The word 'thyroid' derives from Greek 'thyreoeidḗs' (θυρεοειδής), meaning 'shield-shaped.' The compound consists of 'thyreós' (θυρεός, a large oblong shield) and the suffix '-eidḗs' (shaped like, from 'eîdos,' form or shape). The 'thyreós' was a specific type of ancient Greek shield — large, rectangular, and curved, resembling a door. Indeed, the word 'thyreós' derives from 'thýra' (θύρα, door), because this shield was shaped like a door panel. The PIE root behind 'thýra' is *dhwer- (door, gate), one of the most securely reconstructed PIE words, with reflexes in virtually every branch of the family.
The PIE root *dhwer- produced an extraordinary word family. In Germanic: English 'door,' German 'Tür,' Dutch 'deur,' Old Norse 'dyrr.' In Latin: 'foris' (door, gate) — which produced 'foreign' (literally 'outside the door'), 'forest' (the 'outside' land beyond the village gate), 'forum' (originally an outdoor public space), and 'forensic' (pertaining to the forum, hence to public courts of law). In Greek: 'thýra' (door), which gave 'thyroid' through the chain door → door-shield → shield-shaped
The term 'thyroid' was first applied not to the gland but to the thyroid cartilage — the largest cartilage of the larynx, which forms the 'Adam's apple.' The anatomist Thomas Wharton, in his 'Adenographia' (1656), named the gland 'glandula thyreoidea' because it sits adjacent to the thyroid cartilage. The cartilage was named 'thyroid' (shield-shaped) by Galen, who noted its resemblance to the thyreós shield.
The thyroid gland itself is a butterfly-shaped organ in the front of the neck, wrapping around the trachea. It produces two main hormones: thyroxine (T4) and triiodothyronine (T3), which regulate the body's metabolic rate, heart function, digestive function, muscle control, brain development, and bone maintenance. The gland's function was unknown until the nineteenth century, when clinical observations of thyroid enlargement (goiter), thyroid deficiency (hypothyroidism), and thyroid excess (hyperthyroidism) gradually revealed its metabolic role.
Goiter — the visible enlargement of the thyroid — has been observed since antiquity. The most common historical cause was iodine deficiency, since the thyroid requires iodine to produce its hormones. In regions far from the sea (where iodine is scarce in the soil and water), goiter was endemic. The Swiss Alps, the Himalayas, the Great Lakes region of North America, and central Africa were all 'goiter belts.' The introduction of iodized salt in the 1920s — first in Switzerland, then in the United States
Hypothyroidism (underactive thyroid) causes fatigue, weight gain, cold intolerance, depression, and cognitive slowing. In infants, severe hypothyroidism causes cretinism — a condition of stunted physical and mental development. Hyperthyroidism (overactive thyroid) causes weight loss, rapid heartbeat, anxiety, tremor, and heat intolerance. Graves' disease, an autoimmune form of hyperthyroidism, is named after the Irish physician Robert Graves (1835).
The medical vocabulary includes 'thyroidectomy' (surgical removal), 'hypothyroidism' and 'hyperthyroidism' (under- and overactivity), 'thyroiditis' (inflammation), 'thyroid-stimulating hormone' (TSH, produced by the pituitary gland to regulate the thyroid), and 'thyroxine' (the primary thyroid hormone, synthesized for medical use as levothyroxine — one of the most commonly prescribed medications in the world).