Thyroid cancer symptoms

Hi if anyone can help and share there symptoms and how they had appointments and anything to help I would really appreciate it.

 

so about a month ago I notice a lump in my throat honestly didn't think much of it ignored it then my mum literally dragged me to the gp had a feel and straight away was seen at ENT had a camera and they could see swelling in my thyroid gland and soft tissue in my nose and was booked for an MRI and CT scan and a biopsy so then I started with ear ache one ear comes and goes a little pain in my neck throat almost sometimes like cramp I've lost over a stone in weight and I have aches in my shoulder just one again left side and I walk round like I haven't slept in years I have now got consistently bad headaches and I have had my MRI and now waiting for scan tomorrow it is I'm just hoping to see if anyone can help me I'm worried I've accepted it can be anything it's life you can't change things and that's fine with me but it's the waiting 

how long has it taken someone else to get results I wanted to add it feels like a burning sensation sometimes in my throat I'm 27 next week and she doesn't matter I know that I'm just a little impatient and sort of want to know what's going on and hoping I can start to feel a lot better so any story is a help for me and I'm always here just to chat and comfort people if ever need 

 

thanks 

bebravealways x

  • I had thyroid cancer and while every situation is different, the only symptom I had was a lump on my throat that I was not even aware of. I don't think it is common to have many symptoms, so my guess would be that things like the burning in your throat, shoulder aches and headaches are likely to be coincidence. I don't think any of those are really connected to thyroid cancer, though again, different people can have different experiences.

    Weight loss could be due to an overactive thyroid, but I don't think that would mean anything about whether the nodules were cancerous or not. I think benign ones could also cause your thyroid to become overactive.

    Thyroid nodules are very common. Something like a quarter of people have them? The vast majority, I think over 90%, are benign. I don't think there is any great difference between the symptoms of those that are benign and those that are cancerous.

    And even if it is thyroid cancer, and it probably isn't, thyroid cancer is not what you might be imagining when you hear the word "cancer." The most common forms have a near 100% survival rate among younger people, where younger means under about 50. And they rarely use chemotherapy or radiotherapy.

    Basically, if it is thyroid cancer, they will remove your thyroid and you will probably be fine. If they think you are at higher risk of reccurrance, they will do radioiodine treatment a bit later, which basically just means swallowing a capsule. The name makes it sound like it is something ongoing, but it's not. It can be annoying as you are radioactive afterwards so you have to stay in isolation for a while, but it is a one-off and doesn't make you feel sick or anything. My only side effect was a nosebleed about ten days after it.

    I was back at work a month after the operation if that tells you anything!