The Clinical Picture of Hypothyroidism
Correct diagnosis is the key to practicing good medicine.
That sounds obvious, but in my experience, many of us do not make truly correct
diagnoses. Why else would we have such high numbers of ill people in our country
despite the huge amount of money we spend on "health care"?
Regardless of what specific problems my patients present, my goal is to
facilitate a shift in the direction of autonomous homeostasis, and that almost
bulletproof state of health we experienced in our youth. My own personal health
experience, my work with pro-caliber athletes and with my patients has taught me
that our health is intimately linked with our hormone levels. When hormonal
levels are optimal, DNA is optimally transcribed, and autonomous homeostasis is
better maintained and regained. Hormone levels start to decline around age
26–27, and susceptibility to illness starts to increase.
Health maintenance is like playing tennis. The point of
strength for every tennis player is the center of the court. Every time s/he
makes a return, s/he will try to get back to that point of strength. Each time
s/he fails to get back to the center s/he loses a point (illness). If s/he fails
enough times s/he loses (death). One's health depends on the ability to get back
to the homeostatic center even when life fires a 110 mph shot on one's backhand
side!
Diagnosing and treating hormonal imbalances is essential
to good medical practice. You cannot have optimal muscle growth and repair
without testosterone. You cannot facilitate growth and repair of brain neurons
without estrogen. Without adequate cortisol, the immune system falters. The
point is that returning your patients (or yourself) to optimal health depends on
diagnosing and treating hormone imbalances.
Unfortunately, most of us depend almost exclusively on
blood tests to detect hormone imbalances. Yet, deficiencies don't show up in
blood work until the patient is clinically in dire straights.
Nowhere is this need for accurate diagnosis more critical
than with hypothyroidism. Because thyroid hormone plays a central role in energy
metabolism and immune competence, and it synergizes with all other hormones, it
is probably the most important hormone for maintaining homeostasis. You won't
make it back to the center of the physiologic court with low thyroid levels.
Regrettably, there are no lab tests that reliably diagnose
hypothyroidism. Most physicians do their patients more harm than good by even
ordering thyroid tests. It's the odd physician that will treat a patient with
normal lab values, even if the clinical picture screams "Hypothyroid!" Who wants
to be labeled odd, right? Yet our patients continue to suffer.
If you understand the basics of thyroid physiology, you
will understand the imperative to address hypothyroidism, and you'll be better
able to recognize it from what patients show and tell you.
Thyroid hormone underwrites transcription and assembly of
glycoaminoglycans. These "water magnets" are building blocks for collagen.
Without intracellular glycoaminoglycans, cells can't retain water. Clinically,
this manifests as dry, wrinkled skin, lusterless hair, brittle nails and the
painful joints of osteoarthritis. Inability to hold water inside cells also
results in fluid leakage into extracellular space. This presents as a rounded
face, sub-orbital edema, leg edema, and a swollen/scalloped tongue.
Thyroid hormone assists insulin in moving glucose from the
blood into cells. When thyroid levels are low, more insulin is needed to
maintain normal glucose. More insulin means more fat cell hyperplasia, which
shows up as increased fat deposition, especially around hips, thighs and abdomen
(truncal obesity), all of which point to suboptimal thyroid levels.
Thyroid hormone is responsible for the strength of cardiac
contractions, which, in turn, determines how much blood makes it down to the
extremities. Low contractility manifests as a palpably reduced temperature in
the feet and hands. The concomitant low oxygen state in the toes facilitates
fungal overgrowth in nails and between toes.
The conversion of beta carotene into vitamin A is
dependent on thyroid hormone. In a low thyroid state, conversion stagnates and
beta carotene builds up, causing a yellow tint in palmar and plantar surfaces.
The lack of immune-boosting vitamin A may lead to chronic respiratory, nasal,
pharyngeal and ear infections.
Myxedema, the turgid accumulation of glycoaminoglycans,
fat and extracellular water in the legs and arms, is pathognomonic of thyroid
disease. This sign is
only
The accompanying pictures are worth the proverbial
thousand words. Learn to recognize them as reflecting hypothyroidism. You will
see them in most patients because most chronically ill people have some level of
thyroid compromise. The take-home lesson is to rely most heavily on what the
patient and your head-to-toe physical exam tell you.
The book,
Type 2 Hypothyroidism,
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A. Extensive fungal infection of the
finger and toenails (onychomycosis) is often associated with
hypothyroidism, a consequence of compromised cardiac contractility,
leading to decreased blood flow to the extremities. The resulting
low-oxygen state at the tips of the fingers and toes promotes fungal
overgrowth. |
Roby Mitchell, MD, aka Dr. Fitt,
is a family physician currently practicing orthomolecular and nutritional
medicine with Jonathan Wright, MD, at the Tahoma Clinic, Renton, WA. He is a
graduate of Texas Tech University School of Medicine, as well as the US Marine
Corps Officer Candidate School.
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