Ethical guidelines for our site Australian English Spanish German Hungarian Italian Polish UK English US English


    
in the news

understanding
your tests

inside the lab

about this site

site map

send us your
comments


home
Screening Tests for Newborns

Congenital Hypothyroidism

Congenital hypothyroidism occurs when an infant is born with a thyroid gland that is not producing enough thyroid hormones. Untreated congenital hypothyroidism may cause mental retardation.

Screening for this condition involves looking for a high level of the hormone TSH in the baby’s blood. Blood is normally sampled from the baby’s heel ('heelprick') and collected onto a piece of card (Guthrie card). Several spots of blood can be collected at the same time to allow screening for other conditions, such as Phenylketonuria (PKU).

If the thyroid testing results indicate congenital hypothyroidism, thyroid hormone supplements may be necessary.

This page last modified on

May 15, 2007

.
 

In the newsUnderstanding your testsInside the Lab
About the siteSite mapSend us your commentsHome

If you don't know what a word or a medical term on this site means
use Stedman's online medical dictionary

We comply with the HONcode standard for trustworthy health
information:
verify here.

©2007-2008 all rights reserved
Email concerns to labtestsonlineau@aacb.asn.au

Terms of use Privacy