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Elaine Moore
- Elaine, hi! questions
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Elaine Moore
- undereye swelling---plus questions to Elaine..
The periorbital swelling is related to venous congestion which occurs in hypothyroidism. In addition, hypothyroidism can trigger or exacerbate TED because it causes an increase in thyroid antibodies. If you become hypothyroid, your gland tries to correct the problem by increasing its activity including increased thyroid antibody production.
Hope this helps, Elaine
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Elaine Moore
- Elaine, hi! questions
Many people have a history of dieting or taking diet pills before being diagnosed with GD. Studies show that strenuous exercise like any stressor can trigger GD. But the diet connection seems to be related to the hypothyroid period most everyone has for a few weeks to a few years before developing hyperthyroidism. It's more an association than a trigger.
The ATDs are anti-thyroid drugs. They help block dietary iodine and help reduce the amount of thyroid hormone you can produce. Normally, your body produces varying amounts of thryoid hormone depending on your diet, stress, other hormones, meds, temperature, thryoid antibody levels, etc. If you always produced the same amount of thryoid hormone, your ATD dose would provide you with a constant level. So a certain dose of an ATD reduces your dose the same each day, but if you're producing more hormone, your levels will be higher and if you're producing less hormone, the levels will be lower.
Periorbital edema is more likely to occur in hypothyroidism than hyperthyroidism. Hypothyroidism makes everything sluggish and makes you retain fluid. Hypothyroidism is a term for myxedema, and myxedema comes from the words for waterlogged and swollen. So yes, your eye symptoms could be from hypoT. Look at your levels.
What I'm saying with TSH is that it shouldn't be used to monitor your meds since it can be misleading....although if TSH is high the dose is usually stopped for a few days and then lowered. You want to be on just enough of an ATD dose to keep FT4 near the high end of the reference range. You wouldn't want to just stop taking meds. You would want to reduce your dose slowly. And if you're getting by on a very low dose, then you could consider using alt med alone to help move you into remission.
You want to follow a natural diet and you want to make sure you're getting adequate but not excess protein. You don't want to stress yourself out though. Best, Elaine
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Elaine Moore
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