thyroid gland disease that involves an overproduction of thyroid hormone
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I just realized I might have hypothyroidism. Looking for other experiences among men
What you describe could be various hormone problems, but hypothyroidism is obviously high on the list :)
It really sucked the energy out of me, and I was just at TSH 4.4. Just a mild case, but it was screwing up my life in so many ways. Check testosterone as well.
What you describe - with swelling - sounds like a fairly severe case. Isn't there any doctor who can see you earlier? You don't need a specialist for diagnosing and treating that, in general. Or you could just go get some private lab tests (TSH, fT4, testosterone, Cortisol) to see where you're at. Test early after waking up, no biotin-containing supplements for 72 hours prior.
More on reddit.comMy boyfriend got diagnosed with hypothyroidism and I'm feeling horrible
21 Year Old Male - Increasing symptoms over the past 2+ years?
I am not sure that you have a thyroid condition, but your symptoms are definitely consistent with one.
I (male) was hypo roughly 16-19 and had pretty similar symptoms. Growing anxiety, cold all the time, weak joints (or they felt weak, wasn't active enough to dislocate anything), sore, fatigue (sleeping 16 hours a day at the end), terrible . . . performance.
You might also be having occasional hyper-thyroid episodes too. The weight fluctuations and getting too hot suddenly sound hyper rather than hypo.
The doctor will tell you what the "ideal" TSH is. Honestly it doesn't really vary much with age, weight, or gender - if your body needs more thyroid because of one of those factors, then it will produce more TSH (generally).
You might want a full metabolic panel regardless of how the test comes back. There is definitely something wrong with you if your description is accurate. Plenty of people on the internet and this subreddit think you need to be very pushy about thyroid issues - the main problem with getting hypothyroid treatment is that many of the symptoms are also present in major depression, and doctors are reluctant to treat thyroid symptoms that may be the result of the depression. However, this probably won't be an issue for an initial diagnosis.
Most importantly though, be militant about receiving some form of treatment. You are not well, and even if it is actually entirely mental you need to get better. You will regret it for the rest of your life if you do not actively seek treatment of one form or another. I definitely regret not getting my condition dealt with sooner.
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