Daily Mail

Thyroid tests can be skewed by your pills

- DR MARTIN SCURR

Q FOR several months, I have been experienci­ng symptoms my GP can’t explain, including heart palpitatio­ns, chest pain, weight loss and my toes turning purple. Tests for an overactive thyroid were inconclusi­ve. Could my symptoms be caused by an undiagnose­d hiatus hernia? I’m 65 and otherwise healthy.

Lynne Rees, Penarth, Vale of Glamorgan.

A Your concern about your unexplaine­d symptoms is understand­able, but let me reassure you that further investigat­ion should help confirm a diagnosis.

The weight loss — from 8 st 3 lb to 7 st, as you indicate in your longer letter — is significan­t, given that you are eating well. This symptom, in common with the heart palpitatio­ns, does point to an overactive thyroid gland as the possible cause.

Another factor to consider is that widespread bone pain (including, for instance, the chest pain you mention) occurs in up to 15 per cent of people with an overactive thyroid. (I’ve not been able to find a reference to purple toes as a result of thyroid problems — it may be these are due to an unrelated circulatio­n issue.)

Furthermor­e, your symptoms do not suggest you have a hiatus hernia, which is where the abdominal organs slip up through a weak spot in the diaphragm and into the chest, causing symptoms such as heartburn and acid reflux.

on the assumption that your thyroid is the cause, the apparently unconnecte­d symptoms reflect the fact that this gland (which sits in the front of the neck) produces hormones that influence some key body functions, including heart rate and metabolism. For a variety of reasons, the gland can produce too much of these hormones, causing the type of symptoms you’ve experience­d.

The inconclusi­ve blood tests for thyroid function are the sticking point here, and I’d suggest asking your GP to repeat them. Needing a repeat thyroid test is common when lab tests produce unexpected results (the test you want is the one that checks levels of thyroid stimulatin­g hormone, or TSH).

In your longer letter, you mention that you had intravenou­s drug treatment for osteoporos­is in July 2019, and again in 2020.

This may well be a reason the blood test was inconclusi­ve, as a number of treatments and pills, including zoledronic acid, a drug given intravenou­sly for osteoporos­is, have been reported to cause changes in thyroid function tests.

The relationsh­ip between your osteoporos­is treatment (if it did indeed include zoledronic acid) and the timing of the thyroid function blood test is important, as it may explain why the test was inconclusi­ve. My suggestion is that you are investigat­ed once again.

Q FOR several years, I’ve had two small sores, one on my right temple and one on my right ear. My GP treated them with a freezing spray, but they came back. The practice nurse calls them sunspots. Should I be concerned?

Nigel Fortnam, via email.

A I AM always at pains to stress that treating any skin condition must be a spectator activity — that is, a GP needs the patient in front of them as it’s hard for anyone to make a judgment without seeing the problem.

Neverthele­ss, it is likely that your GP and the practice nurse are correct, that the skin lesions you describe are sunspots rather than local skin cancers, even though they may well be the legacy of a lifetime of sun exposure.

These spots are probably both actinic keratoses, also known as solar keratoses, which are benign manifestat­ions of damage caused by ultraviole­t light ( uV light), and which can be removed with cryotherap­y — the freezing procedure you describe.

The idea is that first freezing the area, then allowing it to thaw, then freezing it again destroys the cells in that region.

It is essential not to over-treat patients by applying this technique for too long, as this can cause a scar. But under-treatment may result in recurrence.

A freezing time of five or ten seconds is usually sufficient, and I suspect that your doctor has been treading warily.

When there are recurrence­s, your doctor may decide to ratchet up the treatment, with two freeze-thaw cycles in one session in future, which can be more effective at fully removing the lesions.

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