At the end of my first year at university, I began to get very ill.
I felt exhausted but hyperactive, I sweated all the time, I had panic attacks and my hair fell out, I had chronic stomach upsets, I kept losing weight no matter how much I ate, and I even had the occasional black-out.
What I found hardest to cope with were the palpitations and tremors - I couldn't even hold a pen without trembling, and I could constantly hear my heart beat. And if I lay flat on the floor, I could see the blood pumping through my aorta in my stomach as I'd got so thin.
God knows why. but I didn't tell my parents what was going on. But when I developed a goitre and weird, bulging eyes, they worked out that I had Graves' disease - a hereditary illness, which my mother had also suffered from.
Graves' disease is an autoimmune disorder where the thyroid gland goes into overdrive; the thyroid gland controls metabolism, so basically it was as if I was on speed.
Thankfully, there was a treatment - an anti-thyroid drug called carbimazole, plus a course of beta-blockers to stop my heart racing.
I was warned however that the carbimazole had a (rare) side-effect of bone marrow suppression, and so if I ever got an infection, especially a sore throat, I'd have to report it immediately to have my white blood cell count checked. I get a lot of sore throats.
I'd also have to have my blood screened every month anyway to check that the drugs were working and that my thyroid hormone levels were stabilising.
From then on, my life was spent going in and out of hospital, being punctured for blood samples - the insides of my elbows were perpetually bruised and I looked like a junkie.
You're probably wondering why I'm telling you all this - I mean, what's this got to do with radiation poisoning?
Well, unfortunately, the drug treatment didn't work, and after three years I was told I had to come off the carbimazole, as for obvious reasons it wasn't a long-term solution.
The only options I had now was a thyroidectomy or radioiodine treatment. A phobia about having my throat slit meant the thyroidectomy was out of the question. Moreover my grandpa, another Graves' sufferer, had had the operation, and it had left him with a necklace-shaped scar which I really didn't want.
So I went for the radioiodine. I'd read the leaflet - it was just a drink and seemed harmless enough.
My parents took me to the hospital, where a nurse told me to go to a secure wing. I opened the door and noticed there were nuclear symbols everywhere (like the one pictured at the top) and suddenly I felt very afraid.
The only people I could see were technicians wearing full-body protective outfits, like the ones they wear at the end of ET. I didn't know whether to laugh or cry, but began to feel slightly hysterical.
One of them came up to me, took my form with my details out of my hand, and asked me to wait in a small room. I sat there in my jeans and my top, feeling woefully underdressed and horribly alone.
The technician came back after ten long minutes and then handed me an innocuous-looking little bottle with a straw sticking out of it. It was one of those white bottles you have in Chemistry class to dispense drops of distilled water. Again I wanted to laugh.
She told me to drink it all down. I drank it - it tasted of nothing. She then told me to go home and to shower thoroughly and wash my clothes as soon as I got in, and that was that.
I got home, I did as I was told. I was ill for a week - flu-like symptoms - which I had been warned about and so was prepared for.
What I hadn't reckoned on was feeling like a pariah. After radioiodine treatment, you emit radiation from your neck for at least a week, so you can't go near any other humans in case you poison them too - the young, the old, and the pregnant being particularly susceptible to radiation poisoning.
I had to take a week off lawschool and became a complete hermit for that period, which had the added effect of making me terribly lonely, as well as a radioactive outcast.
So, I guess what I'm trying to say is that my minor experience of radiation was pretty frightening. However, and this is the important bit, it was entirely voluntary.
I keep thinking of the people in Japan, and how if anything should happen to them because of the situation in Fukushima right now, it wasn't their choice.
Comments
And Japan. God, words can't even describe :( we can only pray.
I'm not particularly religious but even I'm praying this works out ok for Japan.
@aforkfulofspaghetti - Thank you :)
@FoodUrchin - Thanks, and so do I.
The second time we went to Japan, my husband and I went to Hiroshima and I cried the whole time I was there.
It does make you stop and think doesn't it, how things that are so normal can so quickly be stripped away and everything turned on its head.
I'm entirely non-religious, but I'm thinking hard on Japan and hoping that everything is fixed as best it can and that the consequences aren't too horrific for anyone.
Glad to hear you got through your own experience too, I knew nothing about this condition before.
Yeah, I think that's what I'm doing too - sending good vibes.
@Sarah, Maison Cupcake - Thyroid disorders are really common, especially in women, but unfortunately they often go undiagnosed because the symptoms are similar to lots of other illnesses.
I think in Japan, the fear is double-edged - they don't know what's going to happen, but at the same time, they know better than any other country :(
I didn't know all these, it's strange to think how something can be poison and medicine at the same time. But I guess it's not so radical after all, too much of anything is never good.
Whatever happens, I wish more information I got on Japan and radiation is as clearly stated and well founded as this.
We have hypothyroidism in common. Mine was induced by lithium therapy for depression so now I too have to take a daily dose of levothyroxine.
The weird thing is that a high one-off dose of radioiodine (like I had here) is safer than low but sustained exposure.
The former destroys the thyroid gland (which is why it's used for medical purposes), but the latter can cause thyroid cancer.
Radioiodine is also called Iodine-131 and was one of the main radioactive isotopes in the Chernobyl disaster :(
@Su-Lin - Thank you, and no, it's not good.
@Joe Cassels - Oh, I think I'd be too paranoid to live that close.
Hypothyroidism is a pain, isn't it - but better than what came before!
I'm the same as the other non-religious people here, just hoping that everything is somehow okay in Japan.
Wow that is really a terrible thing to go through, thanks so much for sharing it! I was just researching food that helps detox radiation poisoning and found that miso is really amazing. Hopefully the Japanese near the nuclear plants are able to have access to food.
I used to follow you a lot a couple years ago when I was watching all of those fantastic cooking videos of Burma, but I lost track somewhere along the way so it is great to find you again!
I used to live in Burma so I sure miss the food there, I may have a chance to go back this year. Finger's crossed.
The radiation thing is crazy. It seems so odd to me that something so invisible and abstract can have such a major effect.
How do you get on with the thyroxine stuff? I suspect that I'll probably end up on it at some point, though I'm in no great rush...
My thoughts have been with the people of Japan too. As you say, we willingly put radiation into our bodies (ironically, to make us better!), but people of Japan have no choice.
@hellaD - Hello *waves*. That's encouraging to hear about miso - I swear the Japanese have the best diet - eg the Okinawans are one of the longest-lived people around.
Thank you re Burmese videos - will upload more soon I hope. So cool that you lived in Burma!
@Miss Whiplash - Automimmune buddies? Ha! So you're hyperthyroid too? I can 100% say go for the treatment - taking levothyroxine just means popping a pill daily - otherwise you're pretty much normal and I've never noticed any side-effects.
@No Love Sincerer - Yay - have never known anyone who had the same treatment - although family members on both sides have been hyperthyroid, they all stabilised on the carbimazole or had thyroidectomies. Great post too.
It makes sense you were isolated for longer if you work with children. Am glad you're okay now x
Am so pleased so much effort is being made to support Japan by everyone in the food community eg the Cakes for Japan appeal and #Bento4Japan.
My thyroid is a little bit crap too (I think the auto-immune things tend to come in pairs), but not bad enough for them to give me drugs yet...
No nasty radiations for me - sounds horrible. I hope they sort out the power plant badness soon...
You're right that auto-immune diseases come in pairs - my aunt has diabetes and my mum has pernicious anaemia, and both are a result of them having had hyperthyroidism.
@Charlene - Yes, I forgot that it can take ages to settle the dosage. Mine went up and down for ages and they finally settled on 125 mg a day, but even then I occasionally go hypo or hyper - hence the blood check every six months. But the tiredness goes away eventually :)
Anyway, ladies - FREE PRESCRIPTIONS!
Yesterday I took the Radioactive Iodine R-131 pill, a 100 millicurie treatment dose, administered from a double sealed lead container by a nurse with protective gear and a Geiger counter. This is said to be the equivalent of 500 dental xrays, and I'm now in isolation, forced to stay 6' minimum from my husband, son and worse of all my 3 beloved lap dogs for a week. The humans can understand, but the poor dogs think I don't love them anymore, and kept me up all night scratching the guest room door.
As a child of 9, I was originally diagnosed with hyPOthyroidism, aka slow or lazy thyroid (lazy sounds like a choice, a word I don't agree with) and have been on many different thyroid replacement drugs over the years, and have had a lifetime of divergent symptoms: racing then too slow heartbeats, periods of anxiety attacks followed by manically high energy / confidence, paralyzing migraine headaches, uncontrollable weight gain and loss, and more.
In 1991 at age 37, I had my left thyroid lobe removed due to a 3mm malignant nodule, followed by radiation. Then the right half of my thyroid was removed April 12, 2012 when another malignancy was found, this one 1.5cm, and now more radiation. I have a double set of necklace scars, the second set still quite fresh and the muscles still very inflamed from this second insult to their otherwise fine work. For the past 6 weeks, I've not been allowed to take any of my daily thyroid replacement hormones; this was supposed to get my TSH level up, as the higher or hungrier the system is for the iodine the thyroid needs, the better this treatment works. But this is wreaking havoc on my kidneys and more, and the radioactive pill is still in my system, so today is day 2 of 8 days isolation and discomfort.
Ironically, over the summer we hosted some exchange students from Funari High School in Hiroshima, Japan, the sweetest girls ever, and I know that they and their entire country faces a future of thyroid and digestive woes, as radiation, the silent menace, may have already done it's damage, and it takes years to reach fruition.
My Endocrinologist said it's likely I was likely exposed to radiation as a child; my Father worked at a GE facility where it was handled daily. It's likely his clothing carried low doses home daily, and being exposed as a child/baby is the most dangerous time. Around age 4, I also sat at this facility and watched the ladies paint the numerals and watch & gauge hands with radium, the agent that made these things glow in the dark. These women used their lips to shape the paint brush into a fine point for this tiny work, and sometimes one sweet woman would paint her teeth and turn the lights off to be funny. Poor thing, her insides probably turned into charcoal briquettes. God forbid she had contact with babies! But for now I'm in this isolation mode, very bored as I've been told to limit contact with anything I can't throw away. I was advised to wear gloves before using computer if I had to use one, and trust me, I'm in need of things to do to pass this time where I'd usually be cooking, or at my son's school, or elsewhere in close proximity to many people.
I still feel compelled to post to wish you well, and to express my best wishes for the kind and wonderful people of Japan. I can almost guarantee there will be an epidemic of thyroid & colo-rectal/digestive system cancer there in 20 years, but hope they are spared that as I, like you have been through a life time of symptoms that affected everything I did from time to time. I'm hoping this will improve for me now that my supposed last surgery is over, but no one can say for certain anything other than I am likely to gain weight. Oh joy! Just what every girl wants to hear. We shall see.....
Best Wishes to you!
Sharon Thompson in Sanford, Florida Where the air is rich with sweet sweet citrus blossoms....
From what I've seen with cats the radiation treatment is so much nicer, less discomfort during the procedure, less complications afterwards, MUCH better long term prognosis.
I've known a number of cats that have had alternate therapies (such as chemical titration) and they tended to waste away unpleasantly...
So maybe it is scary, but it seems to be the best treatment out there- you made a good choice.