MDOI International Journal of Multidisciplinary Studies and Innovative Researchs 110.0168/INT.2026.00143
110.0168/INT.2026.00143
Article

Tongue and Nail Hyperpigmentation Following Radioactive Iodine Therapy: A Report of Two Cases

Catarina Regala, MD , David Veríssimo, MD , Sara Donato, MD , Diogo M. Rombo, PhD, Pedro Jorge, MD , Lucília Salgado, MD , Valeriano Leite, PhD , Tiago Nunes da Silva, MD 2025 International Journal of Multidisciplinary Studies and Innovative Researchs

Abstract

Background/Objective Radioactive iodine therapy (RAIT) is widely used in the management of thyroid disorders, particularly as adjuvant treatment for differentiated thyroid carcinoma. While generally well tolerated and mainly affecting the salivary glands and gastrointestinal tract, RAIT has also been associated with rare mucocutaneous complications. Case Report This case report describes 2 uncommon presentations of tongue hyperpigmentation following RAIT, one also associated with nail pigmentation, a complication not previously documented. Both patients were women, underwent surgery for differentiated thyroid carcinoma, and had more than 1 RAIT, with cumulative activities of 250 mCi (patient 1) and 400 mCi (patient 2). Tongue hyperpigmentation developed within days of RAIT and occurred without xerostomia, taste disturbances, or known predisposing factors such as poor oral hygiene or concurrent medication use. In patient 1, tongue and nail pigmentation resolved within 2 and 4 months, respectively, whereas in patient 2 it persisted for 18 months after the last RAIT. Discussion Only 4 prior reports of RAIT-related tongue hyperpigmentation were identified, all in women aged 28–75 who developed symptoms within 3–10 days after a single treatment and resolved spontaneously. Our patients showed similar features, including onset shortly after RAIT and absence of common risk factors for black tongue. However, they differed in that pigmentation followed multiple RAIT, with one case showing persistent discoloration and the other presenting the novel finding of concurrent nail hyperpigmentation. Conclusion RAIT-induced mucocutaneous hyperpigmentation is extremely rare and often self-limiting but warrants further investigation to clarify its mechanisms and long-term significance.

Identifier Metadata

Identifier 110.0168/INT.2026.00143
Canonical mdoi:110.0168/INT.2026.00143
Resolver URL https://mdoi.org/110.0168/INT.2026.00143
Resource URL Open resource
Document URL Open document
Content Type Article
Authors Catarina Regala, MD , David Veríssimo, MD , Sara Donato, MD , Diogo M. Rombo, PhD, Pedro Jorge, MD , Lucília Salgado, MD , Valeriano Leite, PhD , Tiago Nunes da Silva, MD
Year 2025
Depositor International Journal of Multidisciplinary Studies and Innovative Researchs Organisation
Prefix 110.0168
Registered June 16, 2026
Updated June 16, 2026
Status Active
Visibility Public

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