Active Living Daily Care Eat Smart Health Hacks
About Contact The Library

Side Effects Of a Thyroid Uptake Scan | Know What Can Happen

Most people feel fine after this test, with only brief nausea or a sore injection spot in a small number of cases.

A thyroid uptake scan is a nuclear medicine test that shows how your thyroid gland handles a tiny amount of radiotracer. It’s often paired with imaging (“thyroid scan and uptake”) to show the gland’s size, shape, position, and activity. The goal is simple: give your clinician clearer answers about thyroid function than bloodwork alone can provide.

If you’re worried about side effects, you’re in the right place. This test tends to be low-drama for most people. Still, it helps to know what’s normal, what’s rare, and what should trigger a same-day call.

One more thing: people often blame the tracer for symptoms that come from the day around the scan—fasting, dehydration, caffeine withdrawal, a tense neck position, or plain nerves. Sorting that out can lower stress and help you respond the right way if you do feel off.

Side Effects Of a Thyroid Uptake Scan: Common Reactions

Most thyroid uptake scans use a small dose of radioactive iodine (often iodine-123) or another tracer. Side effects aren’t common, yet a few short-lived reactions can show up. When they do, they usually fit into one of these buckets.

Mild nausea or an unsettled stomach

Some people feel queasy after taking the tracer. When it happens, it’s often brief. If you’re prone to nausea, ask the imaging center whether you can eat soon after the dose, since protocols vary based on the tracer and the timing of images.

Soreness, bruising, or a small lump at the injection site

Many centers use an injection for the imaging portion. A tender spot, minor bruising, or a small raised area can occur, similar to a routine blood draw. It usually fades over a day or two.

Headache, lightheadedness, or feeling “off” for a short time

These symptoms aren’t typical, yet they can happen from fasting, dehydration, stress, or standing up too fast after lying still. Water, a snack (when allowed), and slow position changes often settle it.

Allergic-type reaction to the tracer

True allergy is rare, but it’s possible with any medication or tracer. Tell the technologist right away if you notice hives, swelling of your lips or face, wheezing, or trouble breathing. Those call for urgent care.

Thyroid Uptake Scan Side Effects By Timing

It helps to break this test into three windows: right after the tracer, during imaging, and the hours after you head home. Each window has its own “normal” sensations and its own warning signs.

Right after the tracer

  • What you might feel: nothing at all, or mild nausea.
  • What you might notice: a faint metallic taste if you had a liquid tracer.
  • What’s a good sign: symptoms (if any) stay mild and ease quickly.

During the scan

The scan itself is painless. The camera sits close to your neck and upper chest, and you’ll be asked to keep your head still. Some people feel cramped or anxious in imaging rooms. If that’s you, say so before you start. Many sites can pause, reposition, or talk you through each step.

If you want a clear walkthrough of what you may feel during and after the procedure, RadiologyInfo’s patient page is a solid starting point: thyroid scan and uptake patient overview.

After the scan

Your body clears the tracer over time, mostly through urine. Many facilities suggest drinking extra fluids and washing hands well after using the bathroom. That’s good hygiene, and it also lowers the small radiation exposure to people around you.

Cleveland Clinic’s overview also explains expected risks and side effects in plain language, including why pregnancy and breastfeeding get extra screening: thyroid uptake and scan risks and side effects.

Prep Issues That Can Feel Like Side Effects

A lot of “side effects” are really prep effects. Depending on why you’re getting the scan, you may be told to pause thyroid medication, stop certain supplements, or avoid iodine-rich products for a period beforehand. That window can change how you feel, especially if your thyroid levels are already swinging.

If you feel jittery, tired, sweaty, wired, or foggy during the prep period, that may reflect your thyroid status more than the tracer. Timing matters too. Some people sleep poorly the night before a medical test, then get a headache or dizziness the next day and blame the scan.

The best move is simple: bring a full list of meds and supplements, plus a list of recent imaging studies that used contrast. That helps your ordering team time the test so results are easier to trust.

Side Effects You Might Notice And What They Mean

Here’s a practical way to match common post-test sensations with likely causes and what usually helps. Use this as a quick check-in, not a self-diagnosis tool. If symptoms feel severe or fast-moving, treat that as a warning sign and get help.

What You Might Notice What’s Often Behind It What Usually Helps
Mild nausea Sensitivity to the tracer, empty stomach, or nerves Small snack when allowed, water, slow breathing, rest
Sore injection spot or small bruise Needle irritation or minor bleeding under the skin Gentle pressure, warm compress later, avoid heavy lifting that day
Lightheadedness Fasting, dehydration, standing up fast Sit before standing, hydrate, eat when allowed
Headache Tension, dehydration, poor sleep Hydration, rest, your usual headache care if permitted
Itchy rash or hives Allergic-type reaction to tracer (rare) Tell staff right away; urgent care if swelling or breathing trouble
Warmth or flushing Stress response, room temperature shifts Adjust layers, ask for a pause, sip water
Uneasy, tense, or panicky in the scanner Tight positioning, sensory overload Ask for a break, keep your attention on slow breaths, request step-by-step coaching
Worry about “radiation” after leaving Normal concern about nuclear medicine Follow facility instructions on fluids and bathroom hygiene

Radiation Exposure And When It Matters Most

A thyroid uptake scan uses ionizing radiation. That’s the reality, so it’s fair to ask what that means for your body. In most diagnostic thyroid uptake tests, the dose is small, and exposure is low compared with many other imaging studies. The tracer is selected because it lets the camera measure thyroid activity with a limited amount of radioactivity.

The risk picture changes in two situations: pregnancy and breastfeeding. Radiation can reach a fetus, and radioactive iodine can concentrate in breast tissue and pass into milk. That’s why imaging centers screen for pregnancy and ask about breastfeeding before you take the tracer.

UCSF’s medical test page notes the amount of radioactivity is small and flags pregnancy and breastfeeding as reasons to avoid the test: UCSF thyroid scan risks.

“I’m iodine allergic, can I still do this?”

This topic gets messy because people use “iodine allergy” to mean different things. Some people reacted to iodinated CT contrast. Some reacted to a topical antiseptic. The tracer used for a thyroid uptake scan is not the same as CT contrast and is used in a different context and dose.

Your history still matters. Tell your imaging team about any past reactions to contrast dye, plus any true medication allergies. That gives them the clearest picture for safe planning.

What Counts As A Red Flag After The Test

Most people go back to normal routines the same day. Still, a short list of symptoms deserves fast attention.

Urgent symptoms

  • Swelling of the face, lips, tongue, or throat
  • Wheezing, chest tightness, or shortness of breath
  • Fainting that doesn’t improve after sitting or lying down
  • Severe vomiting where you can’t keep fluids down

Same-day call symptoms

  • Hives that spread or itch intensely
  • Injection-site pain that ramps up, with warmth, pus, or streaking redness
  • Fever after the test, especially if you also feel ill

If you want a clinician-facing list of potential complications, StatPearls on the NIH’s NCBI Bookshelf lists issues like injection-site pain, hypersensitivity reactions, and fetal or infant exposure concerns: thyroid uptake and scan complications (NCBI Bookshelf).

Symptom When It Often Shows Up What To Do
Hives with swelling or breathing trouble Minutes to hours Seek emergency care
Lightheadedness that passes with rest During or right after the scan Sit, hydrate, eat when allowed
Injection-site soreness or bruise Same day Warm compress later; watch for worsening redness
Persistent vomiting Hours Get urgent care advice to avoid dehydration
Fever with spreading redness at injection site 1–2 days Call your clinician the same day
Persistent anxiety after leaving Same day Try hydration and food first; call the imaging center if worry spikes

How To Make The Day Smoother

You can’t control every variable, yet you can set yourself up for a calmer test day.

Hydrate if your instructions allow fluids

Dehydration makes headaches and lightheadedness more likely. It can also make veins harder to access if your center uses an injection.

Bring a snack for the waiting window

Some protocols involve waiting several hours between the tracer and imaging, or returning the next day for a delayed measurement. Ask what you can eat and when. Having a simple snack on hand can prevent a crash that feels like a tracer reaction.

Wear clothing that makes neck access easy

Tight collars and jewelry slow things down. A plain crewneck tee or button-up shirt tends to work well. Leave necklaces at home.

Say what you’re worried about before the camera starts

If you get motion sick, feel claustrophobic, or have panic symptoms in medical settings, tell the staff upfront. They can explain the pace, check on you, and pause if you need a breather.

Scan Side Effects Versus Treatment Side Effects

People often mix up a diagnostic uptake scan with radioactive iodine treatment. Both involve radioiodine, yet the purpose and dose are different.

A diagnostic thyroid uptake scan uses a small tracer dose to measure thyroid function and, in many cases, take images. Radioactive iodine therapy uses higher doses designed to treat thyroid disease by damaging thyroid tissue. Side effects like salivary gland irritation and dry mouth are linked far more often with treatment than with diagnostic tracer doses.

What A Good Outcome Looks Like

A good outcome is simple: you complete the scan comfortably, you leave without new symptoms, and the results help your clinician pick the right next step. For many people, that next step is also straightforward—adjusting thyroid medication, narrowing down the cause of abnormal labs, or confirming how a thyroid nodule is behaving.

If you’re getting this scan because you’ve felt shaky, sweaty, or wired, it can also feel good to get clarity. Not drama. Just clarity.

References & Sources

  • RadiologyInfo.org.“Thyroid Scan and Uptake.”Explains the procedure, what you may experience, and risks and limitations.
  • Cleveland Clinic.“Thyroid Uptake & Scan.”Summarizes expected sensations and notes pregnancy and breastfeeding cautions.
  • UCSF Health.“Thyroid Scan.”Notes the small amount of radioactivity and flags pregnancy and breastfeeding as reasons to avoid the test.
  • NIH NCBI Bookshelf (StatPearls).“Thyroid Uptake and Scan.”Lists potential complications such as injection-site pain, hypersensitivity reactions, and fetal or infant exposure concerns.
Mo Maruf
Founder & Lead Editor

Mo Maruf

I created WellFizz to bridge the gap between vague wellness advice and actionable solutions. My mission is simple: to decode the research and give you practical tools you can actually use.

Beyond the data, I am a passionate traveler. I believe that stepping away from the screen to explore new environments is essential for mental clarity and physical vitality.