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Iodine and the Body

 

Exocrine System

Zettinig

 

Long-term impairment of the lacrimal glands after radioiodine therapy: a cross-sectional study.

Zettinig G, Hanselmayer G, Fueger BJ, Hofmann A, Pirich C, Nepp J, Dudczak R.

Eur J Nucl Med Mol Imaging. 2002 Nov;29(11):1428-32. Epub 2002 Aug 28.

[abstract only]

 

"Impairment of the lacrimal glands after external radiation has been well documented, but there are only a few reports on the effects of radioiodine therapy on the lacrimal glands. Long-term effects of high-dose radioiodine therapy on tear secretion have not previously been studied. We investigated 175 eyes of 88 patients with a history of radioiodine therapy for thyroid carcinoma (68 females, 20 males; mean age 55+/-16 years, range 17-81 years) and compared them with a sex- and age-matched control group ( n=39). All patients had been given at least 2.96 GBq iodine-131 (maximal administered activity 22.3 GBq (131)I). An ophthalmological investigation was performed 64+/-71 months (range 3-317 months) after initial radioiodine therapy by a single ophthalmologist. Lacrimal gland function was evaluated with three different function tests. External eye morphology was considered, and detailed ophthalmological history-taking was performed. Patients with factors known to affect lacrimal gland function (contact lenses, autoimmune disorders, history of additional radiation exposure) were excluded from the study. A total of 81 patients (92%) had at least one abnormal function test indicating impaired lacrimal gland function. Schirmer's tear test was decreased (<10 mm/5 min) in 47 of the 88 patients and definitely abnormal (<5 mm/5 min) in 35 patients. A tear film break-up time of <10 s was found in 78 patients, and 62 patients had a definitely abnormal break-up time of <5 s. The lacrimal lipid layer was impaired in 43 patients. The function tests were all significantly altered in the study group as compared with the controls ( P<0.005, P<0.001, P<0.001, respectively). Both subjective symptoms of dry eye ( P<0.01) and changes in the external eye morphology ( P<0.001) were significantly more prevalent in the study group. Our findings suggest that in the majority of patients, lacrimal gland function may be permanently impaired after high-dose radioiodine therapy. All three layers of the tear film are involved and there is a pronounced long-term effect on the tear film stability."

 

 

Radioactive contamination of contact lenses during radioiodine therapy.

Zettinig G, Karanikas G, Hanselmayer G, Havlik E, Dudczak R.

Nucl Med Commun. 2000 Oct;21(10):955-7.

[abstract only]

 

"Although the secretion of radioiodine in tears is not unexpected, there are only few investigations in that field. We report the measurement of 131I in disposable contact lenses for daily use during radioiodine treatment. After administration of 740 MBq 131I, all contact lenses of a 59-year-old female used the day before and 5 days after radioiodine therapy were collected and measured in a gamma counter. Activities of 124 Bq (right) and 139 Bq (left) were measured in the contact lenses used during the first day after administration of radioiodine. The activity in the contact lenses of the following days was significantly lower. An initial dose rate of approximately 0.31 microSv x h(-1) was caused by the radioactivity resulting in a total dose of 13 microSv to the patient's eye lens. That dose is negligible compared to the dose caused by the incorporated radioactivity."

 

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