Showing posts with label thyroid disorders. Show all posts
Showing posts with label thyroid disorders. Show all posts

Saturday, June 13, 2009

Thyroid Quiz

In their book, Thyroid Power: Ten Steps to Total Health Richard L. Shames, M.D., and Karilee Halo Shames, R.N., Ph.D., have the following quiz:

Do you . . .

  • have unusual fatigue unrelated to exertion?

  • feel chillier than most people, often needing to wear socks to bed?

  • dress in layers because of needing to adjust to various temperatures throughout the day (sometimes too hot, sometimes too cold)?

  • have feelings of anxiety that sometimes lead to panic?

  • have trouble with weight, often eating lightly, yet still not losing a pound?

  • experience aches and pains in your muscles and joints unrelated to trauma or exercise?

  • have increased problems with digestion or allergies?

  • feel mentally sluggish, unfocused or unusually forgetful, even though you're not old enough to have Alzheimer's?

  • know of anyone in your family who has ever had a thyroid problem (even yourself at an earlier age)?

  • suffer from dry skin or are prone to adult acne or eczema?

  • go through periods of depression and/or lowered sex drive, seemingly out of proportion to life events?

  • have diabetes, anemia, rheumatoid arthritis or early graying of hair? Does anyone in your family?

  • experience your hair as feeling like straw, dry and easily falling out?

  • experience significant menopausal symptoms, including migraine headaches, without full relief after taking estrogen?

  • have a history of whiplash or other neck injuries (which may have damaged your thyroid)?

  • have significant exposure, now or in the past, to chlorine, bromine or fluoride (which compete with iodine in your thyroid)?

  • feel utterly exhausted by evening, yet have trouble sleeping?

  • wake up tired?


  • If you answered yes to four or more of these questions, you could be one of millions of people with an undiagnosed or under-treated low thyroid problem.

    Read more!

    Thursday, June 11, 2009

    Hypothyroidism

    Nathan Becker, M.D., F.A.C.E., F.A.C.P, assistant clinical professor of medicine at University of California at San Francisco, says this about hypothyroidism in Thyroid Power: Ten Steps to Total Health written by Richard L. Shames, M.D., and Karilee Halo Shames, R.N., Ph.D.:

    Hypothyroidism is undoubtedly the most common disorder of thyroid function. It affects both sexes and all ages; it may be overt or subclinical; the spectrum of severity is broad. At one extreme are patients who have a few symptoms and signs. At the other extreme are patients in coma. Hypothyroidism can be subclinical for many years, particularly in patients with autoimmune Hashimoto's thyroiditis.

    Although we are beginning to understand immune mechanisms, we do not yet fully understand autoimmune thyroid disease. Hashimoto's disease is primarily cell-mediated immune destruction of the thyroid gland. In the less common Graves' disease (also called thyrotoxicosis), a circulating antibody drives the thyroid to hyperfunction, out of the control of pituitary TSH feedback. Graves' disease and Hashimoto's disease frequently coexist in families. Although the tendency to develop these autommune disorders is almost certainly inherited, we do not yet know how the malady is inherited.

    What frequently confuses the average clinician is that patients often experience other autoimmune endocrinopathies simultaneously. Addison's disease (adrenal insufficiency), type 1 diabetes (insulin dependent), autoimmune gonadal failure, hypoparathyroidism and pituitary failure are not rare partners. Several years ago, Phyllis Saifer, M.D., and I coined the term APICH Syndrome, which introduced associative non-endocrine maladies with the previously outlined endocrine disorders. While clinically important, these relationships tantalized more than informed us about the basic mechanisms of autoimmunity.

    Thyroid disorders are coupled maladies: localized inflammation with generalized flu-like symptoms and resultant hormone excesses or deficiencies. It is no surprise that the patient, as well as the physician, is confused.

    Admid this confusion, treatment with thyroid hormone -- to the point of TSH suppression -- is often diagnostic as well as therapeutic. These remarks would be considered heresy by academicians. Physicians and patients should, however, remember that academicians are often passionate, idealistic, eccentric, quarrelsome and self-serving. They often do research, publish, teach, but rarely see or care for thyroid sufferers.

    Regarding actual patient care, a trial of thyroid hormone therapy was often used to good advantage in the past. Today, with sensitive laboratory studies, such as TSH assays, our presumed ability to diagnose thyroid disease has encouraged the physician to treat the laboratory data instead of the patient. Consequently, empiric treatment with thyroid hormones has fallen out of favor.

    Nevertheless, sensible, cost-effective treatments of widespread thyroid disorders remain an important concern of the physician, not least because the patient often presents with vague complaints that easily can be misdiagnosed. Patients who present with fatigue, depression and subtle cognitive defects are frequently dismissed, discouraged and mistreated. I've spent many years treating these patients with thyroxine (T-4) and more recently with concomitant triiodothyronine (T-3) with much success.
    Read more!