Thyroid Disease: The Numbers
How Common Is Thyroid Disease?
When the AACE (American Association of Clinical Endocrinologists) established new TSH Guidelines (0.3 - 3.0 vs. 0.5 - 5.0, and Labcorp and your physician still insist that a level of 4.5 is normal?)) the number of people estimated to be affected by abnormal thyroid function doubled.
According to the AACE, the number of people affected by Thyroid Disease now surpasses the number of people diagnosed with Diabetes or Heart Disease.
- 27 Million: The number of Americans estimated to suffer from Thyroid Disease. (And 75 % of those patients are being treated with the worthless therapy of only T4 or synthroid alone)
- 13 Million: The number of Americans estimated to suffer from Thyroid Disease...but remain undiagnosed.( I think that this number is much higher)
- 14 Million: Estimated number of Americans affected by Hashimoto's Thyroiditis (Autoimmune Thyroiditis / Hypothyroidism). And that means that the TSH lab test , and even all the basic thyroid lab tests are worthless. And by the way, 30% of women over the age of 50 will have these antibodies, will have classic low thyroid symptoms, and will be told their lab values are normal! The lab tests are worthless, and the ONLY way to manage Hashimoto’s Thyroiditis is by adjusting the medications to a patient’s signs and symptoms.
- 8 out of 10: Patients with Thyroid Disease are women.
- 5x - 8x: Women are 5 to 8 times more likely to suffer from Hypothyroidism than men.
- 25%: Approximate number of women that will develop permanent Hypothyroidism.
So stop suffering from low energy levels (especially in the late afternoon), weight gain( despite eating right and exercising), brain fog, muscle aches and pain, poor digestion, hair loss, dry skin and depression. Just say “no” to only being tested with TSH, and demand to get the full panel. If you are NOT getting better on replacement therapy, demand that your doctor checks your thyroid antibodies. And demand that your doctor takes care of you and NOT a worthless unreliable lab test like TSH.
I met someone last week with Hashimotos. She was having to see TWO SEPARATE DOCTORS in order to get enough thyroid medication to make a difference! Is that insane or what? they were just trying to go by her TSH levels. I just don't undrestand what is wrong with the medical community in not seeing there is a need to re-evaluate the validity of these outdated test and numbers and treat patients based on their symptoms. I guess my biggest question is what did they do before TSH tests when they just diagnosed based on symptoms??? DING DING DING, I know! they gave the patient enough thyroid until their symptoms went away.
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