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The thyroid hormone breakthrough: Overcoming sexual and hormonal problems at every age PDF

431 Pages·2006·1.519 MB·English
by  ShomonMary J
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The THYROID HORMONE Breakthrough Overcoming Sexual and Hormonal Problems at Every Age Mary J. Shomon For my husband Jon, the loving, funny, and always patient guy holding my hand and riding right alongside me on my hormonal roller coaster We are volcanoes. When we women offer our experience as our truth, as human truth, all the maps change. There are new mountains. —Ursula K. Le Guin A small group of thoughtful people can change the world. Indeed it is the only thing that ever has. —Margaret Mead CONTENTS Epigraph iii Disclaimer vi Introduction vii Part I: The Thyroid Chapter 1: About the Thyroid and Thyroid Disease 3 Chapter 2:Women’s Hormones 19 Chapter 3: Diagnosing Thyroid Conditions 39 Chapter 4: Thyroid Treatment 68 Chapter 5: Thyroid Risks and Symptoms Checklist 87 Part 2: Thyroid-Related Hormone Issues Chapter 6: Puberty, Menstrual, and Sexual Problems 115 Chapter 7: Pregnancy Challenges 156 Chapter 8: Infertility and Miscarriage 193 Chapter 9: Postpartum and Breastfeeding Challenges 227 Chapter 10: Perimenopause, Menopause, and Premature Ovarian Failure 260 Part 3: Finding Solutions Chapter 11: Creating Your Own Thyroid Hormone Breakthrough 303 v CONTENTS Appendix: Charting Your Fertility and Menstrual Reproductive Cycle 335 Resources 343 Bibliography 387 Index 395 Acknowledgments About the Author Other Books by Mary J. Shomon Credits Cover Copyright About the Publisher Disclaimer This book contains advice and information relating to health care. It is not intended to replace medical advice and should be used to supplement rather than replace regular care by your doctor. It is recommended that you seek your physician’s advice before embarking on any medical pro- gram or treatment. All efforts have been made to assure the accuracy of the information contained in this book as of the date of publication. The publisher and the author disclaim liability for any medical outcomes that may occur as a result of applying the methods suggested in this book. INTRODUCTION As women, we’ve come to expect that certain things are in- evitable. As young girls, we anticipate—but at the same time dread—the first arrival of “Aunt Flo” or “my friend.” Then, for the next 30 to 40 years, we assume that premenstrual syn- drome, erratic cycles, and unusually light or heavy menstrual periods are simply an unavoidable part of life. In the meantime, women’s magazines and television news programs deliver conflicting messages: you can get pregnant from a single sexual encounter, but infertility is on the rise. Teenage pregnancy rates are down, but if you’re a 45-year-old celebrity, it’s a breeze to give birth to twins. If you can’t get pregnant after trying for a year, your doctor says you are “ex- periencing infertility” and shuttles you off to a fertility expert for elaborate and expensive workups. After that you’re offered costly procedures and treatments—everything from hormone treatments to in vitro fertilization—to help you have a baby. When we are pregnant, we assume that morning sick- ness is to be expected—even the kind of morning sickness that goes on all day and all night throughout the pregnancy, leaving us dehydrated and debilitated. “Morning sickness is a good sign,” say the old wives’ tales, and our mothers, relatives, and friends repeat this mantra, while prescribing crackers and club soda, as if that will make it better. viii INTRODUCTION And while we all want to be like the celebrity model who still has an adorable figure with a tiny baby “bump” when she’s nine months pregnant, and who gets back into size 4 jeans a few weeks later, baby at her breast, some of us defi nitely don’t fit into that category. Instead, we walk around feeling down in the dumps, because our hair is falling out and we have no energy. And we have a horrible feeling of guilt and failure, because we’re not making enough milk to breastfeed our baby properly. We need to supplement with formula, or worse—we can’t nurse at all. Many of us just assume that we’re not going to have the sex drive that we had when we were young. After reading all those women’s magazines and watching enough Oprah and Discovery Channel health shows, who of us can’t recite the reasons for our low libido? Marriage, exhaustion, children, not enough time, stress—I could go on for pages listing all the reasons why “losing that spark” is an expected part of life for women. Let’s not forget the hormonal grand fi nale: menopause. Now that hormone replacement therapy is in the medical dog- house, women are once again saddled with weight gain, hot flashes, night sweats, fatigue, mood swings, vaginal dryness, and low sex drive. And just to add to the fun, we now have some- thing called perimenopause—the time before true menopause, when we have all those so-called menopausal symptoms, plus erratic and sometimes extremely heavy periods. It may come as a surprise to you—it sure did to me—that perimenopause can go on for as long as a decade! Have I depressed you yet? You were already depressed, you say? And sort of stressed out and anxious too? Of course, depression and anxiety are conditions that we assume are a given in today’s modern life. Antidepressants and antianxiety INTRODUCTION ix drugs like Zoloft, Prozac, Effexor, and Zyprexa are among the most prescribed medicines in the United States today. It may sound as if we women are destined to be victims of our hormones from our preteens into our golden years. But there is hope. And it comes from your thyroid—a small gland that is very powerful, but often overlooked when it comes to women’s complaints. The thyroid is a bowtie- or butterfly-shaped gland lo- cated in the neck, below and behind the Adam’s apple area. It is the master gland of energy and metabolism, and a key player in our complex endocrine system, interacting with oth- er endocrine glands such as the pancreas, adrenals, ovaries, and pituitary. The thyroid releases hormones that rise and fall in concert with other endocrine hormones, such as insulin, cortisol, estrogen, and testosterone. When the thyroid is not doing its job properly, it can throw the body’s entire hormonal and reproductive systems out of balance. An undiagnosed or improperly treated thyroid condition may actually be at the root of many symptoms and complaints that we assume are simply “hormonal.” By conservative standards, there are almost 27 million people with thyroid conditions in the United States today. An estimated half of these people are undiagnosed. And this estimate may just be the tip of the iceberg. Since 2002, experts in the endocrinology community have been calling for changes in the standards that define normal thy- roid function. Some doctors are already using new standards for diagnosis and treatment, but many practitioners have yet to adopt them. According to these new standards approxi- mately 59 million Americans are considered to have thyroid disease.

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