What is Hashimoto's Thyroiditis?
Health & Fitness:Alternative Health
Hashimoto's and Hoarse Voice - Dr. Martin Rutherford
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Can Hashimoto's give you a hoarse voice? And the answer is yes. And frankly it's kind of a gauge to help the clinician to maybe understand what kind of Hashimoto's case he's working with as well as maybe where to start care with, with that type of patient. So Hashimoto's and hoarse voice. It's, it's, it's pretty much this is the more unstable Hashimoto's patient. So if you have a hoarse voice, you reach up here and your thyroid's maybe swells a little bit and then goes away and swells a little bit. Maybe it's tender, maybe you don't have any of the tenderness or swelling, maybe you just have the hoarseness in the voice itself. You are, and, and it's, and it's affecting your throat. Usually it's because the thyroid is getting attacked. The hoarseness of the voice is usually because it is affecting your thyroid, maybe not to the degree where you're able to perceive that the thyroid is enlarging a little bit, because when I palpated people's thyroids, I would say more than half are shocked. When I say you have an enlarged thyroid and then I have a, an, and that food starts to react. And our immune system starts to flare up. They'll, they'll get an inflammatory response either against their thyroid against their thyroid sites, their, their their thyroid sites or thyroid cells against their thyroid cells. And then that'll create an inflammatory response. Maybe you get a little bit of enlargement in there and and then you have that hoarseness, and then you have and then it comes and it goes for no reason at all. You might have swelling with it. You may not have swelling with it. And that's, that's kinda how it goes. If a person comes in here and there that's significant that's acute to me, that's like a right now thing. Let's get that under control right now. Because if you get that under control right now a lot of the patient's symptoms feel better then the problem I have with that is then that the patient thinks they're better because then they go like, well, I'm done. But at that point we usually need to find the rest of their triggers. And, and, and a lot of times they're like so happy because they're feeling so much better than that. They don't follow through with that. But that's another story. So this is, so this is so this is, yeah, this is significant. You can get, this is a sign that you're either in an acute response or that if you're like me and I'm not in acute situations anymore. I mean, I have my Hashimoto's like largely under control, but, but for me it, it's it's kind of a sign of like, okay, there's a trigger somewhere then I, that I didn't miss something happened to me today. Something, because basically in Hashimoto's look, you're looking to get the person to stop the downward progress. You're looking to get them out of remission. And then you're looking to have them have enough awareness to know that you have to manage this thing. You have to look for future trigger.
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Martin P. Rutherford, DC
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