Thread: more on thyroid
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Old 07-18-2010, 05:52 PM
paula_w paula_w is offline
In Remembrance
 
Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: Florida
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paula_w paula_w is offline
In Remembrance
 
Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: Florida
Posts: 3,904
15 yr Member
Default more of everything

Laura found literature that says one can be dx hyperthyroid and then it changes to hypothyroid....which is another match in my background. i have never had any noticeable symptoms of thyroid disease. Doctor found it was enlarged during a routine exam and i had a scan.

i wish pd was as easily treated - never gave the thyroid much thought.

oh and i know of one male pwp on this forum who had his thyroid removed if we are counting. Also wonder who had early onset menopause, and nursed their children. [if you don't mind sharing] perhaps age at which we had children is a factor. i waited till my 30s.

this is interesting because we suspect autoimmune components and thyroid is auto immune disease right? [thought i read that somewhere]
so pd could have come first. or i picture pd formed like a storm. Storms start under similar conditions, but no two are alike. Some become hurricanes or tornadoes, others just thunder and lightning or rain. some move faster than others. Degrees of damage vary. etc

this is off topic but while in the science mode i'm going to put it where science readers are. the rest is a summary of science needed for the book.

at what point do we start apoptosis and what is that alpha synuclein's normal function? when do we begin to self destruct? Are we injesting something from someone else's body in our water? are we full of fungus - i recently read that fungus and cancer look alike - hard to tell the difference. i have a recurring fungus so maybe we should take a tally of those who have fungus in their system. fungus can become cancer; what else can it do?

so what came first to cause an autoimmune reaction so serious as to shut down or overstimulate the thyroid?i knew a girl growing up who took the iodine. i think i'll look her up on facebook and see how she is doing today.

there isthe possibility and this has been theorized, that whatever pd is could have come first. maybe pd really is just being poisoned with chemicals; then it's a real crap shoot. we are all taking in different chemicals...rick mentioned soot, i grew up with soot from the steel mills always on the window sills - you wipe them and it comes right back and pd is high in pittsburgh of course. There is a nuclear power plant nearby too;we attended the 4th of july carnival and fireworks where the towers of the nuke plant are last week..it's very clean compared to the steel mills.

somehow we end up losing smell, [not everyone tho] slowing up of everything which points to mitochondria, then there are neuro transmitters .....i think if i was playing pin the tale on the donkey, i'd aim for the metabolism and endocrine system and the acetycholine neural pathways, based on what i've researched so far. Dopamine is responsible for much of our strange behaviors, our strange appearance, our off and ons, our addictions, but it also helps restless legs, which i also had off and on growing up and just hated it. Is restless leg defined - do they know the origin? That sounds like a transmitter imbalance but i haven't looked it up.

And i haven't even mentioned genetics. i am glad we are exploring the thyroid because it is a symptom of poisoning. People who live near toxic sites or radiation exposed exhibit thyroid abnormalities. My mother had to have her thyroid removed; gosh do I know anyone at home [pittsburgh] who isn't on thyroid med?

I am writing on neural transmitters for the book and we have set an August 15 deadline for all writing. so if you have any information on neuro transmitters please post it or send me PM. They are all important but pwp may as a whole lack GABA, which is all your emotions to simplify it and hardly do it justice,have too much acetylcholine, which i suspect until someone proves differently can poison our own brains. it's in the literature that it stops dopamine production. Have you ever seen an advanced patient who shows motor symptoms more than cognitive?I cannot verbally communicate after a certain amount of dopamine is in my system. i am befuddled thru and thru. perhaps in the elderly, our acetylcholine decreases, which helps the dopamine, but makes us mostly look demented or cognitively impaired. motor stops progressing - i can't remember if i actually heard someone say that but let me know if you have a source.

We're not doing this to show our stuff. This is pure patient empowerment and some of the activists are getting very very tired. Forum members are who itis about and science must be up to date so post what you see that is relevant please till aug. 14.... this will be r first complete [well sort of] draft and we already have to update some of our work.

This forum is a lifesaver. No reason we can't save the world. hah it's sinemet ramble hour. I lose all sense of time but find this whole thing - the human body computer - so fascinating. We'd love to have a draft to show at the wpc so guest writers on your mark...we need you now.

thanks and if you have questions kindly start a new thread. my last efforts are going to be hitting at the science so this thread is related enough hopefully to put this here.keep the science coming.

suzie that was perfect timing = your first statement validated mine , whiich was actually provided by laura.
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paula

"Time is not neutral for those who have pd or for those who will get it."

Last edited by paula_w; 07-18-2010 at 06:11 PM. Reason: to say that i didn't read suzie's post before posting mine
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