Thyroid and parathyroid glands anatomy

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anteriorly in the lower neck, level with the fifth cervical to the first
thoracic vertebrae (see Fig. 29.17). It is ensheathed by the pretracheal
layer of deep cervical fascia and consists of right and left lobes connected by a narrow, median isthmus. It usually weighs 25 g but this
varies. The gland is slightly heavier in females and enlarges during
menstruation and pregnancy. Estimation of the size of the thyroid
gland is clinically important in the evaluation and management of
thyroid disorders and can be achieved non-invasively by means of
diagnostic ultrasound. Mean thyroid volume increases with age (Chanoine et al 1991). No significant difference in thyroid gland volume
has been observed between males and females from 8 months to
15 years.
The lobes of the thyroid gland are approximately conical. Their
ascending apices diverge laterally to the level of the oblique lines on
the laminae of the thyroid cartilage, and their bases are level with the
fourth or fifth tracheal cartilages. Each lobe is usually 5 cm long, its
greatest transverse and anteroposterior extents being 3 cm and 2 cm,
respectively. The posteromedial aspects of the lobes are attached to the
side of the cricoid cartilage by a lateral thyroid ligament (Berry’s ligament). The isthmus connects the lower parts of the two lobes, although
occasionally it may be absent. It measures 1.25 cm transversely and
vertically, and is usually anterior to the second and third tracheal cartilages, although it can be higher or even sometimes lower because its
site and size vary greatly. A conical pyramidal lobe often ascends
towards the hyoid bone from the isthmus or the adjacent part of either
lobe (more often the left). It is occasionally detached or in two or more
parts. A fibrous or fibromuscular band, the levator of the thyroid gland,
musculus levator glandulae thyroideae, sometimes descends from the
body of the hyoid to the isthmus or pyramidal lobe. For further reading,
see Mohebati and Shaha (2012).
Ectopic thyroid tissue is rare but may be found around the course
of the thyroglossal duct or laterally in the neck, as well as in distant
places such as the tongue (lingual thyroid), mediastinum and the subdiaphragmatic organs (Noussios et al 2011). The most frequent location
of ectopic thyroid tissue is at the base of the tongue, in particular at the
region of the foramen caecum; often it is the only thyroid tissue present.
Small, detached masses of thyroid tissue may occur above the lobes or
isthmus as accessory thyroid glands. Vestiges of the thyroglossal duct
may persist between the isthmus and the foramen caecum of the tongue,
sometimes as accessory nodules or cysts of thyroid tissue near the
midline or even in the tongue, where they are called thyroglossal duct cyst.PARATHYROID GLANDS
The parathyroid glands are small, yellowish-brown, ovoid or lentiform
structures, usually lying between the posterior lobar borders of the
thyroid gland and its capsule. They are commonly 6 mm long, 3–4 mm Neck
472SECTION
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across and 1–2 mm from back to front, each weighing about 50 mg.
Typically, there are two on each side, superior and inferior, but there
may be more or there may be only three or many minute parathyroid
islands scattered in connective tissue near the usual sites. Very occasionally, an occult gland may follow a blood vessel into a groove on the
surface of the thyroid. Normally, the inferior parathyroids migrate only
to the inferior thyroid poles, but they may descend with the thymus
into the thorax or they may be sessile and remain above their normal
level near the carotid bifurcation. The anastomotic connection between
the superior and inferior thyroid arteries that occurs along the posterior
border of the thyroid gland usually passes very close to the parathyroids,
and is a useful aid to their identification.
The superior parathyroid glands are more constant.

Thyroid and parathyroid glands anatomy

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Thyroid and parathyroid glands anatomy
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