Guest guest Posted August 27, 2011 Report Share Posted August 27, 2011 Hi, my son was on anti-depressants and i did not no that the thyroxine he was trialing made him worse. it makes the dose of depressants more potent and you have to reduce the dose first.now he is clean from these dangerous drugs.(they can make you commit suicide.) the reasoning about adding T3 is to make the antidepressants work better as they don`t really work by them selves.my thoughts are not to take them in the first place as depression is caused by the lack of T3= or being hypo / and maybe adrenal as well as they work closely together. Angel. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 27, 2011 Report Share Posted August 27, 2011 Hi Angel I agree the anti-d's can be very dangerous; there are some really horrific stories about what people have done whilst on them, and people in drug trials have committed suicide after being on them, then taken off them (they were fine before hand). >> my thoughts are not to take them in the first place as depression is caused by the lack of T3= or being hypo / and maybe adrenal as well as they work closely together. bit late for that now, my mother's been on them for years, inc anti psychotic/mood stabilisers. she was no where near as bad as this before she started them. > > my thoughts are not to take them in the first place as depression is caused by the lack of T3= or being hypo / and maybe adrenal as well as they work closely together. Angel. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 27, 2011 Report Share Posted August 27, 2011 ps - i don't want to sound unsympathetic to people with depression, i have had problems with this for years, been on most of the meds (apart from the MAOIs), saw several psychiatrists. my teens were crap and depression filled, and 20s were too, mostly i struggled to exist and function, let alone cope, so i do have experience of this. i just disagree with the causes - be it hormonal, nutritional, or something else. the psych drugs are not good - they mess so many things up. i've had a lot more benefit /relief from hormones/vitamins. i've read a fair bit about orthomollecular psychiatry, too - thats' pretty interesting, they got results. not many people seem to know about this. i'm pretty sure i'm on a hiding to nothing emailing this doctor, but i do it anyway. pity my mother can't look at things like b12, candida, thyroid etc. but she is not interested. i can understand her being worn out, not being able to, but how hard is it if someone will do most of the thinking for her? she just needs the results and i can help, doesn't want to, yet is happy to take very strong meds. ah well. i try not to think about it. chris Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 27, 2011 Report Share Posted August 27, 2011 Hi - the following from Dr Peatfield: " Having just read the tragic news item from India about the depressed thyroid lady who committed suicide, and preparing as I am at present a lecture about thyroid and depression which I shall shortly give to London's Institute of Optimum Nutrition's Mind Conference, I felt it might be appropriate to remind people of the strong link and frequency of depression and hypothyroidism. Depression causes untold misery and destroys lives. Perhaps one in five people will suffer from it sometime in their lives. A huge industry has arisen around the treatment of depressive illness and psychiatrists are gainfully employed in their thousands. Whether it is more widespread than it was is perhaps difficult to answer. There are more of us to be depressed; we have more to be depressed about, and we are more likely to seek help. But there certainly seems to be more people troubled by depression and the great panoply of antidepressant medication tells its own story. Before having a look at thyroid deficiency and its link to depression, we should learn a bit about it, and how it is caused and why. People who are depressed are sad, unmotivated most of the day and are usually worse in the morning. They sleep poorly, and wake up tired; they feel worthless, they have a poor self-image. They may eat more or less and put on or lose weight. Sir Winston Churchill used to call it his Black Dog. In his case, as with many, it was self-limiting: probably an extra cigar and brandy banished it! There are two sorts of depression fundamentally: the exogenous kind, which is the result of circumstance, and the endogenous form, an illness from within ourselves. It is the second form we are to deal with. Maintenance of mood resides in part of the brain called the hippocampus. Here brain cells release neurotransmitter hormones, which are taken up by receptors; the amount released and the number of receptors responding, governs whether we are depressed or not. Probably the most important of these mood neuro transmitter substances are serotonin and noradrenalin, and treatment is directed at preventing the decay of these substances at the receiving nerve endings. This is what Monoamine Oxidase Inhibitors (MAOIs) antidepressants, Tricyclic antidepressants and Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitors (SSRIs) do. However, thyroid hormone deficiency acts on the receptor sites and hastens the recycling of these neurotransmitters at the nerve endings or reduces the amount being secreted. The result is that the neurotransmitters that are responsible for maintaining mood do not work at optimum efficiency. Depression then takes over. It has been estimated that more than one third of people suffering from depression are hypothyroid. Some are in hospital. They receive, over long periods, antidepressants of one sort or another when actually the problem is deficiency of thyroid hormones. It is simply that no one thought of thyroid deficiency as a cause when their illness began; or the simplistic tests failed to reveal it. Any patient suffering from depression should be routinely assessed for hypothyroidism. There should be no exceptions; half to one third will be found to be hypothyroid, and as a result of treatment, their depression will begin to lift in weeks. Conventional medicine will turn with little thought to psychotropic antidepressants. The problem with these is that they are sometimes difficult to stop taking. Of the SSRIs, Seroxat in particular has a poor reputation in this respect; Prozac has attracted unfavourable reports and moreover contains a fluoride compound. Tricyclic antidepressants (eg Tryptizol, Imipramime) often have unpleasant sedating side effects, and the MAOIs (eg Parnate, Nardil) clash with a number of drugs and foodstuffs. St 's Wort is an altogether simpler and safer alternative. Hypothyroidism should not be considered in isolation. It is more than likely that there are other deficiencies at work and cortisol, testosterone, oestrogen, DHEA and progesterone deficiencies should be looked for and corrected. It is now clear that nutrition plays a much greater role in mental illness than conventional medicine would have us believe. The brain and its neurotransmitters simply don't work properly without the proper raw materials. An obvious one is that there should be a constant, even supply, of its fuel glucose. Hypoglycaemia is certainly associated with depression. The essential amino acids must be provided for the manufacture of the protein neurotransmitters; so must essential fatty acids, especially the omega 3 group, which make up the structure of the brain and the neurones releasing the neurotransmitters. The vitamin B complex, folic acid, vitamin C are needed to allow the amino acids to form complex proteins and the other mineral micronutrients have to be there. Get the nutrients right (also ensuring thyroid manufacture and uptake), provide thyroid supplementation if required, perhaps as naturally as possible from glandular extracts, and we can fight the black tide of mind altering drugs that threatens to overwhelm so many of us. Hope that this helps. Luv - Sheila ps - i don't want to sound unsympathetic to people with depression, i have had problems with this for years, been on most of the meds (apart from the MAOIs), saw several psychiatrists. my teens were crap and depression filled, and 20s were too, mostly i struggled to exist and function, let alone cope, so i do have experience of this. i just disagree with the causes - be it hormonal, nutritional, or something else. the psych drugs are not good - they mess so many things up. i've had a lot more benefit /relief from hormones/vitamins. i've read a fair bit about orthomollecular psychiatry, too - thats' pretty interesting, they got results. not many people seem to know about this. i'm pretty sure i'm on a hiding to nothing emailing this doctor, but i do it anyway. pity my mother can't look at things like b12, candida, thyroid etc. but she is not interested. i can understand her being worn out, not being able to, but how hard is it if someone will do most of the thinking for her? she just needs the results and i can help, doesn't want to, yet is happy to take very strong meds. ah well. i try not to think about it. chris Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 27, 2011 Report Share Posted August 27, 2011 Thanks Sheila, I've read that link before. That's what's frustrating- anyone who has any knowledge knows lack of thyroid can cause depression. but my mother won't take any notice. i am now trying to become very detatched from the situation, to cope. it is very frustrating. unforunately, some psyhciatrists may not know the thyroid connection, and the pharmaceutical industry has vested interests doesn't it. chris Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 28, 2011 Report Share Posted August 28, 2011 My mum was, as far as I could see, hypothyroid. I nagged her for a couple of years to go to the doc but she just kept telling me I was obsessed with it..... So I wrote a letter for her to hand to her doc, It listed her symptoms and listed the other family members who have had problems and requested TSH, Free T4 and Free T3 tests. I gave her the letter some time ago and decided to say nothing more about it. I was very surprised recently when I spoke to her, seems she'd had time (about a year) to think about it and finally got fed up enough to give the letter to her doc. The doc did the tsh test (only)... it came back at 3. something. Doc said she would watch it, mum said she wasn't hanging around for the doc and is now on NT and doing great!! She had no messing around with half baked meds and prescriptions, she just asked me what to do, then got hold of her own meds and got on with it!!!!! Give your mum the info she needs in written form, and stand back, is my experience of what works!!!! xx > > Thanks Sheila, I've read that link before. > > That's what's frustrating- anyone who has any knowledge knows lack of thyroid can cause depression. but my mother won't take any notice. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 30, 2011 Report Share Posted August 30, 2011 Thanks for the reply Well i've mentioned it to her so many times, not wasting my breath anymore. she is quite content to make me spin my wheels, let me get upset while she tells me all her ills but won't do anything about it. i am not getting involved anymore. i did however email her psychiatrist yesterday. i put it factually and politely and put in a few links to articles on pubmed and said untreated thyroid issues can cause her exact symptoms, and not only that, he can use T3 in euthyroid patients. he won't like what i've wrote, i don't think. " They don't like it you know, they don't like it up 'em! " . i left off the bit that i thought it was highly irresponsible of him to change her meds - and every time he does this, she's in a mess - and then go on holiday for 3 weeks. chris > > > > My mum was, as far as I could see, hypothyroid. I nagged her for a couple of years to go to the doc but she just kept telling me I was obsessed with it..... > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 30, 2011 Report Share Posted August 30, 2011 Let us know if you get a response from him this will be very interesting. Boy, how you've grown since you started TPA! I'm reet proud of thee Lad! Luv - Sheila Thanks for the reply Well i've mentioned it to her so many times, not wasting my breath anymore. she is quite content to make me spin my wheels, let me get upset while she tells me all her ills but won't do anything about it. i am not getting involved anymore. i did however email her psychiatrist yesterday. i put it factually and politely and put in a few links to articles on pubmed and said untreated thyroid issues can cause her exact symptoms, and not only that, he can use T3 in euthyroid patients. he won't like what i've wrote, i don't think. " They don't like it you know, they don't like it up 'em! " . i left off the bit that i thought it was highly irresponsible of him to change her meds - and every time he does this, she's in a mess - and then go on holiday for 3 weeks. chris .._,___ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 30, 2011 Report Share Posted August 30, 2011 yeah i did, he just said thanks for my well written letter and he will seriously consider my suggestions or something like that - i don't think he'll take any notice of them whatsoever, but that's just my cynicism. this is not my problem, thankfully. glad i'm feeling better that is all and am able to try and think about these things. > > Let us know if you get a response from him this will be very > interesting. Boy, how you've grown since you started TPA! I'm reet proud of > thee Lad! > > Luv - Sheila > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 30, 2011 Report Share Posted August 30, 2011 i spoke to my mother just now....she said the psych had enjoyed reading my letter and said it was well written...and that she shouldn't be cross with me (I didn't tell her i'd written to him - i didn't want her to think i was interfering - i left it up to the psych to tell her if he wanted). He has changed her meds; i hope she improves.... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 31, 2011 Report Share Posted August 31, 2011 It looks like the psych did take notice of what i wrote - from a further chat to my mother, she advised me that he offered her some thyroxine yesterday (i now wonder what her results were)....i don't think he's ever offered her that before...my mother refused it, but i did suggest to her that she research this and work with him..... > > i spoke to my mother just now....she said the psych had enjoyed reading my letter and said it was well written...and that she shouldn't be cross with me (I didn't tell her i'd written to him - i didn't want her to think i was interfering - i left it up to the psych to tell her if he wanted). He has changed her meds; i hope she improves.... > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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