Wednesday, October 31, 2007

Hypothyroid: Why is Weight Loss So Damn Hard?

If you have been diagnosed with hypothyroidism, you likely have heard the following from your doctor when discussing your weight?

  • "Get off the couch and exercise"

  • "No more pigging out"

It's easy to pass the buck. Assuming that an overweight person is that way because they are lazy is a mistake.

It is also very easy to give the poor advice of exercise more and eat less. While some need to do just that, for others it will actually make matters worse.

So why is it that someone that is diagnosed with hypothyroidism have such problems losing weight?

A person diagnosed with hypothyroidism (and many more who are not) has a problem with either their thyroid gland or thyroid hormone. Either way the result is symptoms of thyroid problems due to a slowed metabolism. If your metabolism is abnormally low, less calories will be burned at rest. This results in more energy to be stored on your body (AKA fat).

This is not the end of it. There are also contributory factors that can work as either the primary problem, or work synergistically to really mess things up.

Excess estrogen is a perfect example of this. As I explained in a previous post about symptoms of thyroid problems due to excessive estrogen, your body stores estrogen in fat cells. The more fat cells you have, the more estrogen can be bound. Excessive estrogen also binds to thyroid hormone and makes it useless, which further slows down your metabolism, which makes you gain more at cells, which binds more estrogen, which can bind to more thyroid hormone...you get the point.

This process can spiral out of control till it gets to the point where everything seems to fail. Whether a doctor has told you that you have been diagnosed with hypothyroidism or not, you have to address the hypothyroid issue or you will continue to ask yourself, "Why is Weight Loss So Damn Hard?"






1 comment:

Russell Moris said...

I was at hard stage of hypothyroidism and 3 capsules of thyroid supplement a day. Thyroid capsules have changed my life -- from 15 hours/day in bed to being an active medical school student.