Thyroid cancers - case 654 |
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Clinical presentation: A 71-year-old man was referred for an evaluation of a suspected thyroid carcinoma. He suffered from progressive dyspnea for 3 months and discovered a large nodule in the left lobe. Laryngology revealed palsy of the left recurrent nerve.
Palpation: a hard fixed mass in the left thyroid.
Functional state: euthyroidism with TSH-level 0.83 mIU/L.
Ultrasonography. An extremely large, hypoechogenic mass occupied or infiltrated the left thyroid lobe. The mass had irregular borders.
Cytological diagnosis: carcinoma.
Wash-out thyroglobulin resulted in undetectable level.
Final diagnosis: secondary carcinoma of the thyroid, probable a metastatic adenocarcinoma.
CT examination revealed a tumor in the left upper lobe of the lung.
The patient underwent perthoracal biopsy of the mass in the lung. The biopsy of the lung: poorly differentiated adenocarcinoma cancer.








