Symptoms of Thyroid
December 30, 2009 by uttoransen
Filed under Disease and Conditions
Statistics show that at least 10 times a million people suffer from the known symptoms that result in thyroid problems alone. The fact that drives the knife deeper is the fact that these are not diagnosed – the reason for which is the large number of people suffering from the disease. There is no exact number of how many among these 10 million actually do suffer but a lot of people actually get into the problem at a very later part of the development of the disease. The gland is a very vital part of the body because it contains increases and decreases the body’s rate of metabolism.
The condition affects men more than women. Barely 2 percent of the men suffer from it compared to the ten times as much percentage of women. One of the many variants of the condition is called hypothyroidism. This is also called by other names such as low thyroid and under active thyroid. When the organ functions slowly, what naturally happens is that the body’s rate of metabolism also slows down to way below normal. This is what happens when one suffers from hypothyroidism. The other one is hyperthyroidism which is a thyroid which is working faster than it should.
Hyperthyroidism can directly result in really slow metabolism and results in fatigue, depression and lots of putting on of weight. There are other symptoms but these symptoms are not really related to the disease. They merely have occurred many a time with the related symptoms.
The symptoms of hypothyroidism are:
- High level of cholesterol
- Problems with the Immune system
- Temperature problems within the body – hands and feet, inability to stand out in the cold and a very low basal temperature
- Putting on of weight
- High depression
- Feeling week
- Loss of energy
- Skin that becomes rough and dry
- An increase of menstrual periods (in the case of women)
- Loss of sleep (insomnia)
- Inconsistent bowel activity and also constipation
- Hair starts falling off
- Slow memory and lots of dementia
- Nervousness and shaky hands
The main direct links with symptoms of a thyroid problem are the levels of hormones and their imbalance. There are basically three hormones involves with the thyroid. They are thyroid hormones, progesterone and estrogen.
Having thyroid symptoms is related to hormone levels and hormone imbalance. Three related hormones for a woman are estrogen, thyroid hormone and progesterone. Understanding the interplay between these three hormones helps one better understand how to approach treating thyroid symptoms. Estrogen serves the function of turning calories that come from food into fat and the thyroid hormone turns these calories into energy. Progesterone balances these two and sees to it that estrogen does not have too much of an effect. It converts the fat to energy. The more the progesterone level, the more the thyroid hormone functions right. This was proved in an experiment. So this seems to be the best solution for the thyroid problem – increase the level of the natural progesterone in the body.






