Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. People also ask

  2. Mar 25, 2012 · Hakaru Hashimoto: 1881-1934. The Japan Thyroid Association uses Hakaru Hashimoto’s picture in its logo as a way to pass on his pioneering spirit to today’s physicians. At 35, Hashimoto...

  3. Only after his death was his description of struma lymphomatosa more than two decades earlier widely recognized by the medical and thyroid communities and consistently given the eponym, Hashimoto’s disease or Hashimoto’s thyroiditis. Who was he? What did he describe? Why was it seen as novel?

  4. Hakaru Hashimoto (橋本 策, Hashimoto Hakaru, May 5, 1881 – January 9, 1934) [1] [2] was a Japanese doctor and medical scientist of the Meiji and Taishō periods. He is best known for publishing the first description of the disease that was later named Hashimoto's thyroiditis.

  5. Apr 22, 2021 · Hashimoto’s Disease was first described by a Japanese doctor in 1912. Hashimoto’s disease is a description often levelled at anyone with hypothyroidism, in much the same way as Graves’ Disease is with hyperthyroidism.

  6. Feb 12, 2016 · The term, Hashimoto's disease, is more widely used than ever. In part, the eponym reflects the realization that what Hakaru Hashimoto described is actually a form of autoimmune disease that can present not only as goiter but also as a shrunken, poorly functioning thyroid gland.

  7. Also known as Hashimoto's disease, Hashimoto's thyroiditis is named after Japanese physician Hakaru Hashimoto (1881−1934) of the medical school at Kyushu University, [70] who first described the symptoms of persons with struma lymphomatosa, an intense infiltration of lymphocytes within the thyroid, in 1912 in the German journal called Archiv ...

  8. Dec 19, 2020 · How many of these Hashimoto's disease facts do you know? Find out more about how Hashimoto's disease leads to hypothyroidism, early thyroid symptoms to watch for, and how doctors treat an underactive thyroid.

  1. People also search for