Guest guest Posted March 5, 2006 Report Share Posted March 5, 2006 Hi, Tate. Hashimoto's thyroiditis is the most common type of hypothyroidism in the developed countries, where iodine deficiency is not common. Worldwide, iodine deficiency is the most common cause of hypothyroidism. Iodine deficiency occurs because iodine is one of the three minerals that people need, but plants don't (the other two are chromium and selenium). Plants do pick up these minerals if they are in the soil on which they are grown. But people who live in regions where iodine happens to be low in the soil can grow perfectly healthy food crops and eat them, but not receive enough iodine. In the U.S., iodine has been added to table salt for many years, and this eliminated most iodine deficiency. Some concern has been expressed that iodine deficiency will become more common in the U.S., because many people have gone on low-salt diets and many people eat quite a bit of their food from fast food outlets that may use noniodized salt in order to lower their costs. If you want to check your iodine status, you can get a bottle of tincture of iodine and make a spot on your arm with it about the size of a quarter. Look at it 24 hours later. If it's gone, you are short of iodine. If it's still there, you have sufficient iodine. There is no general agreement on the cause or causes of Hashimoto's thyroiditis. In CFS, I have proposed (in my AACFS poster paper in Oct. 2004) that it is caused by glutathione depletion in the thyroid gland. Normally, the thyroid gland generates hydrogen peroxide to use in the synthesis of thyroid hormones, the final step of which occurs outside the cells. The thyroid cells protect themselves from the hydrogen peroxide that diffuses back into the cells by generating glutathione, which serves as an antioxidant. When glutathione becomes depleted in the thyroid gland because of bodywide depletion of cysteine, the hydrogen peroxide attacks molecules within the cells. The immune system responds to clean up these damaged molecules and in the process, it generates antibodies to thyroid molecules. It is therefore viewed as an autoimmune disease, but in CFS, at least, I think it is not really the fault of the immune system. It is just doing its job of cleanup. I cited literature support for this hypothesis in my paper. Recent reports from two or three people on this list suggest that when glutathione is built back up, the thyroid begins to come back to normal operation. I think this supports my hypothesis. Rich > > Hi, > > I'm wanting to know the difference between the two, and if treatments > for them differ. > > thanks, > Tate > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 5, 2006 Report Share Posted March 5, 2006 Hi Tate and Rich- Rich, great summary. I knew that Hashimotos wasn't a slam dunk autoimmune disorder but I never understood the hydroperox part of it. Thanks for the explanation. You have this great way of taking the most complicated stuff and explaining it in clear and simple language that even miss brain fog here can understand..lol... I am all for keep it simple these days..lol..hmmm..wonder if that is CFIDS or age...lol.... Tate-I have clear cut Hashimotos. Running my antibodies, there is no doubt. Years ago before I got really sick, my antibodies weren't elevated therefore we suspected plain ole Hypothyroidism. Then when the antibodies elevated, we knew is was Hashis. Due to the nature of my chemical poisioning, my hormones are the obsession of my life. As with my primary sex hormones and androgens, my thyroid medication is made by a compound pharmacy and is a sustained release combo of T4 and T3 specific to what my body needs. Years ago when first dx'd, I went the usual route of the Synthroid, Thyrolar, Cytomel, Armour, etc (hello osteoporosis) and felt like crap. I KNEW they were not right for my body. I am so gratefult that the world of compound pharmacies was presented to me. Before actually confirming Hashis, I tried the 's protocol because it is believed that some people with regular Hypothyroidism can " jolt " a sluggish thyroid " back to life " with his up and down ladder protocol of straight compounded sustained release T3. I have a friend that did three rounds of the protocol and has been fine ever since. But of course when it comes to moi, nothing's that easy..lol.. Anyway, I have done a ton of reading on this issue and years ago, put together some misc. notes from a variety of resources. Much of it came from reading stuff from Broda , 's Syndrome website, Dr Lowe's website, conversations with this group (I think some is from Rich and Napier, who was active with this group a few years ago) and other groups, etc. Some great general info: http://www.wilsonssyndrome.com http://drlowe.com http://www.brodabarnes.org (his bookstore has some great books, including his own) I am not an expert on this subject by any means and welcome any corrections and/or feedback to any info here, particularly if it is incorrect or perhaps now out of date. Kathy NOTES FROM VARIOUS SOURCES STARTS HERE: The thyroid system regulates body’s metabolic rate. The purpose of the thyroid system is to maintain a normal body temperature. T4 is the raw material to make active T3. Active T3 is what the body needs. TSH and T4 shows thyroid hormone in blood, not how effectively T3 is affecting the cells. T3 conversion happens in the tissues of the body. No test can test what’s happening in the tissues and cells of the body. WTS is essentially a stress and starvation mechanism gone amuck. Production of thyroid hormone is often normal; the processing of that hormone in the tissue can get bogged down. WTS is a low thyroid problem, happening “downstream” from the blood stream, therefore undiagnosable with thyroid tests. This downstream part of the thyroid system is responsible for processing or converting T4 into active T3. Almost all the active T3 in the body is produced from T4 after T4 leaves the blood stream. Under physical, mental or emotional stress the body slows down the metabolism by decreasing the amount of T4 that is converted to active T3 while increasing the amount that is converted into the inactive by-product called Reverse T3. This is done to conserve energy. When stressed or starved, the T4 to T3 conversion decreases and the cells of the body slow down so the body temperature drops. When the temperature drops, many of the body’s enzymes do not function as well. When the stress is over, the metabolism is supposed to speed back up to normal. This does not happen correctly in thyroid disorders. RT3 can build so high that it can start hogging the enzyme that converts T4 to T3. This enzyme is called 5’-Deiodinase. Solution: Clearing out the RT3 so the tissues can reset the system and function normally on its own again. Bring down the level of RT3 to also decrease T4. No T4 = no active T3 so the body has to start making it’s own again. Summary: Administering direct pure T3 reduces TSH because the body sees it has enough thyroid hormone. So the message is not sent by the TSH to make T4, which is then converted to RT3 or T3. Cannot do T3 therapy long term as it will weaken long term T4 production. Period of stress induces T4 conversion into the biologically inert stereoisomer called Reverse T3. RT3 is a mirror image of active T3 and fits well into T3 cell-membrane receptor sites upside down. Once bound to these receptors, RT3 prevents active T3 from binding, thus preventing thyroid activation at these receptor sites. Important to note that the symptoms of poor conversion & /or receptor sites blocked with RT3 can also be similar to symptoms of adrenal insufficiency from high/low cortisol & /or DHEA. Hypothyroidism: High TSH and low T4 and T3. Patient’s thyroid gland has lost its organ reserve capacity to produce adequate levels of T4 and T3. These patients need to take thyroid replacement continually. However, hypothyroid patients may also be poor converters of T4 into T3 and neither T4 nor glandular thyroid replacement will optimize these patients. Combination T4 and T3 is indicated here. The body will save energy example: maintenance of skin, our largest organ. By decreasing energy to maintain = dry skin, dry hair, hair loss, brittle nails.etc. Poor healing. Don’t need food as much. LUXURY FUNCTIONS SUCH AS SEX DRIVE ARE THE FIRST TO GO. The more important functions, hearing, heart breathing are not a greatly affected by body temperature. Progesterone and pregnenolone activate thyroid function Estrogen opposes thyroid function Conventional treatments: T3/T4 combos: Immediate release T3. Also contain T4, which is what we’re trying to reduce to deplete the RT3 levels. T4: Symptoms improve but come back, typically after 2-3 months. Dr. increases dose. Feel better for a while then worse. Eventually, T4 may be increased and patient gets worse right off the bat. Avoid Goitrogens: broccoli cauliflower cabbage turnips mustards greens kale spinach brussel sprouts kohlrabi rutabagas horseradish radish and white mustard Consume: molasses, egg yolks, parsley, apricots, dates, prunes, fish, chicken, raw milk, cheeses Temperature: Shake down thermometer to 96.0. Take temperature for 7 minutes Nothing hot or cold at least 15 minutes prior Do pulse and temperature 3, 6 & 9 hours after waking Add and divide by 3 to get average daily temperature Temperature: Upon wakening, put in armpit for 10 minutes 97.8 – 98.2 is normal Protocol Notes: One-day compensator: Rise first day Falls second day of same dose Will reach 98.6 more easily by raising 7.5 ug daily Wean down dose every two days Features of One day: Reach and maintain 98.6 at certain dose Temp relapse as dose is lowered On next cycle, once compensation achieved, use patients lowered temperature as a guide to increase the dose to the next 7.5 ug increment At next highest increment, hold the does for five-seven days or longer on subsequent cycles before weaning down. If temp relapses, raise the dose 37.5 and higher causes T4 suppression and greater risk of side effects From Internet Web group: There is no Phase I involved, only Phase II. But most of the thyroid hormones is actually disassembled and recycled. It's kind of complicated, but here's a summary (Based on N. V. Bhagavan, Medical Biochemistry, Fourth Edition, 2002, p. 777): As you probably know, there are two active thyroid hormones, T4 and T3, with T3 being much more active than T4. The metabolism of T4 involves about 20% of it being directly processed by glucuronidation or sulfonation in the liver, and going into the bile, or by deamination and decarboxylation to produce inactive thyroacetic acid derivatives, and I don't know what happens to them. Another 30% is deiodinated to produce T3, and the remaining 50% is deiodinated to produce rT3, which is inactive, and is completely deiodinated to produce tyrosine, which can be recycled for various uses, and iodide. Of the T3, about 20% is directly processed by glucuronidation or sulfonation and goes out in the bile, or by deamination and decarboxylation to inactive thyroacetic acid derivatives, whose fate I don't know. The other 80% is completely deiodinated to form tyrosine, which is recycled, and iodide. The iodide is partly reabsorbed by the thyroid gland to be used to make more T4 and T3, and the rest goes to the urine via the kidneys. Part of the conjugated T4 and T3 that goes out in the bile is hydrolyzed (deconjugated) and recycled to the liver via the enterohepatic circulation, and is put back into the blood stream to be used again. The rest goes to the stools. The average actual daily intake of iodine is about 500 micrograms. By far, most of the iodine that is lost from the body goes out in the urine (about 488 micrograms per day). About 12 micrograms per day goes out in the stools. The RDA for iodine has been set at 150 micrograms per day. NOTES FROM VARIOUS SOURCES ENDS HERE ,konynen " <richvank@...> Sun Mar 5, 2006 3:16 am Hi, Tate. Hashimoto's thyroiditis is the most common type of hypothyroidism in the developed countries, where iodine deficiency is not common. Worldwide, iodine deficiency is the most common cause of hypothyroidism. Iodine deficiency occurs because iodine is one of the three minerals that people need, but plants don't (the other two are chromium and selenium). Plants do pick up these minerals if they are in the soil on which they are grown. But people who live in regions where iodine happens to be low in the soil can grow perfectly healthy food crops and eat them, but not receive enough iodine. In the U.S., iodine has been added to table salt for many years, and this eliminated most iodine deficiency. Some concern has been expressed that iodine deficiency will become more common in the U.S., because many people have gone on low-salt diets and many people eat quite a bit of their food from fast food outlets that may use noniodized salt in order to lower their costs. If you want to check your iodine status, you can get a bottle of tincture of iodine and make a spot on your arm with it about the size of a quarter. Look at it 24 hours later. If it's gone, you are short of iodine. If it's still there, you have sufficient iodine. There is no general agreement on the cause or causes of Hashimoto's thyroiditis. In CFS, I have proposed (in my AACFS poster paper in Oct. 2004) that it is caused by glutathione depletion in the thyroid gland. Normally, the thyroid gland generates hydrogen peroxide to use in the synthesis of thyroid hormones, the final step of which occurs outside the cells. The thyroid cells protect themselves from the hydrogen peroxide that diffuses back into the cells by generating glutathione, which serves as an antioxidant. When glutathione becomes depleted in the thyroid gland because of bodywide depletion of cysteine, the hydrogen peroxide attacks molecules within the cells. The immune system responds to clean up these damaged molecules and in the process, it generates antibodies to thyroid molecules. It is therefore viewed as an autoimmune disease, but in CFS, at least, I think it is not really the fault of the immune system. It is just doing its job of cleanup. I cited literature support for this hypothesis in my paper. Recent reports from two or three people on this list suggest that when glutathione is built back up, the thyroid begins to come back to normal operation. I think this supports my hypothesis. Rich > > Hi, I'm wanting to know the difference between the two, and if treatments for them differ. > thanks, > Tate > --------------------------------- Relax. virus scanning helps detect nasty viruses! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 5, 2006 Report Share Posted March 5, 2006 Kathy, This is a wealth of great information, but my head is spinning (more than usual). Did you figure out what exactly you needed on your own (and from all the info. you posted?) or did you have a health professional assiting you? I imagine using a compouding pharmacy you would have to know exactly what to compound. I was Dx many years ago with the same Hashi/Hypo with an aspirated cold nodule. Practially every doctor I've seen has a different take on TSH panels and how to treat and I don't want to fool around with hormones myself, but I am so frustrated as to what to take and at what level. Presently, I'm taking 45 mg. Armour and feel no Thyroid issues in the fore (in my body,) so guess I will continue until ... I see if raising my glutathione levels, as many have suggested here, might make a difference and actually eliminate the need for any Thyroid medication. Ballady Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 5, 2006 Report Share Posted March 5, 2006 Hi Ballady- I know. It's a lot of info and very overhwleming. I have had years with this and it still is not all lodged in my brian..lol.. I live in a very regulated state in the US where finding open minded docs has been difficult, particularly an endocrinologist. As a matter of fact, I really got into it one time with an endocrin who said that there is no such thing as a sustained release T3, meanwhile I was sitting in front of him with a bottle in my hand. It was at that visit that I said no more, I am going to find some open minded docs and I that's exactly what I did. I spent so much energy educating and arming myself with heavy scientific documentation and was pretty effective at talking various docs into trying stuff with me. But the problem with this is that I can only take it so far then I really need their medical direction, if you know what I mean. I am not the doc sorta thing. Noone actually hit the nail on the head until the last two. The first of the two just so happens to be a fairly open minded endocrinologist who is located downstate and has close ties with Dr Serafina Corsello...I laugh at that cause if anyone will open a closed mind, it is her! Anyway, he finally started me on a SR compound combo specific to my results and how I felt. (He has his own lab, doesn't use outside labs) However, one thing that he seemed stuck on was keeping the dosage specific to a standard T4/T3 4:1 ratio, regardless of how I felt. I knew I was getting way to much T3 by the way I felt and was substantiated by my labs. And he just would not budge on this issue. So, I left him and asked my open minded chelation doc if he was willing to help me and he is. He is slowly working me up on dosage, playing with the ratio and I can feel that we are going in the right direction. I love the SR, no more of those huge spikes and dips I use to have with the immediate release. The best thing that came out of this was finding the compound pharmacy who makes this for me. Dr Corsello has been working with them for years so they are pretty savvy on a lot of things. Until recently, many of the usual big guys and some of the smaller that I spoke with and have done business with do not compound a SR combo. There is great controversy about the SR component and if it truly binds with the T4. Wellness is now offering it but they make it with different SR agent than the pharmacy I am using now. Plus, the pharmacy I am using now is VERY price competitive compared that what I have paid for non SR thyroid (and other hormones) in the past...I'm talking HALF the cost. My current doc relys heavily on them for guidance and I like that cause they are really good in the thyroid area. I am doing glut pushes on chelation day. We just increased it to 600 mg on I and am also supplementing with oral as well. As with you, I will be very interested to see if I too have any thyroid changes. Of course that is depending on what the stupid metals are doing to my poor thyroid....lol..it's always something. Kathy " ballady4 " <ballady4@...> Sun Mar 5, 2006 9:51 am Kathy, This is a wealth of great information, but my head is spinning (more than usual). Did you figure out what exactly you needed on your own (and from all the info. you posted?) or did you have a health professional assiting you? I imagine using a compouding pharmacy you would have to know exactly what to compound. I was Dx many years ago with the same Hashi/Hypo with an aspirated cold nodule. Practially every doctor I've seen has a different take on TSH panels and how to treat and I don't want to fool around with hormones myself, but I am so frustrated as to what to take and at what level. Presently, I'm taking 45 mg. Armour and feel no Thyroid issues in the fore (in my body,) so guess I will continue until ... I see if raising my glutathione levels, as many have suggested here, might make a difference and actually eliminate the need for any Thyroid medication. Ballady --------------------------------- Bring photos to life! New PhotoMail makes sharing a breeze. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 6, 2006 Report Share Posted March 6, 2006 Thanks everybody. Here's my problem. The Dr. I'm seeing now has been understandably reluctant to diagnose cfs as long as my TSH is elevated. But I have tried taking synthetic hormone several times and it screws me to hell every time. I've even cut my pills down to 6mcg from 100mcg, and I still can only take a 6mcg. every two weeks, approx. I told him this, and he went ahead and prescribed 150mcg tablets. Great. So he prescribed armour, and I'm reluctant to even fill it because of the waste of money, and more importantly, the synthetic made me not able to sleep whatsoever... I can't afford this anymore, since I'm only able to sleep for a few hours in the evening, and then hopefully go to sleep at dawn, so I can't tolerate another session of finding out what dosage I can(t) take. Did switching to armour help anybody? Is there anything published about how cfs affects the thyroid, and isn't caused by thyroid (hypothyroidism)? I'm thinking about taking the definitions of both diseases to him, and explaining how they differ, as in how the fatigue in cfs is related to exertion, and how hypothyroidism seemingly has a steady fatigued state, how hypo states weakness, and I'm not weak whatsoever, if I didn't feel like crap, I would be strong as anything, no weight gain, etc. and how my symptoms fit in exactly with cfs, but I don't know how to do it without him blowing me off. He already seems tired of me telling him what I think, wtf do I do? HELP! thanks. > Kathy, > > This is a wealth of great information, but my head is spinning (more > than usual). Did you figure out what exactly you needed on your own > (and from all the info. you posted?) or did you have a health > professional assiting you? I imagine using a compouding pharmacy you > would have to know exactly what to compound. > > I was Dx many years ago with the same Hashi/Hypo with an aspirated > cold nodule. Practially every doctor I've seen has a different take on > TSH panels and how to treat and I don't want to fool around with > hormones myself, but I am so frustrated as to what to take and at what > level. Presently, I'm taking 45 mg. Armour and feel no Thyroid issues > in the fore (in my body,) so guess I will continue until ... I see if > raising my glutathione levels, as many have suggested here, might make > a difference and actually eliminate the need for any Thyroid medication. > > Ballady > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 6, 2006 Report Share Posted March 6, 2006 On Mar 6, 2006, at 2:28 PM, mascis_j wrote: > Did switching to armour help anybody? Synthetic wouldn't have helped me at all. Armour does seem to be the thyroid of choice for CFS patients (though, of course, there are plenty of people on other regimes as well) due to its T4/T3 balance. > Is there anything published about how cfs affects the thyroid, and > isn't caused by thyroid > (hypothyroidism)? All over the place. In a nutshell, CFS messes up our metabolism in all kinds of kinky ways. Some of those ways affect the pituitary (which can return false TSH readings as a result); the adrenals (which may not make enough of the adrenal co-factors required to metabolize T4 into T3), and glutathione production (which Rich is much better qualified to hold forth on than I am). Many of us make plenty of T4, but for some reason can't convert it to T3. The symptoms you describe are pretty classic for someone who's got too much T4 running in their system; taking more is only likely to make it worse. The Armour, on the other hand, has T3 (the active form of thyroid that your body actually uses), so you're more likely to get some real benefits without cranking your T4 up further. The Canadian Case Definition is one source for this stuff. PubMed is, of course, the classic source. I'm sure there are lots of people here who might help, too. > I'm thinking about taking the definitions of both > diseases to him, and explaining how they differ, as in how the > fatigue in cfs is related to exertion, and how hypothyroidism > seemingly has a steady fatigued state, how hypo states weakness, and > I'm not weak whatsoever, if I didn't feel like crap, I would be > strong as anything, no weight gain, etc. and how my symptoms fit in > exactly with cfs, but I don't know how to do it without him blowing > me off. He already seems tired of me telling him what I think, wtf > do I do? 1. Find a doctor who actually believes CFS exists, and knows a thing or two about it. 2. Download the Canadian Case Definition (readily available online), put it in a binder, take it to your doctor, and insist that s/he read it before trying to figure out what's wrong with you. (There's good info on thyroid in here.) 3. Try the Armour. Just try it. If it wipes you out further, don't panic: just give a holler to this list, and I'll tell you about the DHEA thing, which may help. 4. If you've got an FFC near you, consider getting yourself there. Their doctors seem to be fairly well-informed on the role of thyroid in managing CFS. Sara Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 6, 2006 Report Share Posted March 6, 2006 > > > Did switching to armour help anybody? > > Synthetic wouldn't have helped me at all. Armour does seem to be the > thyroid of choice for CFS patients (though, of course, there are > plenty of people on other regimes as well) due to its T4/T3 balance. > > > Is there anything published about how cfs affects the thyroid, and > > isn't caused by thyroid > > (hypothyroidism)? > > All over the place. > > In a nutshell, CFS messes up our metabolism in all kinds of kinky > ways. Some of those ways affect the pituitary (which can return false > TSH readings as a result); the adrenals (which may not make enough of > the adrenal co-factors required to metabolize T4 into T3), and > glutathione production (which Rich is much better qualified to hold > forth on than I am). > > Many of us make plenty of T4, but for some reason can't convert it to > T3. The symptoms you describe are pretty classic for someone who's > got too much T4 running in their system; taking more is only likely > to make it worse. The Armour, on the other hand, has T3 (the active > form of thyroid that your body actually uses), so you're more likely > to get some real benefits without cranking your T4 up further. > > The Canadian Case Definition is one source for this stuff. PubMed is, > of course, the classic source. I'm sure there are lots of people here > who might help, too. > > > I'm thinking about taking the definitions of both > > diseases to him, and explaining how they differ, as in how the > > fatigue in cfs is related to exertion, and how hypothyroidism > > seemingly has a steady fatigued state, how hypo states weakness, and > > I'm not weak whatsoever, if I didn't feel like crap, I would be > > strong as anything, no weight gain, etc. and how my symptoms fit in > > exactly with cfs, but I don't know how to do it without him blowing > > me off. He already seems tired of me telling him what I think, wtf > > do I do? > > 1. Find a doctor who actually believes CFS exists, and knows a thing > or two about it. > > 2. Download the Canadian Case Definition (readily available online), > put it in a binder, take it to your doctor, and insist that s/he read > it before trying to figure out what's wrong with you. (There's good > info on thyroid in here.) > > 3. Try the Armour. Just try it. If it wipes you out further, don't > panic: just give a holler to this list, and I'll tell you about the > DHEA thing, which may help. > > 4. If you've got an FFC near you, consider getting yourself there. > Their doctors seem to be fairly well-informed on the role of thyroid > in managing CFS. > > Sara > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 6, 2006 Report Share Posted March 6, 2006 > > > Did switching to armour help anybody? > > Synthetic wouldn't have helped me at all. Armour does seem to be the > thyroid of choice for CFS patients (though, of course, there are > plenty of people on other regimes as well) due to its T4/T3 balance. > > > Is there anything published about how cfs affects the thyroid, and > > isn't caused by thyroid > > (hypothyroidism)? > > All over the place. > > In a nutshell, CFS messes up our metabolism in all kinds of kinky > ways. Some of those ways affect the pituitary (which can return false > TSH readings as a result); the adrenals (which may not make enough of > the adrenal co-factors required to metabolize T4 into T3), and > glutathione production (which Rich is much better qualified to hold > forth on than I am). > > Many of us make plenty of T4, but for some reason can't convert it to > T3. The symptoms you describe are pretty classic for someone who's > got too much T4 running in their system; taking more is only likely > to make it worse. The Armour, on the other hand, has T3 (the active > form of thyroid that your body actually uses), so you're more likely > to get some real benefits without cranking your T4 up further. > > The Canadian Case Definition is one source for this stuff. PubMed is, > of course, the classic source. I'm sure there are lots of people here > who might help, too. > > > I'm thinking about taking the definitions of both > > diseases to him, and explaining how they differ, as in how the > > fatigue in cfs is related to exertion, and how hypothyroidism > > seemingly has a steady fatigued state, how hypo states weakness, and > > I'm not weak whatsoever, if I didn't feel like crap, I would be > > strong as anything, no weight gain, etc. and how my symptoms fit in > > exactly with cfs, but I don't know how to do it without him blowing > > me off. He already seems tired of me telling him what I think, wtf > > do I do? > > 1. Find a doctor who actually believes CFS exists, and knows a thing > or two about it. > > 2. Download the Canadian Case Definition (readily available online), > put it in a binder, take it to your doctor, and insist that s/he read > it before trying to figure out what's wrong with you. (There's good > info on thyroid in here.) > > 3. Try the Armour. Just try it. If it wipes you out further, don't > panic: just give a holler to this list, and I'll tell you about the > DHEA thing, which may help. > > 4. If you've got an FFC near you, consider getting yourself there. > Their doctors seem to be fairly well-informed on the role of thyroid > in managing CFS. > > Sara > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 7, 2006 Report Share Posted March 7, 2006 > > > Thanks everybody. Here's my problem. The Dr. I'm seeing now has been > understandably reluctant to diagnose cfs as long as my TSH is > elevated. But I have tried taking synthetic hormone several times > and it screws me to hell every time. > > Did switching to armour help anybody? > This was the case for me as well - with synthetics. Switching to Armour did help with what I considered to be my more Thyroid type symptoms: cold all the time, slight hand tremors . . . That was 12 years ago. I still take a very small dose daily but I am also looking into the glautathione question, as you are. Ballady Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.