1. Brent GA. Environmental exposures and autoimmune thyroid disease. Thyroid. 2010. 20:755–761.
2. Cho BY. The clinical thyroidology. 2010. 3rd ed. Seoul: Korea Medical Book;285.
3. Saranac L, Zivanovic S, Bjelakovic B, Stamenkovic H, Novak M, Kamenov B. Why is the thyroid so prone to autoimmune disease? Horm Res Paediatr. 2011. 75:157–165.
4. Boas M, Feldt-Rasmussen U, Skakkebaek NE, Main KM. Environmental chemicals and thyroid function. Eur J Endocrinol. 2006. 154:599–611.
5. Duntas LH. Climate change, the butterfly effect, and the thyroid. Thyroid. 2007. 17:287–288.
6. Kim JH, Park SA, Kim NH, Ahn JH, Kim YJ, Cho MJ, Lee YJ, Yoo HJ, Kim HY, Seo JA, Kim NH, Choi KM, Baik SH, Choi DS, Kim SG. Thyroid dysfunction of North Korean women living in South Korea, focusing on subclinical hypothyroidism. Endocrinol Metab. 2012. 27:200–207.
7. Bauer M, Priebe S, Kürten I, Gräf KJ, Baumgartner A. Psychological and endocrine abnormalities in refugees from East Germany: part I. prolonged stress, psychopathology, and hypothalamic-pituitary-thyroid axis activity. Psychiatry Res. 1994. 51:61–73.
8. Imaizumi M, Usa T, Tominaga T, Neriishi K, Akahoshi M, Nakashima E, Ashizawa K, Hida A, Soda M, Fujiwara S, Yamada M, Ejima E, Yokoyama N, Okubo M, Sugino K, Suzuki G, Maeda R, Nagataki S, Eguchi K. Radiation dose-response relationships for thyroid nodules and autoimmune thyroid diseases in Hiroshima and Nagasaki atomic bomb survivors 55-58 years after radiation exposure. JAMA. 2006. 295:1011–1022.