Dangers of high tsh levels

  1. Thyroid disease: How does it affect your mood?
  2. High TSH Symptoms, Causes & What it Means
  3. Thyroid hormone: How it affects your heart


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Thyroid disease: How does it affect your mood?

• Anxiety. • Nervousness. • Irritability. With underactive thyroid, a condition called hypothyroidism, mood symptoms may include: • Depression. • Unusual tiredness. Although thyroid disease can affect mood, it's unusual for those symptoms be the only evidence of thyroid disease. Thyroid disease is associated with many other symptoms such as: • Weight gain or loss. • More sensitivity to hot or cold temperatures. • Bowel movement changes. • Changes in menstrual cycles. Treatment for thyroid disease often includes either medicine that lowers the amount of thyroid hormone that the body makes or medicine that replaces missing thyroid hormone. Treatment often improves symptoms caused by thyroid disease, including those that affect mood. • Hypothyroidism (underactive). American Thyroid Association. http://www.thyroid.org/hypothyroidism/. Accessed Nov. 15, 2022. • Hyperthyroidism (overactive). American Thyroid Association. http://www.thyroid.org/hyperthyroidism/. Accessed Nov. 15, 2022. • Surks MI. Clinical manifestations of hypothyroidism. https://www.uptodate.com/contents/search. Accessed Nov. 15, 2022. • Bode H, et al. Association of hypothyroidism and clinical depression: A systematic review and meta-analysis. JAMA Psychiatry. 2021; doi:10.1001/jamapsychiatry.2021.2506. • Ross DS. Overview of the clinical manifestations of hyperthyroidism in adults. https://www.uptodate.com/contents/search. Accessed Nov. 15, 2022. • Ross DS. Treatment of primary hypothyroidism in adults. https...

High TSH Symptoms, Causes & What it Means

Have you been told, or are you suspicious, that you have a high TSH? If so there are many things you want to consider before pursuing treatment. While your TSH is important for assessing thyroid function it’s certainly not the only test, or the best way, to identify thyroid disease. We are going to take an updated, scientific dive into TSH including what a high TSH means, what kind of symptoms are associated with this condition, and the top 5 causes… What does your TSH Really Mean? Many physicians consider TSH to be the most accurate marker of thyroid status in your body. With that in mind, it makes sense to talk about what it actually does in your body. TSH stands for thyroid-stimulating hormone and it is a hormone secreted by your pituitary gland. Your hypothalamus (part of your brain) TRH then acts on your pituitary gland (another portion of your brain) to stimulate the release of TSH (thyroid-stimulating hormone). TSH then enters your bloodstream and lands on receptors directly on your thyroid gland which then causes the release of thyroid hormones – T3 and T4 then enter the bloodstream and target specific cells in the body (almost every cell has a thyroid receptor) to alter genetic transcription, increase energy production, and so forth. This complex system is regulated at several steps and one step that we use to assess the stability of this entire system is the serum concentration of TSH. This So what does a high TSH actually mean? An elevation in TSH is an indicato...

Thyroid hormone: How it affects your heart

Image: Sciero/Getty Images The thyroid gland, which wrapsaround the windpipe, releaseshormones that havewide-rangingeffects on thebody. Too little or too much of this crucial hormone can contribute to heart problems. Located at the base your throat, the butterfly-shaped thyroid gland releases hormones that affect every organ in your body—especially your heart. Thyroid hormone influences the force and speed of your heartbeat, your blood pressure, and your cholesterol level. As a result, a malfunctioning thyroid gland can cause problems that masquerade as An estimated 6% of people in the United States have thyroid disease. Most of them—about 80%— have an underactive thyroid, or hypothyroidism. When thyroid levels drop, all the systems in the body slow down, triggering a range of symptoms that include fatigue, weight gain, cold intolerance, constipation, and "More than half of people with normal thyroid function have symptoms of hypothyroidism," says Dr. Jeffrey Garber, an endocrinologist at Harvard-affiliated Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center and medical editor of the Hypothyroidism: The cardiac connection Another noncardiac symptom—muscle aches—may also be relevant. Muscle aches can be a symptom of hypothyroidism as well as a side effect of cholesterol-lowering statin medications, a condition known as statin-related myalgia. In fact, research suggests that hypothyroidism is more common in people who can't tolerate statins. "Some experts believe that treating hypothyroidi...