KatieT
9 years agoMember
Chemotherapy and Hashimoto's Disease - Autoimmune Thyroiditis
When I started chemo my weight was stable and I felt good. Three months in my weight was still stable, then on the fifth round of chemo my weight started rising by a kg a month and never stopped. It's now 18 months since I finished chemotherapy. The rate of gain has been consistently 1kg per month. I've been on a calorie controlled restricted diet of 1200 per day throughout most of that time. It's been frustrating and puzzling me. Also my hair didn't grow back properly and I have aches and pains in my legs, ongoing chronic fatigue, dry skin, brittle nails, slightly high cholesterol especially as the weight continues to go on, brain fog, tinging in hands and feet, poor circulation etc. I kept asking my oncologist why I'm gaining weight and why my hair isn't growing. He had no answers and suggested I go to a hair clinic.
This week last fortnight I went to the GP with depression and concerns about symptoms and because she isn't in the 'thinking about cancer & chemo' rut, she listened to all my symptoms and said she thought I had a thyroid problem. So then began a series of bloodtests that came back confirming that.
I don't know if I've had it for a while or whether the stress of cancer treatment triggered an existing tendency or what, but I am very happy to discover that there may be solutions for my problems. Perhaps the assault on my immune system has worsened an existing autoimmune problem. I am now on Thyroxin and the doctor thinks my metabolism will start returning to normal in 4-6 weeks and my other symptoms will slowly subside. I am so stiff and sore and I thought there was nothing to be done about it. This is the best health news I've had in a very long time. I'm wondering why oncologists don't check thyroid levels because it would be very easy for chemotherapy to mask problems.
Anyway, I'm happy and have prospects now for improvements in my physical state. I was desperate and hopeless before.
This week last fortnight I went to the GP with depression and concerns about symptoms and because she isn't in the 'thinking about cancer & chemo' rut, she listened to all my symptoms and said she thought I had a thyroid problem. So then began a series of bloodtests that came back confirming that.
I don't know if I've had it for a while or whether the stress of cancer treatment triggered an existing tendency or what, but I am very happy to discover that there may be solutions for my problems. Perhaps the assault on my immune system has worsened an existing autoimmune problem. I am now on Thyroxin and the doctor thinks my metabolism will start returning to normal in 4-6 weeks and my other symptoms will slowly subside. I am so stiff and sore and I thought there was nothing to be done about it. This is the best health news I've had in a very long time. I'm wondering why oncologists don't check thyroid levels because it would be very easy for chemotherapy to mask problems.
Anyway, I'm happy and have prospects now for improvements in my physical state. I was desperate and hopeless before.