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Maternal Iodine Exposure: A Case of Fetal Goiter and Neonatal Hearing Loss
25
Citations
9
References
2016
Year
NutritionNeonatologyFetal MedicineGynecologyFetal HealthMagnetic Resonance ImagingIodine Deficiency DisordersNeonatal Hearing LossMaternal NutritionPublic HealthThyroid PhysiologyAudiologyClinical NutritionMaternal HealthPrenatal DiagnosisMaternal-fetal MedicineFetal NeurodevelopmentGoiter FormationMaternal Iodine ExposurePlacental FunctionHearing LossThyroid DiseasePediatricsThyroid DisordersFetal GoiterThyroid HormoneFetal ComplicationMedicine
A 27-year-old gravid 1 at 27 weeks 6 days with a history of hypothyroidism had an ultrasound that demonstrated a 3.9 × 3.2 × 3.3-cm well-circumscribed anterior neck mass, an extended fetal head, and polyhydramnios. Further characterization by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) showed a fetal goiter. During her evaluation for the underlying cause of the fetal goiter, the patient revealed she was taking nutritional iodine supplements for treatment of her hypothyroidism. She was ingesting 62.5 times the recommended amount of daily iodine in pregnancy. The excessive iodine consumption caused suppression of the fetal thyroid hormone production, resulting in hypothyroidism and goiter formation. After the iodine supplement was discontinued, the fetal goiter decreased in size. At delivery, the airway was not compromised. The infant was found to have reversible hypothyroidism and bilateral hearing loss postnatally. This case illustrates the importance of examining for iatrogenic causes for fetal anomalies, especially in unregulated nutritional supplements.
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