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I have an enlarged goiter. I have intermittent tightening or sense of fullness in my throat. very uncomfortabl


I am a 39 year old woman. A doctor first noticed my enlarged goiter when I was about 18. Shortly after the birth of my first son 15 years ago my doc said I was testing with abnormal thyroid levels so put me on synthroid. i took it for a few years and tested normal. I was on the smallest dose possible. I stopped taking the meds a few years ago and since then have tested normal for thyroid levels. In the last several years i have noticed more and more often that I get a feeling of fullness or tightening in my throat. sometimes i gag and almost throw up. I have seen the doc who sent me to a specialist and they did an ultrasound and said the goiter was not all that large that they would recommend surgery. my doc sent me to allergist who put me on acid reflux meds and said it would cure it. The acid reflux med works great for heartburn but im still having this very uncomfortable tightness in my neck?? I dont know if its my goiter and I have spent hours on line trying to diagnose this..HELP

Hi, I happened to have read an article that focused on goiters. Apparently they were fairly common in the USA in the first part of the 20th century. They corrected this problem by putting iodine in drinking water. Your tap water will still have this but bottled water does not. Might not hurt to drink tap. Take care and good luck with this.

Lump in the throat sensation

feels like a golf ball, tennis ball, fur ball... is stuck in my throat
feels like my tie is too tight
feel like I am being strangled
my throat feels swollen
The symptoms can be mimicked by pushing on the cartilage in the neck just below the Adams apple.
The lump comes and goes depending on the day.
Symptoms are usually best in the AM and worse later in the day
Stress aggravates the symptoms.
Saliva is difficult to swallow yet food is easy to swallow.
Eating, in fact, often makes the tightness go away for a time.
The symptoms are similar to getting choked up at a wedding or a funeral.
Physiology 101
There are two valves in the esophagus or swallowing tube. They are normally lightly contracted and they relax when you swallow, so that food can pass through them going to the stomach. They then squeeze closed again to prevent regurgitation of the stomach contents. If the normal contraction becomes a spasm (like a charlie horse of the calf muscle) these symptoms start. Stress often makes these spasms much worse. Many people have experienced neck tightness when stressed and this is similar. Even if not caused by stress, stress will make the spasm much worse. Relaxation in many forms (from alcohol to meditation) may improve the symptoms.

A management program
An exam of the neck and throat is extemely important to eliminate serious problems. In fact, it enters most peoples minds that a lump in the throat might be a cancer. In practice, real lumps in the throat, such as a cancer are not felt. It is one of the reasons that a cancer can get so big before it is discovered. It probably is fortunate that we don't have great sensation in the throat as we would then feel every particle of food, with every meal as it travels down the throat. So lacking great sensation in the throat, problems are a little mysterious there.

Unfortunately, many physicians are not familiar with how symptomatic a cricopharyngeal spasm can be and I often see patients who have been extensively tested with Barium swallows, esophageal endoscopies, pH testing, CT scans, xrays, MRI scans and they all come back normal or possibly with some finding that is completely unrelated to the lump in the throat sensation. They may have been tried on numerous medication including proton pump inhibitors for presumed reflux.

Really, just a good exam of the throat, voice box and neck is all that is necessary and it is sufficient as well. I record my exam so that I can play it back and show the patient the structures in the throat. If possible I may try to pass my endoscope behind the voice box into the upper esophagus where the sphincter is. This will also elicit the symptoms, just as pushing lightly on the cricoid cartilage from externally elicits the symptoms.

You should know the following:

These symptoms are so characteristic that as soon as a patient tells me they have a lump in the throat, I can usually describe many of their symptoms to them.
After the exam, just knowing the tightness is not a sign of cancer frequently helps relieve the discomfort.
You will get better. Often improvement is over several weeks or even a few months, but occurs once one knows what the problem is.
Warm fluids should comfort the throat. Consider a cup of warm tea (preferably without caffeine) when the lump is bothersome.
If stress lets up, the symptoms improve. Think about what stress might be making this lump worse.
Muscle relaxants, such as valium, would be a good treatment, except for their addictive properties.
Medication
I sometimes dispense several valium (perhaps 4 to 10) as a test to prove the symptoms are from muscle spasms. I recommend taking one of the Valium on a weekend, when being alert is not important. When the lump occurs, one takes the Valium. Within an hour, there should be significant improvement in the lump sensation. If the symptoms improve after taking the muscle relaxant, then the symptoms are reasonably from a muscle spasm. Again, the knowledge that a muscle relaxant makes a lump disappear can help confirm that the cause of the lump is from a muscle and not an actual lump.
I have also tried injections with a local anesthetic, often with good, but temporary results. It does help to confirm in the patients mind, there is the possibility of relief.
If a local anesthetic injections helps, I have with inconsistent results injected botulinum toxin into the cricopharyngeus muscle, sometimes with prolonged relief.
Benefits
The symptoms go away.
Questions
I receive more email on this page than I can possibly respond to. The essence of many of the emails is that some or several symptoms are slightly different than on this page. Or perhaps, you have been examined by several ENT doctors who gave a different opinion than I do. There is really not much more I can tell you about the syndrome without examining you myself. You might consider sharing a copy of this page with your physician, though I am aware many physicians do not like the lack of peer review on the internet, but consider the page as an opening to talk about your particular case. You might also consider getting a second opinon from an ENT who specializes in the throat - a laryngologist.

I hope this may help to answer your question.

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