ISTHMUS.
The two lobes of the Thyroid gland being the thyroid and the parathyroid are connected by an isthmus.
Thyroid disease affects the thyroid gland. This gland is in the neck, in the shape of a butterfly with lobes on each side. The thyroid gland excretes hormones.
The thyroid gland is located in the throat. The left and right lobes of the thyroid gland are connected by an isthmus.
You need to be more clear with your Question. How many what in a Gland? Are you asking about how many lobes are there in a pituitary gland or hormones in a thyroid gland?
The thyroid gland is composed of two lobes connected by a central isthmus. It is located at the front of the neck, just below the Adam's apple. The thyroid gland secretes hormones that regulate metabolism and other bodily functions.
The thyroid gland resembles a butterfly or a bow tie in shape, as it consists of two lobes connected by a narrow isthmus in the middle.
Thyroidectomy is the removal of the thyroid hemithyroidectomy is the removal of one lobe of the thyroid gland parathyroidectomy is the removal of one or more lobes of the parathyroid which is behind the thyroid gland.
There is one feline thyroid gland in a cat. The gland itself has many parts however, including two lobes - one on each side of the trachea (windpipe).
The thyroid gland is a bilobed (or 2 lobed) gland connected by an isthmus (or narrow tissue passageway) between the two lobes. It is located in the throat.
Hyperdensity in a cat scan of the thyroid indicates calcifications, hemorrhage, or colloid. The thyroid gland is one of the largest endocrine glands and consists of two connected lobes.
sup parathyroid glad : 1. fixed site - at the cricothyroid cartilage, behind recc. laryngeal nerve, sup to inf thyroid a 2. other sites - retro esophageal or retro pharyngeal inf parathyroid gland : 1. common sites - near the inf lobes, ant to RLN, inf to ITA 2. ectopic sites - within thymus, thyroid gland, mediastinum
You have four lobes in your brain: frontal lobe, temporal lobe, parietal lobe, and the occipital.