<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><Articles><Article><id>169</id><JournalTitle>HASHIMOTOâ€™S THYROIDITIS â€“ A REVIEW</JournalTitle><Abstract>Hashimotoâ€Ÿs thyroiditis is a common autoimmune thyroid disorder mostly seen in middle aged women. Surprisingly
little is known about its etiopathogenesis. Usually patients present with hypothyroidism and/or goiter. It is the interaction
between genetic/epigenetic and various environmental triggers including iodine deficiency and infections. Several loci have
been associated with Hashimotoâ€Ÿs disease, such as HLA-DR, immune-regulatory genes (CD40, CTLA-4, PTPN22, FOXP3
and CD25) and thyroid-specific genes. HLA-DRb1 Tyr26, Gln70, Lys71 and Arg74 may cause structural changes in pocket 4
and therefore influence binding of certain thyroid derived pathogenic peptides. It seems to be associated with various
autoimmune disorders and cancers like papillary thyroid carcinoma and malignant lymphoma.</Abstract><Email>anjanappaht@yahoo.co.in</Email><articletype>Review</articletype><volume>5</volume><issue>1</issue><year>2015</year><keyword>Hashimotoâ€Ÿs thyroiditis,Hashimotoâ€Ÿs encephalopathy</keyword><AUTHORS>Anjanappa HT,Arjun A, Lakshmi V</AUTHORS><afflication> Professor and Head, Department of Emergency Medicine, P E S Institute of Medical Sciences and Research, Kuppam, Andhra Pradesh, India.,Post Graduate student, Department of General Surgery, P E S Institute of Medical Sciences and Research, Kuppam, Andhra Pradesh, India.,Professor, Department of Pathology, Sambhram Institute of Medical Sciences, BEML, KGF, Kolar, Karnataka, India.</afflication></Article></Articles>