Why are so many women told they’re depressed or menopausal when it’s actually their thyroid?

After months of unexplained low energy and aching joints, Veronica Tamimi told her mother something that would strike fear into the heart of any parent: ‘I just don’t want to be here any more.’

Veronica, 24, from South London, was at the end of her tether. Her skin had become so dry and cracked, it would bleed, and she’d gained 3 st (19kg) in the previous two years. She also felt deeply depressed.

‘I used to be outgoing and confident, but by September last year I couldn’t look at myself in the mirror,’ says Veronica, who works as an online moderator. 

‘I didn’t want to go out or to be seen. The only reason I got out of bed was to go to work.’

Why are so many women told they’re depressed or menopausal when it’s actually their thyroid?

Veronica, 24, from South London, was at the end of her tether. Her skin had become so dry and cracked, it would bleed, and she’d gained 3 st (19kg) in the previous two years

Finally, earlier this year, Veronica confessed how low she was feeling to her mother, who urged her to see a GP. Veronica was diagnosed with depression and, keen to avoid medication, opted for talking therapy to start with — a decision that would transform her life, though not in the way she expected.

A routine blood test ordered by the mental health team revealed the true cause of her psychological and physical problems: a severely underactive thyroid, or hypothyroidism.

At least one in 20 people in the UK has a disorder of the thyroid, a butterfly-shaped gland that sits just in front of the voice box.

It produces two hormones — triiodothyronine (T3) and thyroxine (T4) — which help regulate key body functions, including heart rate, temperature and mood.

An overactive thyroid (hyperthyroidism) is when levels of these hormones are too high, causing symptoms such as palpitations, rapid weight loss, sweating and itching. But much more common is hypothyroidism, where the gland produces too few hormones, leading to weight gain, fatigue, feeling the cold, constipation and dry skin and hair.

Women are ten times more likely to be affected than men, although it’s not clear why — and the most common trigger for both thyroid problems is an auto-immune condition, where the body mistakenly attacks the thyroid tissues.

Other causes include an iodine deficiency, medications such as amiodarone for heart rhythm disorders, and — possibly — Covid-19. In May, researchers at the University of Milan reported that some people who’d had severe-to-moderate Covid showed signs of impaired thyroid function 12 months later.

Left untreated, thyroid conditions can have a devastating effect on health. New research in the journal Neurology linked having an underactive thyroid in later life with an 81 per cent increased risk of developing dementia (the reasons for this are unclear).

Women are ten times more likely to be affected than men, although it’s not clear why — and the most common trigger for both thyroid problems is an auto-immune condition, where the body mistakenly attacks the thyroid tissues

Women are ten times more likely to be affected than men, although it’s not clear why — and the most common trigger for both thyroid problems is an auto-immune condition, where the body mistakenly attacks the thyroid tissues

Yet, as Veronica’s case illustrates, the wide-ranging symptoms of a thyroid disorder can mean they are misdiagnosed — often as the menopause or mental health problems, according to charity The British Thyroid Foundation.

What’s more, the complexities of the conditions have led experts to raise concerns that, while some patients are not being diagnosed, worryingly, others are being overdiagnosed and overtreated, with potentially serious consequences.

‘Around 25 per cent of the UK population will have their thyroid tested via a simple blood test in any given year,’ says Dr Peter Taylor, a consultant endocrinologist at the University Hospital of Wales.

A test typically looks for two things in the blood: the levels of T4 and thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH). Levels of TSH rise or fall to ‘instruct’ the thyroid gland to produce more or less T4 — changes to the TSH level are often the first sign of a problem.

‘We are picking up more and more cases, but the threshold [of hormone levels] for GPs offering treatment for an underactive thyroid has fallen lower over the years,’ says Dr Taylor.

‘So one of the problems now is that we’re treating people at a very low threshold, but we don’t know exactly where that trigger point [for treatment] should be.’ In other words, some people might be receiving prescriptions for treatment they don’t need.

In the past, there have been fears that not enough people are being diagnosed, but has the pendulum swung too far the other way?

Some experts estimate that as many as 80 per cent of patients who are prescribed levothyroxine to replace low levels of T4 have ‘sub-clinical’ hypothyroidism, which means their results are borderline.

Levothyroxine is one of the most widely prescribed drugs in the UK; in 2020, 1.36 million people in England were taking it. Potential side-effects include an increased risk of osteoporosis and the heart rhythm disorder atrial fibrillation.

Dr Salman Razvi, a consultant endocrinologist and a senior clinical lecturer at Newcastle University, says the problem is partly down to the fact that the definition of ‘normal’ thyroid function is a ‘minefield’. While there is a broad ‘reference range’ for ‘normal’, it isn’t a nationally agreed standard and testing labs sometimes use slightly different ranges — meaning that, theoretically, results and diagnoses may vary depending on where you have the test.

In addition, ‘conventionally, the reference range to diagnose a thyroid disorder and potentially prescribe thyroid hormone medication has been determined by a mathematical equation — it’s not determined on clinical grounds’, says Dr Razvi.

This generally involves asking a large number of healthy people with no known thyroid problem or family history, who aren’t taking any medication, to give blood samples and then setting the limits of ‘normal’ based on where 95 per cent of their readings fall.

‘So if you had 100 people, for example, five might be classed as having an abnormal blood test — 2.5 people will be classed as having a borderline underactive thyroid and 2.5 as having a borderline overactive,’ explains Dr Razvi.

‘Whether or not they actually have an underactive or overactive thyroid is a different question.’

Another problem is that the samples used to create these reference ranges are often taken from healthy, young volunteers, whereas in real life ‘we’re treating older people and people on different medications which might affect results’, he adds.

What’s more, the complexities of the conditions have led experts to raise concerns that, while some patients are not being diagnosed, worryingly, others are being overdiagnosed and overtreated, with potentially serious consequences

What’s more, the complexities of the conditions have led experts to raise concerns that, while some patients are not being diagnosed, worryingly, others are being overdiagnosed and overtreated, with potentially serious consequences

In other words, what’s normal or abnormal for each patient might not be in line with the reference range — and based on their age or general health, some might benefit from treatment at a lower threshold, while others might not need treatment at all, says Dr Razvi.

Recent research seems to back this up. A study published in the journal Plos One earlier this year, which analysed blood samples for TSH and T4 in 100,000 people, concluded that ‘thyroid hormone levels change during a person’s lifetime and vary between sexes’.

High TSH and low T4 levels suggest an underactive thyroid — but ‘when you’re in your 80s, having a TSH level that’s slightly high doesn’t seem to be associated with any harm’, says Dr Razvi.

It’s known that having a high TSH level becomes more common as we age — but rather than being a medical problem, this slowing down of our metabolism could be a natural part of ageing and, adds Dr Razvi, ‘may in fact be beneficial as, hypothetically, it could encourage longevity’.

Patients who are older may also be more vulnerable to unintended side-effects of too much levothyroxine, such as osteoporosis and atrial fibrillation.

What’s more, a 2017 study published in the New England Journal of Medicine, involving 700 over-65s with borderline hypothyroidism, found levothyroxine treatment did not improve key symptoms such as fatigue.

‘We might need to treat younger people a bit more than we are doing — and older people a bit less,’ says Dr Taylor.

‘For younger people — in their 40s and 50s — there is evidence that treating this borderline or sub-clinical thyroid function might improve cardiovascular outcomes, for example.’ But until more large-scale trials are done, it is difficult to know where the cut-offs for treatment should be, he adds.

Complicating matters further is the fact that, although there is quite a broad range considered ‘normal’ for thyroid function across the population, ‘individuals seem to have a narrow set point for their thyroid function’, says Dr Taylor — i.e. what’s normal for them.

Theoretically, it means someone could have a change in thyroid function that causes problems but still falls within the ‘normal’ parameters on a test — so they would be told they don’t have a disorder and have to endure the symptoms regardless.

There are some situations where it’s more important to treat even the most marginal changes in thyroid function, such as during a pregnancy.

Last year, research by UK doctors, published in the Lancet, suggested that women who experience recurrent miscarriage — three or more pregnancy losses in a row — should have their thyroid function tested, even if they have no other symptoms of hypothyroidism.

‘There’s now evidence to suggest that sub-clinical hypothyroidism increases the risk of miscarriage and adverse pregnancy outcomes, such as preterm birth and pre-eclampsia as well,’ says Rima Dhillon-Smith, one of the researchers and a specialist in obstetrics and gynaecology at Birmingham Women’s and Children’s Hospital NHS Foundation Trust. Currently, thyroid testing isn’t routinely done during pregnancy.

In the future, genetic testing may be able to pinpoint an individual’s ‘normal’ thyroid range. However, there is a booming market in DIY thyroid function tests — with High Street retailers including Holland & Barrett and Boots now selling them.

Typically, these tests involve taking a finger-prick blood test and posting the sample to a lab to be analysed for TSH and T4 levels (the test offered by the NHS). A report, sometimes written by a doctor, is then sent to you. But Dr Razvi and Dr Taylor have doubts about how helpful these DIY tests are.

‘It’s an expensive way of having your thyroid checked,’ says Dr Taylor, given how commonly it is done on the NHS anyway.

Although Good Health found some DIY tests cost as little as £7, other companies charge as much as £89 for a single analysis (and recommend you perform the blood test more than once).

And there are other factors worth bearing in mind.

Unwanted weight gain is a common trigger for suspecting an underactive thyroid. But while hypothyroidism can cause the pounds to pile on, there is some suggestion that the relationship goes both ways; that in some cases, it’s weight gain that disrupts thyroid function.

Test results can also be affected by a recent viral infection, which DIY testers may not be aware of.

When your thyroid pills don’t work

Symptoms of an underactive thyroid, such as weight gain and fatigue, don’t always improve on levothyroxine — a synthetic version of the natural thyroxine hormone, T4 — even when blood tests suggest hormone levels have returned to normal.

For some, this may be because their condition is borderline and perhaps they don’t need to be on levothyroxine in the first place, says consultant endocrinologist Dr Salman Razvi.

However, another explanation is that they may also need supplementary T3 — the other hormone produced by the thyroid. Normally, T4 accounts for 75 per cent of the hormones produced by the thyroid gland, T3 the other 25 per cent. The body then converts T4 into the more active T3 as required.

‘We think some people might not be able to convert T4 into T3 as well,’ says consultant endocrinologist Dr Peter Taylor.

‘In clinic we find that a third of people don’t notice any difference on T3 as well as T4, a third feel a bit better and a third feel much better,’ adds Dr Taylor, who believes it’s worth considering T3 treatment if someone doesn’t see improvement on T4 alone. But research on T3’s long-term safety combined with T4 is still in its early stages.

And, as Dr Taylor acknowledges, ‘if you’re not feeling right on T4, it may have another cause aside from the thyroid — and it can be quite hard to find a doctor who will keep an eye on your T3 on the NHS’.

There have also been supply issues for T3, with many NHS commissioning bodies restricting its use after manufacturers hiked up the price by 4,600 per cent, as previously reported by Good Health.

‘When we’re unwell, the body goes into a little bit of a shutdown because it wants to conserve energy, so TSH levels and T3 tend to be low,’ says Dr Razvi. ‘During recovery, the body goes into a transient overdrive, and you could have a period when the TSH is higher. Then, in a few months’ time, it would go back down to normal.’

TSH levels can even vary throughout the day — or change with the seasons, he adds. ‘They tend to be higher in winter and lower in summer. People might think: “If my TSH is high, then I must have an underactive thyroid and therefore I need thyroxine” — but it’s not as easy or straightforward as that.

‘That’s why clinicians wouldn’t normally diagnose a thyroid issue from just one blood test. You’d want to repeat it in at least six weeks, but ideally in three months’ time,’ he says.

Veronica’s TSH and T4 results, however, were so clear cut, doctors immediately diagnosed a severely underactive thyroid and she was put on medication.

‘The GP said I needed to start taking levothyroxine immediately — and that I would probably need to be on it for the rest of my life,’ she says. ‘It was a huge relief. I’ve never been so excited to take medication in my life.’

Within three weeks, Veronica had lost close to 9 lb (4kg) — now, three months on, it’s 1 st 12 lb (12kg) in total.

‘Before I was diagnosed I was eating 1,200 calories a day [it should be 2,000 a day for a woman] and still the weight was going on,’ she says. ‘I couldn’t understand it. Now I know it’s because my metabolism was basically non-existent.

‘It’s changed my life. My body doesn’t ache any more. My mood is better. I’m still a bit self-conscious, but I’m more confident than I was and my skin is better, too.

‘For the first time in a long time, I’m looking forward to the future.’

For more information, visit: btf-thyroid.org

Gum disease? Don’t splash out on costly implants

Growing numbers of people opting to replace loose or decaying teeth with implants should consult an independent periodontist first, warn experts.

That’s because while dental implants should last decades, if you have gum disease it can affect the effectiveness of the implant.

Peter Galgut, a recently retired periodontist, says he has treated many patients with ‘failing’ implants, with some becoming loose within one to two years — and sometimes within months — of being inserted.

And implants aren’t cheap. They can cost from £2,000 to £5,000 for a single tooth or £16,000 for a full set of upper or lower teeth.

Gum disease erodes the supporting tissues of the teeth, causing damage to the jawbone that supports the tooth’s roots.

When that happens, the original tooth becomes loose and eventually falls out — the same happens with dental implants, explains Peter Galgut, a former director of University College Hospital’s School of Dental Hygiene and a senior research fellow at Eastman Dental Institute.

‘Severe gum disease and bone erosion can continue even after an implant has been inserted. It can become loose and may have to be replaced.’

Another problem is that untreated gum disease can lead to infection, which also loosens the implant.

Half the population is thought to have gum disease or periodontitis, according to the British Society of Periodontology and Implant Dentistry. Signs include bleeding or receding gums, bad breath, plaque underneath gums and the formation of periodontal pockets, spaces around the teeth under the gumline.

Before having an implant, patients should insist on having a full periodontal examination at each dental check-up, says Peter Galgut — and a dentist or hygienist should carry out intensive ‘scaling’ to get rid of any plaque to eliminate the risk of infection.

‘Gums must be in pristine health before agreeing to dental implants,’ he says. ‘If not, periodontal disease will begin to infect the gums surrounding the implant, causing it to eventually loosen.

‘If patients are uncertain whether to have implants, they should tell the dentist they require a second opinion, preferably a referral to an independent periodontist.’

Luigi Nibali, a professor of periodontology at King’s College London, says periodontitis is treatable — the bone around teeth can be preserved, thus keeping teeth long-term and avoiding implants (it’s also possible to re-grow gum and bone around teeth).

‘After all, what can be better than your own teeth?’ he adds.

Neil Behrmann

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