Adrenal insufficiency while taking synthroid
Questions in the Thyroid forum are answered by Dr. Mark Lupo. Topics covered include goiter, graves disease, Hashimoto's thyroiditis, hyperthyroid, hypothyroid, thyroid cancers, thyroiditis, and thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH).
Tina999, like ShannieK, Ar1281a and you, I had problems with certain symptoms actually WORSENING after starting thyroid replacement. This promted me to search, which led me to the very websites, by the makers of the thyroid meds. They stated that people with UNTREATED adrenal cortical insufficiency (low cortisol), can experience worsening of their low-adrenal symptoms if they start thyroid homone replacement. It also took me to websites like the one by Dr. Shames, which you can find by going to "google.com" or other search engines and put in search-words: "the thyroid adrenal connection". You will be surprized at the info., click on the articles, including by Dr. Shames, very informative!
Some of us have also looked at Mitral Valve Prolapse lately, as another factor in making low adrenal symptoms worse. I believed from the beginning that MVP is only a possible peice of the puzzle and not the root-cause. These other sites state that worse adrenal symptoms after start of thyroid med., "unmasks an adrenal problem". I can relate to every symptom you listed but nausea has been mild and intermittant. Your cognitive symptoms (mental confusion etc...), I call "mind prattle" but this one too is fairly mild with me and mostly just makes things repeat over & over in my mind but does sometimes affect concentration too. I do get episodes of joint pain with mine too.
Shannon can relate to the fact that tests can show abnormal, then suddenly others do not, this even confuses the Docs. Drmark on here commented (very appreciated) on an ACTH Stim. test I got. He said my baseline reading of "10.7", which also doubled at 30pmin, then tripled at 1-hour, was fairy normal HOWEVER, what I didn't get to tell him is that my 24-hour urine test was low like Shannons (mine "10.7"). I also took many saliva cortisol tests, some low-normal, some borderline low and some 'clinically low' but NEVER in mid to upper normal! I think you Tina999, Shannon, Ar and myself, have a type of adrenal problem, very hard to detect because it is not quite full blown like Addison's Disease and there are aggrivating factors (ei:thyroid & MVP etc...). Treatment for less-than-full-blown, carries risk factors Dr.s simply don't want to take with us, understandably. I'm hoping/believing for positive revelations and is precisely why we search about things such as MVP but right now, it seems we are in kind of a "limbo" with this thing. Frustration is very understandable but we MUST keep researching!!!
Thanks Ladies.
Tina999, do you know how your blood pressure was when you had these problems? they sound scary and severe, mine haven't been this bad.
We're all in the same boat in the quest for an answer. Thankfully, we have Drs that are willing to work with us.
Jimlow/Shanniek, I'm going in for the echo this week, my GP agreed that it'd be a possibility and it's better to rule it out.
Take care you all
Actually the thyroid meds cause my blood pressure to go from 110/70 to about 130/90. I went in with no peripheral circulation-my hands were white but my blood pressure "looked" okay. I am so confused.
Jimlow I think I agree with you that we have something rare and wierd about our adrenal glands/ HPA axis. I have a couple of ideas- high cortisone negatively effects the hypothalamus, causing less CFH and subsequesnt less ACTH to be realesed. However what detects the low cortisone? The med books aren't real clear about that. They say stress causes upregulation but they don't know exactly so can't say. Our adrenal glands aren't broken, but we aren't responding correctly to the drops in cortisone and aldosterone that happen when we start the thyroid hormone. The HPA axis is pretty complicated and my guess is that our's is misbehaving. Perhaps our bodies sense the hypo state as "stress". Constant stress increases cortisol and decreases the response of the hypothalumus to changes in cortisol. Correcting the hypo state causes a massive clearance of the cortisol but our adrenals don't kick in and spit anymore out leaving us "adrenal insufficeint". The HPA research is directed mostly at anxiety and depression