Thyroid Testing

Thyroid Testing

The thyroid is a small butterfly-shaped gland that sits behind and below the Adam’s apple. A wide range of factors from hormone imbalances to mineral deficiencies and environmental pollutants can interfere with thyroid production, leading to health problems.Over 30 million adults suffer from thyroid imbalance.
Don’t let dysfunction go undiagnosed!

Thyroid Dysfunction is Notoriously Under-Diagnosed
  • The American Thyroid Association estimates that as many as 60% of people with thyroid disease are not aware of it.
  • Statistics show that women are seven times more likely than men to develop thyroid problems, facing as much as a one in five chance of developing a problem particularly during the peri-menopause years when hormones start to fluctuate.

Thyroid disease or dysfunction can explain a wide variety of symptoms that include:

  • Hypothyroidism
    • Weight gain or inability to lose weight despite exercise and diet
    • Feeling cold all the time (when others don’t)
    • Low energy and stamina, especially in the evening
    • Memory lapses or slow/fuzzy thinking
    • Dry, thinning, itchy skin
    • Dry or brittle hair and nails
    • Hair loss
    • Irregular bowel habits
    • Menstrual irregularities
  • Hyperthyroidism
    • Sudden or significant weight loss
    • Rapid or irregular heartbeat
    • Sweating
    • Nervousness or irritability

Levels Of Key Thyroid Hormones Can Indicate Whether There Is A Thyroid Imbalance.
These thryoid hormones that are testing include:

  • TSH – Thyroid Stimulating Hormone
    Produced by the pituitary gland, TSH acts on the thyroid gland to stimulate production of the thyroid hormone thyroxine (T4).
  • Free T3 – Triiodothyronine
    T3 is the active thyroid hormone that regulates the metabolic activity of cells.
  • Free T4 – Thyroxine
    The predominant hormone produced by the thyroid gland, T4 is converted to its active form, T3, within cells.
  • Total T4 – Thyroxine
    Total T4 includes both free T4 and protein-bound T4, and is an indicator of the thyroid gland’s ability to synthesize, process and release T4 into the bloodstream.
  • Tgbn – Thyroglobulin
    A protein rich in tyrosine, the residues of which when bound to iodine become the building blocks of T3 and T4. If iodine levels are low, thyroglobulin accumulates, thus high levels indicate insufficient iodine for healthy thyroid function.
  • TPOab – Thyroid Peroxidase Antibodies
    hyroid peroxidase is an enzyme involved in thyroid hormone production. The body produces antibodies, including TPOab, that attack the thyroid gland in autoimmune thyroiditis and Hashimoto’s. Testing TPOab levels can diagnose these conditions.