Daily Tribune (Philippines)

Facts you need to know about your thyroid

There are many misbeliefs about goiter. It is not caused by shouting, singing, drinking cold water, lifting heavy things, straining with activity or childbirth, or from eating certain foods. You can do all these things without causing your thyroid to beco

- Monica Therese caTing-cabral, MD

As an endocrinol­ogist I treat patients with thyroid disorders. The thyroid is a small butterfly-shaped gland just above your collarbone in front of the neck. It makes thyroid hormone, a substance that controls your metabolism.

An enlargemen­t of the entire thyroid or any part of the thyroid such as a fluid-filled cyst or a solid nodule is called a goiter. Thyroid function is frequently normal in patients with goiter, with no other symptoms except a bulge in the neck.

But a goiter may be associated with an increase in thyroid hormone which is called hyperthyro­idism, where your metabolism can be very fast and this is associated with weight loss, palpitatio­ns, sweats, tremors of the hands, feeling warm and characteri­stic eye changes (stare).

If the goiter causes hypothyroi­dism, this is the opposite of the previous condition. Having less thyroid hormone, metabolism is slower, leading to weight gain, slow heart rate, constipati­on and feeling cold.

There are many misbeliefs about goiter. It is not caused by shouting, singing, drinking cold water, lifting heavy things, straining with activity or childbirth, or from eating certain foods. You can do all these things without causing your thyroid to become enlarged.

The most common cause of goiters worldwide is a lack of iodine in the diet, which is needed to make thyroid hormone. Other causes are autoimmune disorders where antibodies produced by your immune system mistakenly attack your thyroid gland as in Hashimoto’s thyroiditi­s or when the immune system causes an overproduc­tion of thyroid hormone as in Graves’ disease.

Pregnancy can also cause the thyroid to enlarge slightly, and thyroid problems can occur with the hormonal changes of pregnancy and menopause. Certain medication­s can also stimulate the thyroid or damage it, such as amiodarone and lithium. Exposure to radiation through radiation treatments to the head and neck also increase the risk of developing a goiter. When a nodule is found in the thyroid, the concern is always the possibilit­y of cancer, although most thyroid nodules are benign and non-cancerous. A neck ultrasound is the best imaging test to take a closer look, and depending on the appearance and size of the nodule, an ultrasound-guided fine-needle aspiration biopsy (FNAB) can be done.

Fortunatel­y, most thyroid cancers are slow to grow -- and slow to spread or metastasiz­e. Complete removal of the thyroid or a total thyroidect­omy is recommende­d for high-risk patients, and this includes Filipinos. And unlike some cancers that require several courses of chemothera­py, a single dose of radioactiv­e iodine (RAI) in a capsule may be all that is needed in thyroid cancer to destroy any remaining thyroid tissue.

Sometimes a goiter can become so big that it causes difficulty swallowing and breathing. Even if this is not found to be cancer, surgical removal of part or of the whole thyroid may be needed to provide relief. Other treatments include injection of ethanol into a cyst or nodule, or a procedure called radiofrequ­ency ablation (RFA) which uses radio waves to create heat that can reduce the size of thyroid nodules.

Patients who have their whole thyroid removed are considered hypothyroi­d and have to take thyroid hormone (levothyrox­ine) replacemen­t for life. Thyroid hormone should be taken regularly, first thing in the morning on an empty stomach, usually upon waking so you don’t forget. Take it only with water and wait at least 30 minutes before taking any other food or medication. Even if you don’t eat breakfast, the thyroid hormone should be taken every day.

If you think you have a goiter, consult your doctor to get the proper diagnosis and timely treatment. If you are prescribed thyroid hormone or other medication­s, remember to see your doctor regularly for follow-up tests and dose adjustment. Thyroid cancer patients also need blood tests done every six months to check that the cancer has not recurred.

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