Endoscopy and Radio Iodine Assay
Endoscopy and Radio Iodine Assay
Endoscopy and Radio Iodine Assay
IODINE ASSAY
DECHY LYN PALMA
ENDOSCOPY
Colonoscopy Colonoscope Entire length of the colon and Inserted through the anus
large intestine
Laparoscopy Laparoscope Stomach, liver, or other abdominal Inserted through a small, surgical
organ, including female opening in the abdomen
reproductive organs (uterus,
ovaries, fallopian tubes)
Proctoscopy Proctoscope Rectum and sigmoid colon Inserted through the anus
Sigmoidoscopy Sigmoidoscope Sigmoid colon (bottom part of the Inserted through the anus
colon)
Thoracoscopy Thoracoscope Pleura covering the lungs and Inserted through a small surgical
structures covering the heart opening in chest
COMPLICATIONS OF ENDOSCOPY
chest pain
damage to your organs, including possible perforation
fever
persistent pain in the area of endoscopy
redness and swelling at the incision site
BEFORE THE PROCEDURE
Pre-Procedural Nursing Implications.
(1) Endoscopic procedures are invasive, and therefore require a formal, signed
consent form.
(2) The patient must be educated about the procedure, the significance of any
preparation, and any post-procedural sequelae.
(3) Upper GI endoscopy (esophagoscopy, gastroscopy) requires that the patient be
fasting. Sedatives are administered prior to the procedure to relax the patient and
facilitate passage of the scope.
(4) If the patient wears dentures, have a denture cup available. The physician may
require the removal of the dentures prior to oral insertion of the scope.
(5) Colon endoscopy (proctoscopy, sigmoidoscopy, and colonoscopy) requires that
the bowel be free of stool to enhance visualization. This is normally accomplished
with laxatives and cleansing enemas.
During the Procedure
This helps your doctor know if the thyroid gland is working properly.
The radioactive tracer commonly used in this test is iodine.
A radioactive iodine uptake test is done to find problems with how the
thyroid gland works, such as hyperthyroidism
PURPOSE:
The amount of radioactive tracer in the thyroid gland is normal. An RAIU test measures the amount of tracer taken up by the thyroid
gland at certain times after the tracer is given. The measured amount of radioactive tracer in the thyroid gland at each one of these times
is at normal levels.
These are normal results at 6 and 24 hours after swallowing the radioactive iodine:
Normal: At 6 hours: 3% to 16%
At 24 hours: 8% to 25%
The test shows either more or less uptake of tracer than normal in the thyroid gland. If hyperthyroidism is present, abnormal test results
may mean certain conditions are present.
A low uptake of tracer by the thyroid gland may mean that hyperthyroidism is caused by inflammation of the
thyroid gland (thyroiditis), taking too much thyroid medicine, or another rare condition.
Abnormal:
A high uptake of tracer spread evenly in the thyroid gland may mean that hyperthyroidism is caused by conditions
Other conditions can cause some areas of higher-than-normal uptake in the thyroid gland. These
include:
An enlarged thyroid gland that contains nodules producing too much thyroid hormone (toxic
nodular goiter)
An single thyroid nodule that is producing too much thyroid hormone (toxic adenoma)