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George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

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thryoid secreting too much of the hormore thyroxin, which helps to regulate the body's<br />

metabolic rate. This hormone goes into the circulatory system, and thus can disturb the<br />

proper functioning of the heart. Lower the rate of production of thyroid hormone, and<br />

everything would return to normal, was the message. Lee said that <strong>Bush</strong> would undergo a<br />

thyroid scan and other tests to help determine the appropriate treatment. Contradicting<br />

earlier statements by Fitzwater that there had been no recent danger signals regarding<br />

<strong>Bush</strong>'s health, Lee now revealed that <strong>Bush</strong> had experienced a small weight loss and<br />

episodes of unusual fatigue during jogging over the previous few weeks. <strong>The</strong> weight loss<br />

had been of eight or nine pounds during the month before <strong>Bush</strong> was hospitalized. <strong>Bush</strong><br />

had been tired enough to complain, "Gee whiz, I must be getting old," on earlier joggings<br />

runs. [fn 31] Some of <strong>Bush</strong>'s symptoms appear to have emerged in February, during the<br />

time of the Iraq war. Lee claimed that <strong>Bush</strong> had never undergone tests of his thyroid<br />

functions because he had shown no symptoms of thyroid disturbance-- a patent absurdity.<br />

According to Burton Lee, the first indication of a thyroid disturbance came on Monday<br />

morning, when a blood test showed that the level of thyroid hormone in <strong>Bush</strong>'s blood was<br />

above normal. <strong>The</strong>se results were then confirmed with repeated blood tests.<br />

<strong>The</strong> official White House line was that this was good news, since thyroid disorders were<br />

easily treated. Fitzwater recounted that "<strong>The</strong> President was overjoyed. It means the<br />

problem was not a problem with his heart and that it is virtually 100 percent treatable."<br />

Burton Lee chimed in with his opinion that biochemical hyperthyroidism is "easily<br />

treatable."<br />

On May 9, <strong>Bush</strong>'s doctors announced that he was suffering from what they chose to call<br />

Graves' disease, a condition in which the thyroid gland becomes enlarged and produces<br />

excessive levels of hormone in response to "false messages" from other parts of the body<br />

about how much of the hormone is needed. Graves' disease is a disorder of the immune<br />

system in which the body produces an antibody which "mimics" the hormone that usually<br />

tells the thyroid how much thyroxin to produce. One decisive test was said to have<br />

involved <strong>Bush</strong>'s swallowing of a small dose of radioactive iodine, followed by<br />

observation with a device resembling a geiger counter to obtain an image of the thyroid.<br />

This thyroid scan revealed a gland that was enlarged, and absorbing iodine at faster than<br />

the normal rate. During this press conference, <strong>Bush</strong>'s medical team also conceded that<br />

<strong>Bush</strong> had experienced a renewed bout of atrial fibrillation in the form of a "rather brief<br />

episode" during the night of Tuesday, May 8.<br />

During this press conference, Burton Lee once again repeated the story that <strong>Bush</strong>'s<br />

thyroid had never been tested during his previous annual or other checkups. He offered<br />

the estimate that <strong>Bush</strong>'s thyroid condition had developed after his last medical checkup,<br />

which had been conducted on March 27, 1991. According to Dr. Kenneth Burman,a<br />

thyroid specialist at Walter Reed Army Medical Center who had been assigned to <strong>Bush</strong>'s<br />

case, the issue of whether thyroid tests should be a part of routine physical examination<br />

was controversial. Burman added that his personal opinion was that such tests were not<br />

cost-effective! Press reports reflected surprise on the part of outside experts about this<br />

alleged neglect of thyroid testing. Also joining in this press conference was Dr. Bruce K.<br />

Lloyd, the chief of cardiology at Bethesda Medical Center.

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