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Type A person with adrenal fatigue and Hashimoto’s hypothyroidism?

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Are you the kind of person who races through life at a 100 miles an hour? Is your motto, "Plenty of time for rest in the grave"? Do caffeine and energy drinks fuel your waking hours? If so, you may be setting yourself up for a crash of epic proportions.

For the Type A person with Hashimoto’s hypothyroidism, protecting your adrenal health is vital to managing your thyroid condition.

Many people today suffer from adrenal fatigue, a condition in which the body's adrenal glands do not make sufficient hormones in response to stress. A huge fight with your spouse or a giant afternoon soda are both stressors to which your adrenal glands must respond. However, when you call on their services too frequently, as many Americans do, you risk causing adrenal fatigue.

We typically associate adrenal fatigue with chronic tiredness, but Type A people—those who are prone to impatience, aggression, ambition, and competitiveness—may be moving too fast to realize they suffer from adrenal fatigue.

Even the Type A person with Hashimoto’s hypothyroidism who also struggles with thyroid-related fatigue may be ignoring her body’s need for a more sane pace.

Common symptoms of adrenal fatigue

  • Feel exhausted often; Type A's typically push through this
  • Feel overwhelmed, constantly stressed out
  • Crave sweets, salty foods, and caffeine or nicotine
  • Crash around 3 or 4 p.m.
  • Feel more awake and energetic in the evening
  • Poor sleep patterns
  • Difficulty waking in the morning
  • Slow to recover from illness, injuries, wounds, or exercise
  • Frequently sick
  • Assailed by allergies
  • Hormonal imbalances
  • Lightheaded or blacking out momentarily when rising from a seated or reclining position
  • Shaky, lightheaded, and/or irritable when going too long without food

The Hashimoto’s hypothyroidism crash: when adrenal fatigue wins out

Sure, you can push through adrenal fatigue. Athletes do it routinely; overtraining often causes adrenal fatigue. That doesn't change the fact that adrenal fatigue depletes your immune system, hormone function, and brain health. It also can exacerbate your Hashimoto’s hypothyroidism condition. What the Type A person most fears losing is productivity, and nothing stops productivity like an adrenal crash.

Adrenal fatigue means that any major stressor—accident, major illness, divorce, death of a loved one—can cause an epic crash. The consequences of such a crash can include chronic fatigue, a harrowing transition into menopause, or some other chronic health disorder. It can trigger or exacerbate autoimmune diseases such as Hashimoto’s hypothyroidism, and recovery can be a very long, slow road.

Lasting health requires major lifestyle changes. The most challenging thing for Type A patients with adrenal fatigue is that the moment they start feeling a little better, they crank up the pace, which puts them right back where they started. Although racing around frantically may feel productive, the truth is you can accomplish more, make fewer mistakes, and irritate fewer people when you operate with better adrenal health. You don't have to sacrifice your competitive edge to act with more purpose, deliberation, and forethought, all hallmarks of a more relaxed, adrenal-friendly approach.

Overcoming adrenal fatigue and managing Hashimoto’s hypothyroidism includes:

  • Removing dietary stressors: sugars, caffeine, junk foods, excess carbs, and food intolerances
  • Addressing any lingering health imbalances: hormonal, immune system, or gut
  • Exercising regularly, but not over exercising
  • Working with your practitioner to use customized nutritional therapy to support your adrenal health

Meet the Author

Dr. Matz DC

Dr. Boyle D.A.C.M., LAc., DiplOM. is the founder of the Holistic Wellness Center of the Carolinas where he is the Director of Functional Medicine. He holds a Diplomate in Oriental Medicine and is acupuncture physician and primary care physician in the state of Florida. His post-graduate focus has been in the fields of functional neurology, functional immunology, and functional endocrinology.

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