted in the belly of the right sternomastoid gland.
No other parathyroids were seen, and none were subsequently found
in the specimen by the pathologist.
Postoperatively, the patient had attacks of frank tetany on the second and fourth
postoperative days, each time responding to intravenous calcium glucoheptonate.
Since that time -he has been maintained on a high calcium=low phosphorous diet,
calcium lactate ablets, Deltalin (vitamin D3), and amphogel, in varying amounts.
At first an attempt was made to wean her of all medications (as her serum calcium
and phosphorus suggested return of parathyroid function). However, it was found
that she could not tolerate complete withdrawal, so attempts were redirected
toward establishing a program that would regulate her calcium/phosphorus balance
with a minimum of medication.
As of now this program includes the following:

Deltalin 100,000 units daily,

calcium lactate two tablets (grains XX) t.i.d., amphogel 30 cc t.i.d., a -gh
calcium/low phosphorus diet, and thyroid extract grains I t.i.d.

The child seems to be doing quite well on this program, has no suggestion of
neuromuscular hyperirritability, and participates freely in available activities.
Her serum calcium is 9.4, with a serum phosphorus of 5.7, and an alkaline phosphatase of 6 B.U.

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