Words matter. These are the best Thyroid Quotes from famous people such as Cris Cyborg, Anna Getty, Gena Lee Nolin, Kim Alexis, Arnold Schwarzenegger, and they’re great for sharing with your friends.
If I make 140, I sacrifice a lot of things in my life: my diet, my training, my thyroid. It’s insane to make 140.
I just think the whole kale thing has gone a little overboard. It’s everywhere you go, and it can actually inhibit thyroid function.
I think people assume that having thyroid disease means you’re older and overweight, but in reality, thyroid disease strikes at all ages and affects all sizes.
I really discovered I had thyroid disease by accident. My son was having some health concerns, and as I filled out his patient history I noticed I had a lot of similar symptoms. I mentioned it to the doctor, and he ran blood work and finally an ultrasound of my thyroid.
I saw a woman wearing a sweatshirt with Guess on it. I said, Thyroid problem?
I don’t have a thyroid anymore. I had radioactive iodine treatment, which destroyed my thyroid. I take medication every day.
I have autoimmune disease, thyroid problems, and I’ve been diagnosed pre-diabetic.
It was later in life when I found out that I had thyroid issues and gained a ton of weight. I got up to 200 pounds.
I want people to know that blood tests alone won’t always detect thyroid disease. My blood panels were normal. I think a lot more people have this disease than are diagnosed.
When my friends have a health concern, they call me. I’ve always been a vitamin taker. I also take digestive enzymes and antioxidants, and supplements that help with the thyroid and adrenals for my time-zone changes.
Having thyroid cancer in 2009 really didn’t change my life at all. I wish I could say that I had this epiphany. But I knew I was lucky before that, so it’s not like I suddenly realised how lucky I am.
I bike ride and swim but I don’t exercise ‘cos I like it. I do it because I’ve got a thyroid problem that can balloon my weight up to 20 stone if I stand still for five minutes.
I have to be cautious, have my thyroid levels checked, and as long as I do that, I’m fine.
After the 2012 Olympics, I returned to training, but unlike in previous years, my off-season weight gain didn’t melt off as soon as I got back to my routine. I was tired, and my clothes weren’t fitting. I’d been diagnosed with hypothyroidism, which means my thyroid is underactive, and that slows my metabolism.
New York, the nation’s thyroid gland.