Hyperthyroidism, according to my doctor, is caused by stress mainly. Looking back now, it makes sense that I had it when my father was battling with cancer and, subsequently, lost it.
There was a time when I stayed with my ailing father for a few days at the hospital and I came home feeling ill myself. I couldn’t get out of bed for more than a week. I had the flu (yes, for the first time in my life), had a splitting headache that didn’t leave me until the ninth day and generally felt weak all over. I was no hypochondriac. But I was convinced there was something terribly wrong with my body.
And so I was off to a neighborhood clinic to get my blood pressure checked. It was normal. Then there was this eye doctor who made me do this costly periphery test and made me wear a pair of new eyeglasses. Nothing there. Then I consulted an EENT specialist as there was a constant buzzing in my right ear. I had a hearing exam and a few more tests. Again, nothing. It was the same doctor who, upon inspecting my throat on my next visit and finding it bigger than usual, recommended that I get a test for thyroid problems. With results in hand, I went straight to an endocrinologist who finally confirmed that I was sick with hyperthyroidism.
So without having to undergo these needless tests and without unnecessarily parting with quite a hefty sum, how do you know if you’re afflicted with this particular disease?
- For me, the first indicator was weight loss which should have been a good thing except that it wasn’t since it was brought about by some form of illness.
- My hands, suddenly, had a life of their own and I couldn’t stop them from trembling. This was especially evident in my handwriting.
- I was always feeling weak and tired which was weird for a hyperactive person like me.
- I couldn’t do anything without panting like a dog in the end. Plus, I would have palpitations that would sometimes make my chest hurt a little.
- My skin was so dry “you could actually write the word dry right on your hand”. (Vaseline or Jergens?)
- My hair was falling at an unbelievable rate it made me panic. There was lots on my pillow, on the floor, in the bathroom. Everywhere.
- I had to make frequent trips to the bathroom which I guess partly accounted for the weight loss.
- My mood swings were becoming more frequent. And no symptom could be worse as far as my poor husband was concerned.
- I took an anti-thyroid agent, the dose of which was gradually decreased as I got better.
- I took steroids for about three months for my thickening throat.
- I abstained from sugar for a month so that my limbs won’t go numb. But this was more preventive than therapeutic. And this, I must say, was the hardest part.
- Not so much. But if left untreated, hyperthyroidism could lead to heart failure or, worse, thyroid storm that may cause coma or death.
- Yes. If you do not want an unsightly scar on your neck.
- Absolutely. If you have enough vanity in your make-up not to want to look like you came straight from Halloween, bone-thin with eyes that would make anyone think they were about to fall off their sockets.
2 comments:
I have the same symptoms as yours, and I have been into stressful situations but it was over a year since that(thank God, got out of that situation), is it also possible to be suffering from hyperthyrodism even it was more than a year ago? I'm just wondering, I didn't ask any doctor's opinion or made me worry too much about it, but it seems like I have it too...coz of the symptoms. what do you think?
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