Guest guest Posted May 24, 2012 Report Share Posted May 24, 2012 Hi Eveyrone, Here's the symptoms that FMS/Hypothyroid suffers can have: 1)Fatigue 2)Lethargy 3) Low endurance 4) Slow speech 5) Slow thinking 6) Poor concentration 7) Depression 8) Nervousness 9) Anxiety 10) Worrying 11) Easy emotional upset 12) Obsessive thinking 13) Low motivation 14) Dizziness 15) Sensation of cold 16) Cold skin 17) Decreased or Increased sweating 18) Heat intolerance 19) Non-restful sleep 20) Insomnia 21) Thick tongue 22) Swelling of face 23) Swelling of eyelids 24) Dry skin 25) Dry mucous membranes 26) Constipation 27) Weight gain unexplainably 28) Paleness of lips 29) Shortness of breath 30) Swelling 31) Hoarseness 32) Loss of appetite 33) Prolonged menstrual bleeding 34) Heavy menstrual bleeding 35) Painful menstruation 36) Low sex drive 37) Impotence 38) Hearing loss 39) Rapid heart rate 40) Pounding heart beat 41) Slow pulse rate 42) Pain at front of chest 43) Poor vision 44) Weight loss 45) Wasting of tongue 46) Emotional instability 47) Choking sensation 48) Fineness of hair 49) Hair loss 50) Blueness of skin 51) Dry, thick, scaling skin 52) Paleness of skin 53) Puffy skin 54) Swelling of ankles 55) Coarse skin 56) Brittle or thin nails 57) Dry ridges down nails 58) Difficulty in swallowing 59) Weakness 60) Body aches & pains 61) Muscle pain 62) Joint pain 63) Numbness or tingling 64) Protrusion of one or both eyeballs 65) Sparse eyebrows (last 1/3) 66) Sore throat that doesn't seem to go away * I mentioned approximately 32 of these symptoms to a number of medical doctors over the past 3 years especially, with no attention being paid to them as a hormone problem, but rather as part of FMS! I eventually became sorry that I had ever gone to a Rheumotologist who diagnosed me with FMS because following that diagnosis, it was and still is all the medical doctors look at regardless of having my full medical history and symptoms, if only they had recognized them I could have been properly treated years ago! A symptom is an abnormality the patient is experiencing but that others can't observe and independently verify. A sign is an abnormality the patient is experiencing and that others can observe and independently confirm. It's been my experience over the past 10 years that medical doctors look at " signs " and neglect " symptoms " . Maybe they no longer know how to recognize them as doctors years ago did. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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