Many Americans suffer from symptoms such as cold hands and feet, low body temperature. sensitivity to cold, a feeling of always being chilled, headaches, insomnia, dry skin, puffy eyes, hair loss, brittle nails, joint aches, constipation, mental dullness, fatigue, frequent infections, hoarse voice, ringing in the ears, dizziness, loss of libido, and weight gain, which is sometimes uncontrollable. Approximately 65 percent of the U. S. population is overweight; 27 percent is clinically obese. Research is pointing to the fact that an under active thyroid might be the number one cause of weight problems, especially among women.
Hypothyroidism Reaching Epidemic Proportions
In 1995, researchers studied 25,862 participants at the Colorado statewide health fair. They discovered that among patients not taking thyroid medication, 8.9 percent were hypothyroid (under-active thyroid) and 1.1 percent were hyperthyroid (over-active thyroid). This indicates 9.9 percent of the population had a thyroid problem that had most likely gone unrecognized. These figures suggest that nationally, there may be as many as 13 million Americans with an undiagnosed thyroid problem.
(
The Colorado Thyroid
Disease Prevalence Study published in the Archives of Internal
Medicine (
http://archinte.ama-assn.org/cgi/content/abstract/160/4/526).
In her book Living Well With Hypothyroidism:
What Your Doctor Doesn't Tell You. . . That You Need to Know, Mary
Shomon quotes endocrinologist Kenneth Blanchard, M.D., of Lower Newton
Falls, Massachusetts as saying, “The key thing is . . . doctors are
always told that TSH is the test that gives us a yes or no answer.
And, in fact, I think that's fundamentally wrong. The pituitary TSH is
controlled not just by how much T4 and T3 is in circulation, but T4 is
getting converted to T3 at the pituitary level. Excess T3 generated at
the pituitary level can falsely suppress TSH.” Hence, many people who
are simply tested for TSH levels and are found to be within “normal”
range are, in fact, suffering from thyroid problems that are going
undetected.
Ridha Arem, MD, Associate Professor of Medicine
in the Division of Endocrinology and Metabolism at Baylor College of
Medicine, agrees. He says that hypothyroidism may exist despite
"normal range" TSH levels. In his book The Thyroid Solution he
says:
Many people may be suffering from minute imbalances that have not yet resulted in abnormal blood tests. If we included people with low-grade hypothyroidism whose blood tests are normal, the frequency of hypothyroidism would no doubt exceed 10 percent of the population. What is of special concern, though, is that many people whose test results are dismissed as normal could continue to have symptoms of an under active thyroid. Their moods, emotions, and overall well-being are affected by this imbalance, yet they are not receiving the care they need to get to the root of their problems. Even if the TSH level is in the lower segment of normal range, a person may still be suffering from low-grade hypothyroidism.
Thus, if we were to
include those who may be suffering from “low-grade hypothyroidism” the
number could well be double the 13 million estimate.
Thyroid Cancer
The statistics on thyroid cancer in the U.S. also tell a disturbing tale. Since 1990, cancer statistics (see http://seer.cancer.gov/) show that the overall thyroid cancer incidence across all ages and races in the United States has been subject to a statistically significant annual increase of 1.4 percent, per annum. That increase was highest amongst females (1.6 % per annum). Also worth noting is the fact that between 1975 and 1996 the incidence of thyroid cancer has risen 42.1% in the United States. This increase was particularly notable in women and most recent figures as of 1996 show that the incidence of thyroid cancer has climbed to 8.0 per 100,000. The National Cancer Institute (NCI) notes that "the preponderance of thyroid cancer in females suggest that hormonal factors may mediate disease occurrence.”
Especially alarming is the rate of thyroid cancer
among children. The NCI publication Cancer Incidence and Survival
among Children and Adolescents: United States SEER Program 1975-1995
has reported that the most prevalent carcinomas in American children
and adolescents younger than 20 years was thyroid carcinoma at 35.5
percent—more prevalent than the highly publicized melanomas (30.9
percent). Approximately 75 percent of the thyroid carcinomas occurred
in adolescents 15 to 19 years of age.
What is Causing This Epidemic?
While more research needs to be done, it is generally accepted that diet plays a major role in thyroid health. For decades we have known that low iodine intake leads to low thyroid function and eventually to goiter. Iodized salt was intended to solve this problem, but it has not been the answer. There are a number of foods known as goitrogens that block iodine. Two goitrogens are quite prevalent in the American diet—peanuts and peanut butter and soybeans used most often in prepared foods as textured vegetable protein (a refined soy food) and soybean oil.
The rise of industrialization, corporate farming, and mass production of food has drastically changed our food supply from what our ancestors ate. Many studies show the detrimental effects of refined sugars and grains on our health. These foods are very taxing on the thyroid gland, and we consume them in large quantities.
Environmental stress such as chemical pollutants, pesticides, mercury, and fluoride are also tough on the thyroid. A growing body of evidence suggests that fluoride, which is prevalent in toothpaste and water treatment, may inhibit the functioning of the thyroid gland. Additionally, mercury may diminish thyroid function because it displaces the trace mineral selenium, and selenium is involved in conversion of thyroid hormones T4 to T3.
Truth About Fats and Oils
Many oils can negatively affect thyroid health. We cook with them almost every day
and they are plentiful in commercially prepared foods.
Expeller-pressed or solvent-extracted oils only became a major part of
the American diet in the last century. It is possible they are among
the worst offenders when it comes to the thyroid. They are known as
vegetable oils or polyunsaturated oils. The most common source of
these oils used in commercially prepared foods is the soy bean.
Large-scale cultivation of soybeans in
the United States began after World War II and quickly increased to
140 billion pounds per year. Most of the crops are produced for
animal feed and soy oil for hydrogenated fats such as margarine and
shortening. Today, it is nearly impossible to eat at restaurants or
buy packaged foods that don’t have soy oil in the ingredients. Often
labels simply state “vegetable oil.”
Ray Peat Ph.D., a physiologist who has
worked with progesterone and related hormones since 1968, says that
the sudden surge of polyunsaturated oils into the food chain post
World War II has caused many changes in hormones. He writes:
Their [polyunsaturated oils] best understood
effect is their interference with the function of the thyroid
gland. Unsaturated oils block thyroid hormone secretion, its
movement in the circulatory system, and the response of tissues to
the hormone. When the thyroid hormone is deficient, the body is
generally exposed to increased levels of estrogen. The thyroid
hormone is essential for making the ‘protective hormones’
progesterone and pregnenolone, so these hormones are lowered when
anything interferes with the function of the thyroid. The thyroid
hormone is required for using and eliminating cholesterol, so
cholesterol is likely to be raised by anything which blocks the
thyroid function.
(See
http://www.efn.org/~raypeat/efatox.rtf: “Unsaturated Vegetable
Oils: Toxic”)
There is a growing body of research concerning
soy’s detrimental affect on the thyroid gland. Much of this research
centers on the phytoestrogens ("phyto" means plant) that are
found in soy. In the 1960s when soy was introduced into infant
formulas, it was shown that soy was goitrogenic and caused goiters in
babies. When iodine was supplemented, the incidence of goiter reduced
dramatically. However, a retrospective epidemiological study by Fort,
et al. showed that teenaged children with a diagnosis of autoimmune
thyroid disease were significantly more likely to have received soy
formula as infants (18 out of 59 children; 31 percent) when compared
to healthy siblings (nine out of 76, 12 percent) or control group
children (seven out of 54; 13 percent). (P.
Fort, N. Moses, M. Fasano, T. Goldberg and F. Lifshitz J. Am. Coll.
Nutr. 9 (1990), p. 164)
When healthy individuals without any previous
thyroid disease were fed 30 grams of pickled soybeans per day for one
month, Ishizuki, et al. reported goiter and elevated individual
thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH) levels (although still within the
normal range) in thirty-seven healthy iodine-sufficient adults. One
month after stopping soybean consumption, individual TSH values
decreased to the original levels and goiters were reduced in size.
(Daniel R. Doerge, Hebron C. Chang, “Inactivation of thyroid
peroxidase by soy isoflavones in vitro and in vivo” Journal of
Chromatography B Vol. 777 (1, 2); 25; September 2002:
269-79)
For more information about the effects of soy in
the modern diet, see the Weston A. Price foundation website:
http://www.westonaprice.org/soy/index.html
Coconut Oil: A-Healthy Choice
Traditionally, polyunsaturated oils such as
soybean oil have been used for livestock feed because they cause the
animals to gain weight. These oils are made up of what is known as
long chain fatty acids—the kind of fatty acids that promote weight
gain. (See EFFECT OF
DIETARY FAT SOURCE, LEVEL, AND FEEDING INTERVAL ON PORK FATTY ACID
COMPOSITION by M.T. See and J. Odle)