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Re: Curious About the Sun

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Janet----You may also have one of the autoimmune diseases such as SLE, which has sunlight sensitivity as a symptom.

Hugs,

Feisty

Webb Osterlohgroup co-owner http://groups.yahoo.com/group/The_Thyroid_Support_Group/ATP Board Member,Thyroid Patient Advocatehttp://feistytx.tripod.com/

Curious About the Sun

Hey All! Appreciate all the info and direction from all of you!I'm curious about something and maybe someone has felt the same thing or knows something about it. I seem to get worse as the summer goes on and August has been especially bad for me overall for the last 3 or so years. Does exposure to sunlight do something to the thyroid hormones (deplete or lower their blood levels or availability)? I know I'm experiencing heat intolerance so I'm not out in it very much and therefore, don't feel it's the heat. But I'm also very sensitive to sunlight. Does anyone know anything about this? THANKS! Janet

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Seems like this is the first I've heard this come up---very interesting. I

know that antidepressants can cause extreme sensitivity to sunlight because

it's in the literature we're given with it. Especially the TCAs. The

SSRIs, frankly, I'm just not sure about. I also know that thyroid sufferers

just seem to get more sensitive to many different things, when it comes to

our skin. Don't know if that has to do with immune factors in the blood

that have become more reactive or what. I would definitely be interested in

someone else's opinion or knowledge on this one!

Curious About the Sun

> Hey All! Appreciate all the info and direction from all of you!

>

> I'm curious about something and maybe someone has felt the same thing or

knows

> something about it. I seem to get worse as the summer goes on and August

has

> been especially bad for me overall for the last 3 or so years. Does

exposure to

> sunlight do something to the thyroid hormones (deplete or lower their

blood levels or

> availability)? I know I'm experiencing heat intolerance so I'm not out in

it very much

> and therefore, don't feel it's the heat. But I'm also very sensitive to

sunlight. Does

> anyone know anything about this? THANKS! Janet

>

>

>

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,

I've wondered about the sensitivities as well.

I don't have actual knowledge of the facts..just experience. I'm

sensitive to loud sounds, bright light, ambient temperature type heat

(yet I can still seem to burn a finger and start to blister before I pull

away, never used to be that way) Yet with cold.. I can run out barefoot

in the snow and grab my dad's morning paper and not feel the cold on my

feet. Yet I can step on a rubber band on carpet and it 'hurts'

I have noticed something rather odd the last couple of weeks. I have

tinnitus (I believe thyroid related and not damage) and almost always

have white noise around me to mask it, most often a fan. On those days

when the weather has been really hot and we've had the central AC on I've

not bothered bringing my fan into the office (I work from home). The

computers on and the AC compressor right outside tends to mask pretty

well. Any way, with the fan not blowing on my skin during the day I tend

to be a lot more aware of 'stuff'. Itches, and tickles and such on my

skin.. yet with air blowing... I don't have all these little things going

on.

I'm wondering if the fan blowing across the skin acts like a 'white

noise' allowing me not to feel these phantom things.. just like the

whistling in the ear doesn't truly exist.. it's just an altered tension

in the surface of the ear drum that makes us 'hear' a whistle. White

noise causes a mild vibration which alters the tension enough to make the

whistle not be heard.

On Sat, 23 Aug 2003 22:43:59 -0500 " " writes:

> Seems like this is the first I've heard this come up---very

> interesting. I

> know that antidepressants can cause extreme sensitivity to sunlight

> because

> it's in the literature we're given with it. Especially the TCAs.

> The

> SSRIs, frankly, I'm just not sure about. I also know that thyroid

> sufferers

> just seem to get more sensitive to many different things, when it

> comes to

> our skin. Don't know if that has to do with immune factors in the

> blood

> that have become more reactive or what. I would definitely be

> interested in

> someone else's opinion or knowledge on this one!

>

>

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Share on other sites

,

I've wondered about the sensitivities as well.

I don't have actual knowledge of the facts..just experience. I'm

sensitive to loud sounds, bright light, ambient temperature type heat

(yet I can still seem to burn a finger and start to blister before I pull

away, never used to be that way) Yet with cold.. I can run out barefoot

in the snow and grab my dad's morning paper and not feel the cold on my

feet. Yet I can step on a rubber band on carpet and it 'hurts'

I have noticed something rather odd the last couple of weeks. I have

tinnitus (I believe thyroid related and not damage) and almost always

have white noise around me to mask it, most often a fan. On those days

when the weather has been really hot and we've had the central AC on I've

not bothered bringing my fan into the office (I work from home). The

computers on and the AC compressor right outside tends to mask pretty

well. Any way, with the fan not blowing on my skin during the day I tend

to be a lot more aware of 'stuff'. Itches, and tickles and such on my

skin.. yet with air blowing... I don't have all these little things going

on.

I'm wondering if the fan blowing across the skin acts like a 'white

noise' allowing me not to feel these phantom things.. just like the

whistling in the ear doesn't truly exist.. it's just an altered tension

in the surface of the ear drum that makes us 'hear' a whistle. White

noise causes a mild vibration which alters the tension enough to make the

whistle not be heard.

On Sat, 23 Aug 2003 22:43:59 -0500 " " writes:

> Seems like this is the first I've heard this come up---very

> interesting. I

> know that antidepressants can cause extreme sensitivity to sunlight

> because

> it's in the literature we're given with it. Especially the TCAs.

> The

> SSRIs, frankly, I'm just not sure about. I also know that thyroid

> sufferers

> just seem to get more sensitive to many different things, when it

> comes to

> our skin. Don't know if that has to do with immune factors in the

> blood

> that have become more reactive or what. I would definitely be

> interested in

> someone else's opinion or knowledge on this one!

>

>

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Share on other sites

,

I've wondered about the sensitivities as well.

I don't have actual knowledge of the facts..just experience. I'm

sensitive to loud sounds, bright light, ambient temperature type heat

(yet I can still seem to burn a finger and start to blister before I pull

away, never used to be that way) Yet with cold.. I can run out barefoot

in the snow and grab my dad's morning paper and not feel the cold on my

feet. Yet I can step on a rubber band on carpet and it 'hurts'

I have noticed something rather odd the last couple of weeks. I have

tinnitus (I believe thyroid related and not damage) and almost always

have white noise around me to mask it, most often a fan. On those days

when the weather has been really hot and we've had the central AC on I've

not bothered bringing my fan into the office (I work from home). The

computers on and the AC compressor right outside tends to mask pretty

well. Any way, with the fan not blowing on my skin during the day I tend

to be a lot more aware of 'stuff'. Itches, and tickles and such on my

skin.. yet with air blowing... I don't have all these little things going

on.

I'm wondering if the fan blowing across the skin acts like a 'white

noise' allowing me not to feel these phantom things.. just like the

whistling in the ear doesn't truly exist.. it's just an altered tension

in the surface of the ear drum that makes us 'hear' a whistle. White

noise causes a mild vibration which alters the tension enough to make the

whistle not be heard.

On Sat, 23 Aug 2003 22:43:59 -0500 " " writes:

> Seems like this is the first I've heard this come up---very

> interesting. I

> know that antidepressants can cause extreme sensitivity to sunlight

> because

> it's in the literature we're given with it. Especially the TCAs.

> The

> SSRIs, frankly, I'm just not sure about. I also know that thyroid

> sufferers

> just seem to get more sensitive to many different things, when it

> comes to

> our skin. Don't know if that has to do with immune factors in the

> blood

> that have become more reactive or what. I would definitely be

> interested in

> someone else's opinion or knowledge on this one!

>

>

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