Guest guest Posted January 10, 2003 Report Share Posted January 10, 2003 Karlene Behlen wrote: > I was diagnosed with Pap cancer and had a thyroidectomy in August > 2002 and RAI in Sept and am just now getting back " up to speed " now > that my Synthroid is regulated. I now have more energy and feel > better than I think I have in probably 10 years. My question is, Do > you think my thyroid was not functioning correctly before the thyroid > cancer was discovered? When they were trying to figure out whether > my lump was cancerous or not they ran blood tests and all my thyroid > tests came back in the normal range, but in the past 10 years or so I > have been tired and usually took a nap during the day with my > daughter just to make it thru the day. Curiously enough, when I was > pregnant with my daughter, my energy level was higher than ever. > > Anyway, I was just wondering if pre-diagnosis of thyroid cancer if it > is common for the thyroid to not be functioning properly or if it has > any other symptoms. Karlene, It's very common for our thyroids to be out of whack for some time before we're diagnosed. My endo's opinion is that by the time we're diagnosed with thyca, most of us have had it for several years. Glad to hear you're feeling better on Synthroid! I thought I was the only one here who felt better after thyca treatment than before. ellen -- mailto:ellen@... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 10, 2003 Report Share Posted January 10, 2003 Karlene Behlen wrote: > I was diagnosed with Pap cancer and had a thyroidectomy in August > 2002 and RAI in Sept and am just now getting back " up to speed " now > that my Synthroid is regulated. I now have more energy and feel > better than I think I have in probably 10 years. My question is, Do > you think my thyroid was not functioning correctly before the thyroid > cancer was discovered? When they were trying to figure out whether > my lump was cancerous or not they ran blood tests and all my thyroid > tests came back in the normal range, but in the past 10 years or so I > have been tired and usually took a nap during the day with my > daughter just to make it thru the day. Curiously enough, when I was > pregnant with my daughter, my energy level was higher than ever. > > Anyway, I was just wondering if pre-diagnosis of thyroid cancer if it > is common for the thyroid to not be functioning properly or if it has > any other symptoms. Karlene, It's very common for our thyroids to be out of whack for some time before we're diagnosed. My endo's opinion is that by the time we're diagnosed with thyca, most of us have had it for several years. Glad to hear you're feeling better on Synthroid! I thought I was the only one here who felt better after thyca treatment than before. ellen -- mailto:ellen@... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 10, 2003 Report Share Posted January 10, 2003 Karlene Behlen wrote: > I was diagnosed with Pap cancer and had a thyroidectomy in August > 2002 and RAI in Sept and am just now getting back " up to speed " now > that my Synthroid is regulated. I now have more energy and feel > better than I think I have in probably 10 years. My question is, Do > you think my thyroid was not functioning correctly before the thyroid > cancer was discovered? When they were trying to figure out whether > my lump was cancerous or not they ran blood tests and all my thyroid > tests came back in the normal range, but in the past 10 years or so I > have been tired and usually took a nap during the day with my > daughter just to make it thru the day. Curiously enough, when I was > pregnant with my daughter, my energy level was higher than ever. > > Anyway, I was just wondering if pre-diagnosis of thyroid cancer if it > is common for the thyroid to not be functioning properly or if it has > any other symptoms. Karlene, It's very common for our thyroids to be out of whack for some time before we're diagnosed. My endo's opinion is that by the time we're diagnosed with thyca, most of us have had it for several years. Glad to hear you're feeling better on Synthroid! I thought I was the only one here who felt better after thyca treatment than before. ellen -- mailto:ellen@... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 10, 2003 Report Share Posted January 10, 2003 Ellen Van Landingham wrote: > Karlene Behlen wrote: > > > ... I was just wondering if pre-diagnosis of thyroid cancer if it > > is common for the thyroid to not be functioning properly or if it has > > any other symptoms. > > Karlene, > > It's very common for our thyroids to be out of whack for some time > before we're diagnosed. My endo's opinion is that by the time we're > diagnosed with thyca, most of us have had it for several years. I think these are two separate issues. Our cancer has been growing for many years before being discovered, but our thyroid function hasn't necessarily been affected. - NYC Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 10, 2003 Report Share Posted January 10, 2003 Karlene, as one who had a bad (hypo) thyroid long before thyca, I can only say that TT was " good riddance to bad rubbish, " a real mental relief to know it was finally going to be literally trashed! I had fantasized about having the extra space for years! Scrolling back to pre-TT days....Some people are born with really abnormal non-working thyroids and these children can suffer greatly at birth and beyond if their condition is not realized. But most people do not have such serious cases and do notice until their bad thyroids become worse after puberty, and even worse yet after pregnancy, and better during pregnancy. You can have a normal thyroid test and still be with symptoms, what is classified as " subclinically " hypothyroid. You can even have a normal thyroid test one day and at ovulation have a below-normal test or low-normal test. I do not think, though, that having thyroid problems makes you at any more risk for thyca than anyone else. Lots of people get thyca who did not have thyroid problems before, so it is true that everyone should take care to have their thyroid checked by a doctor manually once a year for nodules. A good time for women is when their gyns are doing their yearly paps. In this respect, people who have already had thyroid problems are more likely to get theirs continually checked manually, to check goiter size, and thus have thyca caught early. -----Jan Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 10, 2003 Report Share Posted January 10, 2003 Sorry to post again on same topic, and remember I am not a medical person; but I forgot to say that I suspect that some people who are tired, as you mention, might actually have a pituitary problem, or a pituitary problem in combination with a thyroid problem. That these problems can be with those one or two glands themselves being faulty. Or these problems can be that the glands themselves may be fine and only acting faulty due to an incorrect feedback loop that involves an oversensitive immune system. As such the glands act faulty because they are autoimmune; think of this more simplistically as like having developed an allergy to oneself. The glands try to work but the body's feedback system turns them off. I also suspect that other glands, such as the adrenal system, push overtime to try to make up for the ones not working, adding more chaos to tiredness, such as joint pain and panic. ---Jan Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 10, 2003 Report Share Posted January 10, 2003 Sorry to post again on same topic, and remember I am not a medical person; but I forgot to say that I suspect that some people who are tired, as you mention, might actually have a pituitary problem, or a pituitary problem in combination with a thyroid problem. That these problems can be with those one or two glands themselves being faulty. Or these problems can be that the glands themselves may be fine and only acting faulty due to an incorrect feedback loop that involves an oversensitive immune system. As such the glands act faulty because they are autoimmune; think of this more simplistically as like having developed an allergy to oneself. The glands try to work but the body's feedback system turns them off. I also suspect that other glands, such as the adrenal system, push overtime to try to make up for the ones not working, adding more chaos to tiredness, such as joint pain and panic. ---Jan Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 10, 2003 Report Share Posted January 10, 2003 Sorry to post again on same topic, and remember I am not a medical person; but I forgot to say that I suspect that some people who are tired, as you mention, might actually have a pituitary problem, or a pituitary problem in combination with a thyroid problem. That these problems can be with those one or two glands themselves being faulty. Or these problems can be that the glands themselves may be fine and only acting faulty due to an incorrect feedback loop that involves an oversensitive immune system. As such the glands act faulty because they are autoimmune; think of this more simplistically as like having developed an allergy to oneself. The glands try to work but the body's feedback system turns them off. I also suspect that other glands, such as the adrenal system, push overtime to try to make up for the ones not working, adding more chaos to tiredness, such as joint pain and panic. ---Jan Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 11, 2003 Report Share Posted January 11, 2003 katiekabob wrote: > Our cancer has been growing for many years before being discovered, > but our thyroid function hasn't necessarily been affected. , True, it hasn't *necessarily* been affected, but for some of us it has. And the only way we find out, if our pre-dx tests aren't sufficiently abnormal to alarm our GP's, is to contrast how we feel after treatment with how we felt before. ellen -- mailto:ellen@... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 11, 2003 Report Share Posted January 11, 2003 katiekabob wrote: > Our cancer has been growing for many years before being discovered, > but our thyroid function hasn't necessarily been affected. , True, it hasn't *necessarily* been affected, but for some of us it has. And the only way we find out, if our pre-dx tests aren't sufficiently abnormal to alarm our GP's, is to contrast how we feel after treatment with how we felt before. ellen -- mailto:ellen@... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 11, 2003 Report Share Posted January 11, 2003 katiekabob wrote: > Our cancer has been growing for many years before being discovered, > but our thyroid function hasn't necessarily been affected. , True, it hasn't *necessarily* been affected, but for some of us it has. And the only way we find out, if our pre-dx tests aren't sufficiently abnormal to alarm our GP's, is to contrast how we feel after treatment with how we felt before. ellen -- mailto:ellen@... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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