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Physician + Psychiatrist Integrated Review

Can Thyroid Problems Cause Anxiety and Depression? The Link Explained

Racing heart, restlessness, low mood, brain fog — sometimes the cause isn't "just stress." Your thyroid may be involved. This page is jointly reviewed by a Consultant Physician and a Consultant Psychiatrist, because getting this right needs both perspectives.

Quick answer: Yes — thyroid hormone imbalance can produce symptoms that closely mimic anxiety and depression. An overactive thyroid (hyperthyroidism) commonly causes anxiety-like symptoms: palpitations, tremors, restlessness, and poor sleep. An underactive thyroid (hypothyroidism) commonly causes depression-like symptoms: fatigue, low mood, weight gain, and slowed thinking. That's why a simple thyroid blood test (TSH, with free T4 where indicated) is an important early step before — or alongside — mental health treatment.

Why Thyroid and Mood Are So Closely Connected

Thyroid hormones regulate the speed of nearly every process in the body — including brain metabolism and neurotransmitter activity. When levels drift too high or too low, the brain feels it early, often before other organs. This is why mood and anxiety changes are sometimes the first sign of a thyroid problem, appearing months before classic symptoms like neck swelling or major weight change.

The overlap works in both directions, which is where patients often get stuck between specialists:

Overactive thyroid can look like anxiety

  • Palpitations, racing heartbeat
  • Tremors in the hands
  • Restlessness, irritability
  • Sweating and heat intolerance
  • Difficulty sleeping
  • Weight loss despite good appetite

Underactive thyroid can look like depression

  • Persistent tiredness and low energy
  • Low mood, loss of interest
  • Slowed thinking, "brain fog"
  • Weight gain, cold intolerance
  • Constipation, dry skin
  • Excessive sleepiness

The Problem: Treating One While Missing the Other

Two common scenarios we see in Greater Noida:

Scenario 1 — Anxiety treatment without a thyroid check. A person receives months of treatment for "anxiety" while an undiagnosed thyroid imbalance keeps driving the symptoms. Progress stalls, and frustration grows.

Scenario 2 — Normal thyroid report, symptoms dismissed. The opposite also happens: thyroid tests come back normal, and the person is told "it's nothing" — when a genuine anxiety disorder or depression is present and very treatable. Mental health symptoms are real illnesses in their own right, not a diagnosis of exclusion to be brushed aside.

There is also a middle zone: subclinical hypothyroidism (borderline TSH), where the decision to treat depends on symptoms, age, and other factors — a judgement call best made by a physician looking at the whole picture.

How We Approach It at Nirvana Clinic

This is where our two-specialist model genuinely changes the experience. Under one roof:

StepWhat happensWho leads
1. Medical screenFocused history and thyroid function tests (TSH ± free T4); vitamin B12, D, and haemoglobin are checked where relevant, since deficiencies also mimic mood symptomsDr. Manuj Sondhi (Physician)
2. Thyroid correction if neededIf an imbalance is found, it is treated and monitored; mood symptoms are reassessed once levels stabiliseDr. Manuj Sondhi
3. Psychiatric evaluationIf symptoms persist despite normal or corrected thyroid levels — or are severe from the start — a structured mental health assessment identifies anxiety, depression, or another treatable conditionDr. Debolina Chowdhury (Psychiatrist)
4. Coordinated planBoth doctors share notes, so medicines are chosen to work together and nothing falls between two clinicsBoth, jointly

No referral letters, no repeating your story at a second clinic, no conflicting prescriptions.

Dr. Debolina Chowdhury, Consultant Psychiatrist

Dr. Debolina Chowdhury

Consultant Psychiatrist · MBBS, MD Psychiatry (JNMC, Wardha) · 15+ years of experience · NMC Reg. 12-46759 · English / Hindi / Bengali

MS

Dr. Manuj Sondhi

Consultant Physician & Diabetologist · MRCP (UK), MD, DNB · PGD Clinical Endocrinology & Diabetes · NMC Reg. 12-42985 · Thyroid care at Nirvana Clinic

When to Get Checked

Consider a combined evaluation if:

• Anxiety or low mood started or worsened alongside weight change, palpitations, or unusual fatigue
• You've been treated for anxiety/depression but progress has plateaued and thyroid was never tested
• You have a thyroid condition and mood symptoms despite "normal" reports
• There is a family history of thyroid disease and new mood changes
• You're a woman in the postpartum year — thyroid imbalance and postpartum depression can overlap and both need attention

One Clinic. Both Answers.

Get the thyroid tested and the mind assessed — coordinated by a physician and a psychiatrist working together, opposite Delta-1 Metro Station, Greater Noida.

WhatsApp to Book Call +91 88264 47767

Frequently Asked Questions

Which thyroid test should I do for anxiety or depression symptoms?
TSH is the standard first test; free T4 is added where indicated. Your doctor may also check vitamin B12, vitamin D, and haemoglobin, since these deficiencies can mimic mood symptoms too. Test selection should be guided by a doctor rather than done as a random panel.
If my thyroid is corrected, will my anxiety or depression disappear?
Sometimes mood symptoms improve substantially once thyroid levels normalise — but not always. If symptoms persist after correction, an independent anxiety or depressive disorder may be present, and it responds well to proper psychiatric treatment. Both possibilities are taken seriously here.
Can thyroid medicine and antidepressants be taken together?
Yes, in most cases they can be safely combined under medical supervision. This is exactly why coordinated care matters — both doctors at Nirvana Clinic see the full medicine list and plan accordingly. Never start or stop either medicine on your own.
My TSH is borderline. Is that causing my low mood?
Borderline (subclinical) results are a grey zone. Whether treatment helps depends on the TSH level, symptoms, age, and antibody status. Read our detailed guide on subclinical hypothyroidism, and discuss your specific report with a physician.
Can stress itself affect the thyroid?
Severe stress can influence thyroid test results transiently, and living with a chronic illness like thyroid disease can itself contribute to anxiety or low mood. The relationship runs in both directions — another reason an integrated assessment is more reliable than looking at either system alone.
Medically reviewed by Dr. Manuj Sondhi, MRCP (UK), MD, DNB — Consultant Physician & Diabetologist, and Dr. Debolina Chowdhury, MBBS, MD Psychiatry — Consultant Psychiatrist, Nirvana Clinic, Greater Noida.
Last updated: 7 July 2026
Medical disclaimer: This page is for general education and does not replace an individual medical consultation. Thyroid and mental health conditions require proper evaluation and personalised treatment; do not start, stop, or change any medicine based on this page. If you are experiencing thoughts of self-harm, please seek immediate help — contact Tele-MANAS at 14416 or visit the nearest hospital emergency department.