Joined: 03 Jul 2003 Posts: 79 Location: South East, Macedonia
Thyroid Disorders and Radioactive Iodine Treatment Posted: 07-17-03 17:53pm
Found some usefull info:
How is
Hypothyroidism Diagnosed and
Treated?
Hypothyroidism is easy to diagnose,
primarily by a blood test which may show
its presence even before its symptoms
appear. As soon as thyroid hormone levels
drop below the normal range, your
pituitary gland begins to increase
production of TSH. This, and increased
level of TSH in the blood is the way your
doctor will tell when your thyroid
function drops below normal.
It is simple to treat hypothyroidism. A
small and inexpensive thyroid pill taken
once a day should bring thyroid hormone
levels to normal and eliminate symptoms of
hypothyroidism. It is likely that if you
do develop hypothyroidism, it will be
necessary for you to take such a thyroid
hormone tablet for the rest of your life.
An annual checkup will be necessary to
make sure that your dose of thyroid
hormone is correct, but such checkups are
usually recommended for all hyperthyroid
patients, no matter how they are treated.
Will I Gain Weight?
Radioiodine treatments cure
hyperthyroidism, lower thyroid hormone
levels, and thus cause symptoms to
disappear. Weight gain is not an
inevitable consequence of treatment.
All hyperthyroid patients have an increase
rate of metabolism which causes their
bodies to burn up food more rapidly than
normal. In many, appetite and food
consumption are also increased. Because of
individual differences in metabolism and
appetite, some hyperthyroid patients lose
weight, some maintain their weight, and
some actually gain weight. When they are
cured by any method of treatment, body
metabolism decreases and food is burned
more slowly. Appetite usually decreases as
well, and most patients return to their
prehyperthyroid weight. However, the
increased appetite may persist longer than
the increased metabolism. If this happens
to you, there may be a tendency for you to
gain weight unless you voluntarily
decrease your food intake. However, this
can be readily controlled by decreasing
food intake.
What if I am Pregnant?
Pregnancy is one important situation in
which radioiodine must not be used. The
reason is that after the third month of
pregnancy the thyroid gland of the
developing fetus begins to make thyroid
hormone and will collect radioiodine.
Iodine readily crosses the placenta from
the mother to the baby, and radioiodine in
this situation might act to decrease the
function of the thyroid of the unborn
child. Methods of treatment other than
radioiodine should be used in hyperthyroid
pregnant women. As a precaution,
hyperthyroid women of childbearing age who
are to receive radioiodine should be asked
about the possibility of their being
pregnant and the time of their last
menstrual period. Some doctors may ask
such women to have a routine pregnancy
test before radioactive iodine testing and
treatment is done.
Avoid Radioiodine if Breast-feeding
If you are breast-feeding a baby,
radioiodine which you take in a thyroid
treatment could go from your body to the
baby through the your breast milk. The
result would be that your baby would
concentrate that radioactivity in its
thyroid gland and might experience a
change in thyroid function or even develop
thyroid nodules or other tumors in later
years. As a result, if it is important
that you receive radioactive iodine
treatment while you are breast-feeding,
your doctor will require that you stop
breast-feeding until tests show that there
is no longer any radioiodine in your
milk.
Radioiodine Side Effects
There are no immediate side effects from
radioiodine treatment. Do not expect
nausea, vomiting, hair loss, and allergic
reactions to iodine; they do not occur.
Rarely, the thyroid gland may develop a
slight tenderness which may last for a day
or two.
Are There Alternative Treatments?
There are two alternative treatments:
antithyroid drugs and surgery.
Antithyroid drugs act chemically on the
thyroid gland to slow the production of
thyroid hormone and thus control
hyperthyroid symptoms. Propylthiouracil
and methimazole (Tapazole) are the two
antithyroid drugs used in the United
States [and Canada]. Carbimazole, related
to Tapazole, is used in England. In almost
all patients they will be effective in
returning thyroid hormone levels (and
therefore symptoms) to normal. They
usually require four to eight weeks if the
medication is taken regularly and in the
appropriate dose.
In a small proportion of hyperthyroid
patients so treated (about 20 to 30
percent) a permanent cure occurs, although
it is not possible to predict in advance
which patients will be cured and remain
normal after medication is discontinued.
Regular doses of two to three antithyroid
tablets a day for a least six to twelve
months is usually recommended in attempts
at permanent cure.
Antithyroid drugs occasionally produce
side effects, most commonly a skin rash or
itching. These are allergic reactions and
occur in about 5 percent of patients and
disappear when the medication is
discontinued.
Occasionally, however, more serious
reactions can occur and may result in
arthritis, hepatitis, or a dangerous
decrease in the number of white blood
cells know as agranulocytosis. since white
blood cells help protect us from
infection, serious and sometimes fatal
infections may occur if agranulocytosis
develops. Fortunately, the number of white
blood cells usually returns to normal soon
after the drug is discontinued.
Surgical removal of 80 to 90 percent of
the thyroid gland is very effective in
curing hyperthyroidism and has been used
for years. Before an operation can be
performed, however, hyperthyroidism must
first be controlled with six to eight
weeks of antithyroid drugs and iodine
treatment to lower the levels of thyroid
hormones.
Postoperative hospitalization for two to
five days is usual. Surgery involves the
risks of general anesthesia as well as
possible damage to nearby neck structures
such as the nerves to the vocal cords and
the parathyroid glands that control
calcium metabolism. Although surgical
complications are uncommon when the
operation is performed by an experienced
and expert thyroid surgeon, they still
occur in 2 to 5 percent of patients. As
with radioiodine treatment, hypothyroidism
is common after surgery, usually occurring
within a few weeks of the operation. Even
patients who remain well for several
months are at risk for late hypothyroidism
and require yearly blood tests to be sure
that their thyroid levels remain normal.
Is the Treatment Safe?
This form of treatment of hyperthyroidism
by radioiodine has been used routinely for
more than 35 years on well over one
million patients in the United States
alone. Many studies of people treated and
examined at a later time show no harmful
side effects or complications to the
patients or their offspring. Radioiodine
is now recognized as the safest, least
expensive, and most convenient and
effective treatment for hyperthyroidism.
In the United States approximately 90
percent of hyperthyroid patients are
treated with radioiodine.
Radioactive Iodine Treatment of
Hyperthyroidism
The treatment is safe because radioiodine
can deliver sufficient radiation to the
thyroid gland to slow its function while
delivering only a small amount to the rest
of the body. This occurs because
radioiodine remains within the thyroid
gland for a moderate period of time, while
that not collected by the thyroid gland
leaves the body rapidly in urine. The
radiation exposure to the rest of the body
is quite small, on the order of that of
one or two routine diagnostic X-ray
procedures such as a GI series.
Is There Any Danger to My Family?
No! Since the amount of radiation you
receive from radioiodine treatment is not
dangerous, it is reasonable that no one
else in the vicinity receives a dangerous
amount of radiation.
Nevertheless, physicians make an effort to
minimize all radiation exposure to every
individual. This is especially important
for individuals likely to be more
susceptible to the potential effects of
radiation such as pregnant women and tiny
children.
Exposure to others is most likely to occur
if a patient who has received radioactive
iodine is extremely close to another
individual for a prolonged period of time.
Since radioiodine accumulates in the
thyroid, such contact would include
dancing cheek to cheek for an evening,
rocking a baby on your shoulder for a long
period of time, or possibly sleeping
together in the same bed. For this reason
most physicians suggest that patients
sleep alone for two days and avoid such
close contact. In addition, since a small
amount of radioiodine comes out into the
saliva, kissing is not recommended for two
to three days after treatment. There is no
hazard for pets.
Who Should Receive Radioiodine?
In view of its safety, convenience, low
cost, and effectiveness, most hyperthyroid
patients and their physicians in the
United States select radioiodine as the
definitive treatment of choice.
Thank you that information. Sorry to hear
you g/f has gone through that how is she
now? How did they find out about the
cancer through one of the scans?
I have been going to an endocrinologist.
I will have a consultation next week about
the radioactive iodine treatment. I hope
that works out okay. Then thing should be
uphill from there.
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danielv
Experienced User , Rather EHEALTHy
Joined: 03 Jul 2003 Posts: 79 Location: South East, Macedonia
Re: Thank you Posted: 07-18-03 11:01am
Perhaps I'll ask her to join the forum and
talk to you.
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Wildflowers
New User, Becoming EHEALTHy
Joined: 09 Sep 2003 Posts: 1
Thyroid Posted: 09-09-03 23:49pm
Have you ever been told that a sign of
hypothyroidism could be a loss of eyebrow
hair and half moons on the nails
disappearing?
I am brand new to this website and chose
your message to reply to, only instead I
am asking a question.
Can you tell me if you or anyone on this
site has heard of that?
Thanks,
paula
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evinabox
New User, Becoming EHEALTHy
Joined: 01 Oct 2003 Posts: 1 Location: Utah
New And All About Thyroid Disorders Posted: 10-01-03 23:34pm
Just a note to say "hi" and let everyone
know a little about me. I have
hashimoto's disease and I am really into
raising awareness about thyroid disorders.
I have a support group if anyone would
like to peek in and say hi and ask
questions.
Groups.Yahoo.Com/group/utah_thyroid_suppor
t/