Thyroid Symptoms in Women — 12 Warning Signs You Must Not Miss

Last Updated: March 2026 | Reading Time: 9 minutes | ~2,000 words

Thyroid symptoms in women are so common and so varied that they are routinely mistaken for stress, aging, PCOS, anaemia, or depression — sometimes for years. In India, approximately 1 in 8 women will develop a thyroid disorder during her lifetime, making it one of the most prevalent conditions in women’s health. The challenge is that thyroid symptoms overlap with almost every other hormonal condition. This guide identifies the specific symptom patterns, combinations, and timings that point to the thyroid — and tells you exactly when to get tested.

Thyroid Symptoms in Women — Complete Warning Signs Guide
Thyroid Symptoms in Women — Complete Warning Signs Guide | StudyHub Health

Why Are Women More Affected by Thyroid Disease?

Women are 5 to 10 times more likely to develop thyroid disorders than men. This is primarily because thyroid disease is most often autoimmune in nature — and autoimmune conditions disproportionately affect women. The female immune system is naturally more reactive (which helps protection during pregnancy), but this also makes it more likely to mistakenly attack the body’s own tissues, including the thyroid gland. Additionally, oestrogen directly influences thyroid hormone levels, which is why thyroid problems often first appear or worsen at major hormonal transitions: puberty, pregnancy, postpartum, perimenopause, and menopause.

12 Thyroid Symptoms in Women — Complete List

#SymptomHypothyroid (Underactive)Hyperthyroid (Overactive)
1Weight✅ Unexplained weight gain✅ Unexplained weight loss
2Energy✅ Extreme fatigue, sluggishness✅ Hyperactivity, can’t rest
3Temperature✅ Always feels cold✅ Always feels hot, sweating
4Hair✅ Diffuse hair thinning, dry brittle hair✅ Fine, thin hair, some loss
5Mood✅ Depression, low motivation✅ Anxiety, panic attacks
6Periods✅ Heavy, longer, more frequent✅ Light, scanty, less frequent or absent
7Brain✅ Brain fog, poor memory✅ Difficulty concentrating, restlessness
8Skin✅ Dry, flaky, pale skin✅ Moist, warm, smooth skin
9Heart rate✅ Slow heart rate✅ Fast/irregular palpitations
10Sleep✅ Sleeping too much, still tired✅ Insomnia despite tiredness
11Digestion✅ Constipation✅ Frequent bowel movements, diarrhoea
12Fertility✅ Difficulty conceiving✅ Irregular cycles, pregnancy complications

Symptoms Women Most Commonly Ignore

1. Hair Loss and Eyebrow Thinning

Thyroid-related hair loss is diffuse — it affects the entire scalp evenly rather than in patches. Women notice it when brushing or in the shower drain. The key distinguishing feature of hypothyroid hair loss is thinning of the outer third of the eyebrows — the part near the temples. This is one of the most specific physical signs of hypothyroidism and is almost universally missed by patients and often by general doctors unfamiliar with thyroid signs. If your eyebrows are noticeably thinner on the outer edges and you are losing scalp hair diffusely — get a TSH test.

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2. Menstrual Changes

Hypothyroidism causes heavy, prolonged periods (menorrhagia) and shorter cycles — sometimes periods every 21–23 days instead of 28–35. Hyperthyroidism does the opposite — periods become scanty, very light, or disappear altogether (amenorrhoea). Both conditions can cause infertility. Many Indian women with irregular periods are immediately investigated for PCOS when hypothyroidism is actually the cause. A TSH test should be the very first investigation for any woman with new-onset menstrual irregularities.

3. Puffy Face and Swollen Eyes

Severe or prolonged hypothyroidism causes myxedema — a type of fluid retention that specifically affects the face, causing puffiness around the eyes and a swollen, dull appearance. Unlike the puffiness from a bad night’s sleep which resolves by mid-morning, myxedema is persistent throughout the day. Many women attribute this to allergies or poor sleep for years.

4. Anxiety and Palpitations — Often Missed as Hyperthyroid

Women with hyperthyroidism are frequently diagnosed with anxiety disorder, panic attacks, or heart arrhythmias before anyone thinks to check the thyroid. Racing heart at rest, feeling constantly wired and anxious despite no external stressor, trembling hands, and inability to sleep — when these occur together in a woman who has also lost weight and sweats excessively, hyperthyroidism must be ruled out before psychiatric or cardiac diagnoses are made.

Thyroid Symptoms at Different Life Stages

Life StageThyroid RiskKey Symptoms at That StageWhat to Do
Adolescence (12–18)Low but possibleHeavy periods, fatigue, poor concentration, growth issuesTest if periods are consistently heavy or absent
Reproductive years (18–40)High — peak onsetWeight changes, hair loss, irregular periods, infertilityTest TSH annually if symptomatic or family history
PregnancyVery High — criticalExtreme fatigue, nausea, weight issues (may overlap with pregnancy)Mandatory TSH in first trimester for all pregnant women in India
Postpartum (0–18 months)Very High — postpartum thyroiditisAlternating fatigue and anxiety phases; hair fall at 3–4 monthsTSH at 3 and 6 months post-delivery
Perimenopause (40–50)High — symptoms overlapWeight gain, hot flashes, mood changes, poor sleepTSH test before attributing symptoms to menopause
Post-menopause (50+)Highest lifetime riskOften subtle — fatigue, constipation, joint painAnnual TSH screening strongly recommended

Thyroid and Pregnancy — Critical Points Every Indian Woman Must Know

  • 🤰 Untreated hypothyroidism during pregnancy raises the risk of miscarriage by 60% and is linked to impaired foetal brain development and preterm birth
  • 📈 Thyroid hormone requirements increase by 25–50% in the first trimester — women on levothyroxine must have their dose increased immediately on confirming pregnancy
  • 🧪 All Indian pregnant women should have TSH tested at the first antenatal visit — trimester-specific normal ranges apply (TSH <2.5 in first trimester)
  • 👶 Postpartum thyroiditis affects up to 10% of Indian women after delivery — presenting as alternating hyperthyroid then hypothyroid phases over 12–18 months
  • 🍼 Breastfeeding is safe on levothyroxine — very small amounts pass in breast milk and are not harmful to the infant
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Thyroid vs PCOS vs Depression — How to Tell the Difference

SymptomHypothyroidismPCOSDepression
Weight gain✅ Diffuse, with puffiness✅ Mainly belly fat✅ Variable
Hair loss✅ Diffuse + outer eyebrows✅ Male-pattern (temples, scalp)❌ Rare
Irregular periods✅ Heavy, frequent✅ Infrequent, skipped❌ Rare directly
Fatigue✅ Always, not mood-related✅ Often✅ Linked to mood
Skin findingsDry, pale, puffy faceAcne, dark neck patchesNo specific finding
TSH test✅ AbnormalUsually normalUsually normal
First test neededTSH blood testPelvic ultrasound + hormonesClinical assessment

💡 Important: PCOS and hypothyroidism frequently coexist in Indian women. A woman with PCOS symptoms should always have TSH checked — both conditions together worsen weight, hair loss, and fertility problems significantly.

When to Get a Thyroid Test — Checklist for Indian Women

Get a TSH test immediately if you have any 3 or more of the following:

  • ☑️ Unexplained weight gain or loss (more than 3–4 kg without diet/exercise change)
  • ☑️ Persistent fatigue that sleep doesn’t fix
  • ☑️ Heavy, irregular, or absent periods
  • ☑️ Diffuse hair thinning or outer eyebrow loss
  • ☑️ Feeling cold all the time (or always sweating excessively)
  • ☑️ Depression, brain fog, or anxiety without clear cause
  • ☑️ Difficulty getting pregnant for more than 6 months
  • ☑️ Family history of thyroid disease (mother, sister, aunt)
  • ☑️ You are pregnant or just delivered (mandatory)

Key Takeaways

PointKey Fact
How common1 in 8 women in India has a thyroid disorder
Most missed symptomOuter eyebrow thinning — almost pathognomonic for hypothyroidism
Periods signalHeavy periods = suspect hypothyroid; scanty/absent = suspect hyperthyroid
Must test in pregnancyTSH in first trimester for every pregnant woman
Often confused withPCOS, depression, anaemia, perimenopause — all can coexist
Cost of TSH test₹100–200 at most diagnostic labs in India

Frequently Asked Questions

What are the first signs of thyroid problems in women?

The earliest and most commonly reported first signs of hypothyroidism in Indian women are unexplained fatigue (feeling exhausted despite sleeping adequately), diffuse hair thinning noticed in the shower or while brushing, and weight gain of 2–5 kg without any change in diet or activity level. These three together — fatigue, hair loss, and weight gain — forming a triad should immediately trigger a TSH blood test. For hyperthyroidism, the first signs are typically heart palpitations (feeling the heartbeat prominently at rest), unusual anxiety or nervousness, and unexpected weight loss despite eating normally. Both conditions are frequently dismissed initially as stress-related, which delays diagnosis by an average of 1–2 years in India.

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Can thyroid problems cause anxiety and panic attacks in women?

Yes — both thyroid extremes can cause psychiatric symptoms. Hyperthyroidism causes genuine anxiety, restlessness, sudden panic attacks, racing thoughts, and emotional volatility — all resulting directly from excess thyroid hormone stimulating the nervous system. These symptoms can be severe enough to lead to misdiagnosis with anxiety disorder for months or years. Hypothyroidism causes low mood, emotional numbness, poor motivation, and clinical depression — sometimes severe enough to require psychiatric care. In both cases, treating the thyroid often dramatically improves the mental health symptoms without psychiatric medication. Any woman with new or worsening anxiety or depression should have TSH checked as a routine first step, especially if accompanied by any physical thyroid symptoms.

Can thyroid disease cause hair loss in women?

Yes — thyroid-related hair loss is one of the most common and distressing symptoms. In hypothyroidism, hair becomes dry, brittle, and gradually thins across the entire scalp (diffuse pattern). The telltale sign is loss of the outer third of the eyebrows — a finding so specific to hypothyroidism that it is taught in medical schools as a diagnostic clue. In hyperthyroidism, hair becomes very fine and thin and may fall. Importantly, starting thyroid treatment does not produce immediate hair regrowth — there is typically a lag of 3–6 months after TSH normalises before hair regrowth becomes visible, and full density recovery can take up to 12 months. During this period, adequate protein, iron (serum ferritin above 70 ng/mL), and biotin intake support hair recovery.

Does thyroid disease affect fertility in women?

Significantly yes. Both hypothyroidism and hyperthyroidism impair fertility in women through multiple mechanisms. Hypothyroidism disrupts the HPO axis (hypothalamus-pituitary-ovarian axis) — it interferes with the hormonal cascade that triggers ovulation, causing irregular or anovulatory cycles (cycles where ovulation doesn’t occur). Elevated TSH also raises prolactin (the breastfeeding hormone), which further suppresses ovulation. Even subclinical hypothyroidism (TSH 4–10, normal T4) has been associated with reduced fertility and increased miscarriage risk. The good news is that treating hypothyroidism with levothyroxine to bring TSH to the optimal range of 1–2.5 mIU/L for fertility significantly improves ovulation and conception rates. All women experiencing difficulty conceiving should have TSH tested before proceeding to more complex fertility investigations.

How do I know if my symptoms are thyroid or menopause?

This is one of the most clinically challenging differential diagnoses, because thyroid disease and perimenopause share many symptoms: hot flashes, weight gain, mood changes, poor sleep, joint pain, and irregular periods. The key distinguishing strategy is a TSH blood test — but interpretation requires care. Thyroid disease at any TSH level (high or low) with symptoms should be treated. Perimenopause is diagnosed by elevated FSH and reduced oestradiol on hormone panel. Critically, both can exist simultaneously — a 45-year-old woman may have both perimenopausal hormonal shifts AND newly developing hypothyroidism. Treat both when present. Weight gain that responds to thyroid treatment (levothyroxine) points to thyroid; weight gain that doesn’t improve with adequate thyroid treatment points to metabolic or perimenopausal causes needing separate management.


What to Read Next


The thyroid is small enough to fit in your palm — but powerful enough to affect every single cell in your body. In India, where thyroid disease in women is massively underdiagnosed, a ₹150 TSH test could save years of unexplained suffering. If any of the symptoms in this guide resonate with you, that test is where to start.

About This Guide: Written by the StudyHub Health Editorial Team based on guidelines from the American Thyroid Association (ATA), Indian Thyroid Society (ITS), ICMR, and WHO. All clinical values follow current Indian practice guidelines. Last updated: March 2026.


Authoritative Sources: American Thyroid Association | Mayo Clinic — Hypothyroidism | WHO — Thyroid | ICMR India

⚕️ Medical Disclaimer: This article is for general informational and educational purposes only. It is not a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult an endocrinologist or gynaecologist for thyroid-related symptoms. Never adjust thyroid medication without medical supervision.

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