What is the Thyroid?
The
thyroid is a small, butterfly-shaped gland just below the Adam's apple. This gland plays a
very important role in controlling the body's metabolism, that is, how the body functions.
It does this by producing thyroid hormones (T4 and T3), chemicals that travel through the blood to every part of
the body. Thyroid hormones tell the body how fast to work and use energy.
_____The thyroid gland works
like an air conditioner. If there are enough thyroid hormones in the blood, the gland
stops making the hormones (just as an air conditioner cycles off when there is enough cool
air in a house). When the body needs more thyroid hormones, the gland starts producing
again.
____
_The pituitary gland works
like a thermostat, telling the thyroid when to start and stop. The pituitary sends thyroid
stimulating hormone (TSH) to the thyroid to tell the gland what to do.
_____About 20 million
Americans have some form of thyroid disease. Many are undiagnosed or misdiagnosed. No age,
economic group, race, or sex is immune to thyroid disease.
_____The thyroid gland might
produce too much hormone (hyperthyroidism), making the body use energy faster than it
should, or too little hormone (hypothyroidism), making the body use energy slower than it
should. The gland may also become inflamed (thyroiditis) or enlarged (goiter), or develop
one or more lumps (nodules).
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