Posts Tagged ‘hyperthyroidism’

Dangerous supplements for weight loss

The Federal Commission for Protection Against Health Risks (Cofepris) has said are dangerous to health supplements for weight loss containing chromium picolinate and herbs Thevetia Fucus spp and gallbladder, which can even cause death.

The owner of the Cofepris, Miguel Angel Toscano, noted that such products that reach more than 22 thousand, are sold without regulation, so they urged lawmakers to pass a law on the subject.

He said it had recorded 700 complaints of people using such products to affect their health and the lack of regulation has led to increased growth and exceeds the number of registered drugs to reach 9 thousand 500.

At a press conference, Toscano stressed the need for new legislation from Congress make adjustments to the law to require that all food supplements have the health records for sale, because anyone can now expend your product only to report their existence to the Cofepris.

He explained that in the case of Thevetia spp is a plant that directly affects the heart and can lead to death, as well as they contain cardiac glycosides that cause neurological damage, gastrointestinal, Dermalogica, reproduction and vision.

While the Focus vesiculosus contains high concentrations of iodine, which causes symptoms of overstimulation of the thyroid, nervous problems, insomnia and tachycardia, hyperthyroidism, hypothyroidism, allergies, risk of thyroid cancer, gout and acne

Thyroid, obesity, longevity and hair loss

ThyroidAn underactive thyroid gland is one of the most discussed endocrine conditions in the U.S. and wanted to see if the thyroid can be the key to long life, at least for some people, according to researchers.

Dr. Martin Surks and his colleagues at Montefiore Medical Center and Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York studied hundreds of people who had lived to 100 years and found evidence in people with low thyroid activity, those most likely to be in that group.

We used a national health survey to assess the average hormone levels in people of different ages.

The thyroid is located in the neck and is a kind of master gland, secretes hormones that affect metabolism and therefore has a relationship with obesity.

Doctors often monitor their activity as an indirect measure of levels of the hormone (TSH) or thyroid stimulating hormone.

Indicate that high levels of TSH is a condition known as hypothyroidism and low levels suggest that it is overactive, called hyperthyroidism.

People with low thyroid function can lose hair, gain weight and feel weak, while those with overactive thyroid can lose weight and feel a constant nervous state, but both can be easily treated with a daily pill.

Surks and his colleagues found that between 15 and 20 percent of people over 60 have TSH levels that suggest an underactive thyroid gland, which is believed to be normal in older people, as sign of longevity.