10 Unconventional Ways to Tame the Beast of Graves' Disease

Imagine your body's own defense system, meant to protect you, turning rogue and launching an attack on a vital gland. This is the insidious reality of Graves' disease, a condition where an overactive immune system relentlessly pushes your thyroid to churn out far too much hormone. This isn't just about one organ; since the thyroid dictates how nearly every cell in your body uses energy, its rebellion sends ripples through almost every system, from your heart rate soaring and hands trembling to unexplained weight loss and relentless fatigue. While often striking women between 30 and 50, its diverse symptoms can be a bewildering puzzle. Beyond conventional approaches, this article unveils 10 Unconventional Ways to Tame the Beast of Graves' Disease, offering fresh perspectives and proactive strategies to regain balance and reclaim your well-being.

1. Anti-Thyroid Medication

Elderly person taking medication per doctor prescription. Photo Credit: Envato @friends_stock

A Graves' disease patient may need to take anti-thyroid medications like methimazole or propylthiouracil as part of their treatment plan. Ant-thyroid medication is the most simple way Graves' disease can be treated, but it is not a permanent cure. These types of medications work to treat Graves' disease by causing interference in the normal production of thyroid hormone in the body. Anti-thyroid medications can take several months to have a noticeable effect on the patient because their thyroid gland has made and stored enough thyroid hormone to keep it in the body at high levels for several weeks. The anti-thyroid medication works do deplete these stores of extra thyroid hormone so the individual's levels will decrease to normal. The average amount of time it takes for this process is between twelve and eighteen months. Anti-thyroid medications may need to be taken for long periods if a patient's Graves' disease does not go into remission. Some individuals only need to take anti-thyroid medication initially until their disorder goes into remission, and only resume when a relapse of the disease is detected in a yearly evaluation. Anti-thyroid medication can produce side effects, which may force patients to use other methods to treat their Graves' disease.

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