How is thyroid cancer diagnosed?
If you have an enlarged thyroid nodule or any other signs, your healthcare provider could order one or more of these tests:
Blood tests: A thyroid blood test checks hormone levels and establishes whether your thyroid is functioning as it’s supposed to.
Biopsy: during a fine-needle aspiration biopsy, the doctor will remove cells from your thyroid to test for cancer. With the help of a sentinel node biopsy, they can determine if the cancer cells have spread to your lymph nodes. Moreover, they could also use ultrasound technology to guide such biopsy procedures.
Radioiodine scan: This type of test can detect the cancer and establish whether or not it has spread. What happens is that you swallow a pill with a safe amount of radioactive iodine. In a couple of hours, your thyroid gland fully absorbs the iodine. Then, your doctor uses a device to measure the amount of radiation, and where there’s less radioactivity, that’s how they know it will require more testing.
Imaging scans: radioactive iodine scans, computed tomography (CT), and positron emission tomography (PET) scans can easily detect the cancer and where it spread.
7 thoughts on “4 Subtle Thyroid Cancer Symptoms You Should NEVER Ignore”
You never tell us about the subtle symptoms of Thyroid.
Women and people who are assigned as female at birth? WTF does that mean?
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TOO MANY PAGES!!!!!!!!!!!
The title mentions ways to know, but no symptoms are mentioned. Do that.
Four signs you have thyroid cancer. Where are they? You got so much crap I can’t even find the article. So very frustrating. Why do you even bother
it says symptoms not to ignore, but none of the symptoms are listed… why?
Where the hell is the rest of the story!