Guest guest Posted June 20, 2006 Report Share Posted June 20, 2006 > > I was talking to my doctor by email yesterday about my Armour thyroid > dosage and he made the following comments: > > " If you are feeling that you are getting symptoms when increasing the > dose, even though they are " hypothyroid " , it may be that they could > be " hyperthyroid " . Sometimes the two conditions present with exactly > opposite symptoms ... If you experience more of your " hypothyroid > symptoms " when you increase the dose, then don't assume that your > thyroid is underactive, assume it might be overactive. " > > Whilst I have read that some symptoms of hypo and hyper are the same, > I don't understand what he means! Why might my thyroid be overactive?! > I had told him I had been experiencing unexplained extreme > fatigue/aching muscles. Are these hyper symptoms too? What other > hyper symptoms might cross over with hypo ones? > > Also, I don't know what he is getting at! Could some of those symptoms > I consider to be " crashes " because I am not adequately medicated > actually be hyper symptoms? Would this be because the dose is too > high? Unfortunately, he is not all that easy to communicate with and > often throws a " googly " (sorry - British cricket term, I think) into > the conversation, which seems completely unrelated to the thread and > just confuses me! Brain fog doesn't help either. I hope perhaps I > can obtain an explanation here of what he is might be on about. > > TIA > > Katy > Do you have labs done recently? Namely T3? Although some others may disagree one thing about Armour is it is a set ratio of T4 -T3.. two things can happen.. you have a low T4 and a high T3..T3 being the active ingredient causes hyper symptoms but T3 being a short half life your body uses it quickly and then you are not left with enough T4 to play into the conversion issue..sort of like your T3 peaks the body gets flooded you get that rush and then crash as the T3 leaves your system and not enough conversion going on.. this is why a lot of people multidose, it spreads out the T3 during the day to keep them more even. The other thing that can happen is your body does not know what to do with the T3..especially if you have been long term hypo..even though lab wise you maybe fine your body is sensitive to the T3 it has been missing and uses it up quicker.. this is why people on Armour increase slowly and in smal increments to wake up the cell receptors.. The other thing could be that you convert well and you do have a high T3..too much Armour which I think is what the doctor may have been hinting at with you doing the increases..T3 toxicity causes hyper..and some of the symptoms do overlap.. Alot of this is what if's or if your body is doing this or that but to get the answer you need labs.. mainly T4 and T3 as you are on a T4-T3 replacement hormone. Kats3boys Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 20, 2006 Report Share Posted June 20, 2006 Hi Kats Thanks for your reply. My doc doesn't have recent bloods on which to base any advice. The last test was done in April and this is my complete lab history: Fall 2005 (no meds): FT4: 17 (11-24) FT3: 3.7 (3.5-7) TSH: 0.89 (0.35-5.5) Feb 6 2006 (after 4 weeks 1/2 grain): T4: 17.3 (11-24) T3: 3.6 (3.5-7) TSH: 2.8 (0.35-5.5) April 4 2006 (after 5 weeks 1 grain) T4: 16.5 (11-24) T3: 3.9 (3.5-7.0) TSH: 2.00 (0.35-5.5) Ignore my TSH btw - it was being artificially raised by some beta blockers I was taking, which I have now discontinued. I've got another test booked for July. I'm on 1 1/2 grains now and will start 2 grains next week up til my bloods appointment. So you can see my T3 is almost on the floor so it isn't too much T3. His advice the other day was general - not based on my bloods in particular, so that is why I am asking about the hypo/hyper symptoms in general. What might he mean by his comments? Katy >> > > Do you have labs done recently? Namely T3? > Although some others may disagree one thing about Armour is it is a > set ratio of T4 -T3.. two things can happen.. you have a low T4 and > a high T3..T3 being the active ingredient causes hyper symptoms but > T3 being a short half life your body uses it quickly and then you > are not left with enough T4 to play into the conversion issue..sort > of like your T3 peaks the body gets flooded you get that rush and > then crash as the T3 leaves your system and not enough conversion > going on.. this is why a lot of people multidose, it spreads out the > T3 during the day to keep them more even. The other thing that can > happen is your body does not know what to do with the T3..especially > if you have been long term hypo..even though lab wise you maybe fine > your body is sensitive to the T3 it has been missing and uses it up > quicker.. this is why people on Armour increase slowly and in smal > increments to wake up the cell receptors.. > > The other thing could be that you convert well and you do have a > high T3..too much Armour which I think is what the doctor may have > been hinting at with you doing the increases..T3 toxicity causes > hyper..and some of the symptoms do overlap.. > > Alot of this is what if's or if your body is doing this or that but > to get the answer you need labs.. mainly T4 and T3 as you are on a > T4-T3 replacement hormone. > > Kats3boys > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 21, 2006 Report Share Posted June 21, 2006 Katy.... Look at the labs, keep in mind labs are a guide... not the know all end all: TSH Free T4 Free T3 (.35 - 5.5) (11-24) (3.5 - 7) Fall 2005 (no meds) 0.89 17 3.7 02-06-06 4 wks 1/2 gr 2.8 17.3 3.6 04-04-06 5 wks 1 grain 2.00 16.5 3.9 Consider this.... You went from no meds to 1/2 grain to 1 grain. Look at Free T4. It didn't change much, and with the last lab, even though you'd been increased to 1 grain, the Free T4 dropped. Look at the Free T3, it raised only slightly after the 1 grain dose. My mind says..... Free Ts are the measure of the free, unbound, available hormone in the body. Even though you went from no meds, to 1/2 grain to 1 grain, there wasn't much of a change in the levels of Free Ts... so.. where is all that hormone you are taking going? It's either being passed from your body..... or your body is using it.... I suspect the latter.... To me.. seeing a dosage increasing while labs are changing only slightly means that the body is sucking up all the hormone being taken..... With your free T3 as low as it is I (my opinion) do not think you are being over medicated to the point of being hyper... BUT If you body is unused to the increase in hormone (this can come from being hypo for a long time, from starting a dose too high, or from increasing too much at one time) it can show hyper symptoms in the respect that the body doesn't know what to do with all this new hormone and tells us there is a problem by showing symptoms.. Symptoms are the body's way of speaking to us. Hyper symptoms can also be felt even when hypo if the hormone levels are increasing too quickly (either by dosage adjustments too close together or from too high an increase at one time) if the adrenals are fatigued and can't handle on the changes in the body due to the increased hormone levels. With adding T3, either by Cytomel or in a natural product, like Armour.. there seem to be two general groups of people.... One group does well on a single dose of T3, taken all at one time. For them this single dose is able to circulate through their system and fill the empty T3 receptors, with those filled and the body more or less primed for the day and up to fuller function, it's own conversion kicks in and is able to keep filling up the T3 receptors as they empty.... For others, like me, our conversion isn't so hot ever... we need T3 dosing spread out during the day, this allows those major organs and processes to have their T3 receptors filled so that conversion only has to cover 'minor' areas, those not so vital to routine function. That's really over simplified, I hope it makes sense. I've seen folks in our group who's docs have prescribed alarmingly high doses of T3 (either as Cytomel added to Synthetic T4 or as a switch from T4-only to natural) with the intent and purpose of subjecting the person to a sudden RUSH of T3... this great amount of T3 given to a body that has been hypo for some time and is running slowed due to lack of sufficient levels of T3 in order to function properly... well, the body reacts.. for lack of a better term... in a panic. It doesn't know what to do... the heart rate increases, breathing increases, organ and muscle function increases... all in a system that hasn't been running at anything near normal speed and can't handle all this stuff suddenly working faster. You get scared, your body reacts badly.. and the T3 is taken away.... The symptoms that you mentioned... > I had told him I had been experiencing unexplained extreme > fatigue/aching muscles. Are these hyper symptoms too? What other > hyper symptoms might cross over with hypo ones? These can be symptoms of hyper.. but they can also be symptoms exhibited by a body that has been hypo for some time (relative to the person, I can't say it's months, or years, or decades) who starts getting more mobile and active in a body that can't handle all this new activity cuz it's just out of condition. Here I have to relate it back to what happened to me. As my meds came up and I added adrenal glandular (this improves the body's utilization of thyroid hormone, among other things) I felt so wonderful that for the first time I was able to do things that I'd not done in years... I was up and doing things, extra projects, cleaning, socializing... all kinds of stuff... I felt sooo much better... I started having trouble with my hands.... then my legs... My hands started cramping.. bad.... my legs were getting weak and I started falling down..... Why? was it the meds? Was I really messing up with dosing and combinations? Not exactly.... I was over doing it.... I felt good, I wanted to do more stuff, I was able to do more stuff and, to be honest, I don't know if my body was giving me clues to slow down or not... I do remember that I was having a ball WANTING to do stuff and doing it.... The cramping of my hands (while peeling potatoes and apples) was the first clue... the falling down was the second clue.. I was dealing with muscle failure. So... something you have to look at ... the fatigue and muscle issues that you are having now... relate that to any increase in activity and such that you've maybe experienced since adding thyroid hormone. Can you see a correlation between activity levels and the symptoms... It might take some thinking.. the delays can be weeks or months... for me it was about a month... The body uses symptoms to tell us things. Is your's saying too much hormone? Too much too soon? Too much activity before you were strong enough to do it? When we've been feeling poorly and our activity levels drop, our muscles get used less. Our muscle strength decreases, our endurance decreases. So, like in my situation. I felt well enough to go gang busters, I still remember how I was able to do all this stuff....but my body, my muscles, my lungs, my heart weren't strong enough to just jump in and pick up as though all those years of decline had never been. This part was REALLY hard for me to learn... and I still slip up at times.... When we are coming back from the 'pit' it seems to work better if we build our bodies up to meet all the stuff we're adding back into our lives.... Just like someone that starts a walking regime, or a runner training for a marathon... you have to work up your body's strength and endurance to be able to do all this physical stuff... For some of us.... washing dishes, cooking a meal, vacuuming, grocery shopping, or going out with friends is the marathon event that we've not done in so long that we need to train to get there. For others getting through a full day at work is still doable but doing anything after that is beyond endurance.... Ponder on that..... does it bring anything to mind? A last comment... you are getting ready to increase to 2 grain and having labs in July....... Ideally you want labs done 4 to 6 weeks after a dosage adjustment, with 6 being better... when in July are your labs scheduled for? Unless it's at the end of the month... I... me... would choose to reschedule so that your body has a chance to adjust better to that 2 grain and you can get a clearer picture of how your body is responding to it...... Topper () On Tue, 20 Jun 2006 19:19:48 -0000 " Katy " writes: > Hi Kats > > Thanks for your reply. > > My doc doesn't have recent bloods on which to base any advice. The > > last test was done in April and this is my complete lab history: < snip > > Ignore my TSH btw - it was being artificially raised by some beta > blockers I was taking, which I have now discontinued. I've got > another test booked for July. I'm on 1 1/2 grains now and will start > > 2 grains next week up til my bloods appointment. > > So you can see my T3 is almost on the floor so it isn't too much > T3. His advice the other day was general - not based on my bloods > in particular, so that is why I am asking about the hypo/hyper > symptoms in general. What might he mean by his comments? > > Katy Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 21, 2006 Report Share Posted June 21, 2006 Boy.. that didn't format well at all... hope you can decypher it! Topper () On Wed, 21 Jun 2006 13:57:59 -0500 topper2@... writes: > Katy.... > > Look at the labs, keep in mind labs are a guide... not the know all > end > all: > > TSH > > Free T4 Free T3 > (.35 - 5.5) > > (11-24) (3.5 - 7) > Fall 2005 (no meds) 0.89 17 > > 3.7 > 02-06-06 4 wks 1/2 gr 2.8 17.3 > > 3.6 > 04-04-06 5 wks 1 grain 2.00 16.5 > > 3.9 > > Consider this.... You went from no meds to 1/2 grain to 1 grain. < snip > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 22, 2006 Report Share Posted June 22, 2006 Hi Topper Glad to see you back! Thanks so much for your detailed reply! It's very helpful. > > > I had told him I had been experiencing unexplained extreme > > fatigue/aching muscles. Are these hyper symptoms too? What other > > hyper symptoms might cross over with hypo ones? > > These can be symptoms of hyper.. but they can also be symptoms exhibited > by a body that has been hypo for some time (relative to the person, I > can't say it's months, or years, or decades) who starts getting more > mobile and active in a body that can't handle all this new activity cuz > it's just out of condition. > > Here I have to relate it back to what happened to me. > > As my meds came up and I added adrenal glandular (this improves the > body's utilization of thyroid hormone, among other things) I felt so > wonderful that for the first time I was able to do things that I'd not > done in years... I was up and doing things, extra projects, cleaning, > socializing... all kinds of stuff... I felt sooo much better... I started > having trouble with my hands.... then my legs... My hands started > cramping.. bad.... my legs were getting weak and I started falling > down..... > > Why? was it the meds? Was I really messing up with dosing and > combinations? Not exactly.... I was over doing it.... I felt good, I > wanted to do more stuff, I was able to do more stuff and, to be honest, I > don't know if my body was giving me clues to slow down or not... I do > remember that I was having a ball WANTING to do stuff and doing it.... > The cramping of my hands (while peeling potatoes and apples) was the > first clue... the falling down was the second clue.. I was dealing with > muscle failure. > > So... something you have to look at ... the fatigue and muscle issues > that you are having now... relate that to any increase in activity and > such that you've maybe experienced since adding thyroid hormone. Can you > see a correlation between activity levels and the symptoms... It might > take some thinking.. the delays can be weeks or months... for me it was > about a month... OK ... not sure about this. I believe I have been hypo for at least 10 years (eyebrow loss) and possibly as much as 30 years (low body temp), but it's only in the last couple of years, nine months that I have really been suffering. Up til last Fall I was really behaving normally - able to go out for a day shopping with a friend, do all the housework/errands I needed, do Pilates class twice a week, etc. When I was diagnosed in January and started on Armour, that's when I have really noticed the more extreme fatigue ... and by " aching muscles " I mean that aching fluey sensation you get before you get sick, not necessarily aching muscles from after an exercise class. I class that type of ache as a tired ache. But I guess that might be what you mean anyway. I have had to stop the Nutri Adrenal tabs I was taking because they gave me diarrhoea, despite my persevering over a few months and fiddling with the dose etc. Taking them or not taking them doesn't seem to be related to how I feel. I have noticed tho that after about a month on each increase of dose I get worse fatigue, which I take to mean it's time to increase again. That's where I am right now. All set to move up to 2 grains on Monday, with a blood test set on 31st July ... so timed to just where you think it should be! When I last increased (to 1 1/2 grains nearly six weeks ago), I didn't see the big improvement I was hoping. I was still a bit depressed, a bit tired, and not many " well " days. Not like I had seen before. I am puzzled why my fatigue is not getting better (in fact it's really getting worse) with each increase in dose, although I do think my depression is much better - I only feel a bit low about once a week on average now. My eyebrows are worse too, as is my brain fog/memory loss. As for overdoing it .... I dunno - I'm really only doing the basic household jobs and not much else. I don't go out every day, although I really should to try and get those rays for the Vitamin D. I had a busy day last Saturday and Monday was my birthday, but I was fatigued before that anyway!!! Oh goodness .......... Sooooo anyway, you think my doc has said I should think about my symptoms perhaps being from hyperthyroid is because he thinks my dosing might be making me hyper sometimes? Btw, I never get rapid heartbeat - it's now 60-66 bpm from approx 54 bpm before I started Armour. I don't think I have any other hyper symptoms at all. Katy Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 22, 2006 Report Share Posted June 22, 2006 I honestly don't see you as being hyper.. not with pulse rates that low.... My wee little brain is hovering and circling around the increased fatigue after the dosage increase being related to the body speeding up some.. ..your pulse has increased, but it's still a bit low, for resting... If you were hypo for that long.. that does put a lot of strain on the adrenals... How much strain, how much it affected their function.. that can vary so much from person to person. I do know that the adrenals will kick up production to compensate for low thyroid.. that's why we're supposed to get them checked before going on thyroid hormone replacment cuz the added thyroid hormone can really through the adrenals for a loop.. they have to kick it up even more to accommodate and body that is adjusting to moving, working, processing faster. I remember a while back we were comparing your Nutri brand and the US brand Nutri-Meds... if I remember right they were pretty similar.... I wonder if you were taking too much of it? That your body's response was the diarrhea?? Lets look from a different angle... How is your sleep pattern? Do you fall asleep right away and stay asleep? Do you wake often and go right back to sleep or can't go back to sleep? How do you feel when you wake, like you've had enough sleep or that you have to go back and get another 10 hours??? How is your day? Are you up and at 'em and rarin' to go in the morning? Or is more of a slow start with your momentum picking up later in the day, or the evening? What about what you are eating... considering the type of food that you ate say 10 years ago... more vegies or less? More meat or less? More processed foods now or less? I'll stop with that and let you fill me in... I'm just looking to see if we spot anything that will make something stand out as cause... contributor.. whatever... The fatigue setting in after about a month... for many it's about two weeks.. .after a dosage increase does usually mean that the body is ready for an increase... I think you are interpreting that right.... How many doses are you taking in a day... or do you single dose? Multi-dosing gives you less T3 at one time, spreading it out more through the day.... For some that plan is best... for others they need it all at once... perhaps the way you do it now isn't what your body likes and switching it might help? and.... last... but not least!!! Happy Belated Birthday!!! My mom's birthday happens to be today... she passed a few months after my RAI.. so if anyone would like to take just a sec... take a peak skyward and wish Margot and happy B-day... she'd like that! Topper () On Thu, 22 Jun 2006 14:36:34 -0000 " Katy " writes: > OK ... not sure about this. I believe I have been hypo for at least > 10 years (eyebrow loss) and possibly as much as 30 years (low body > temp), but it's only in the last couple of years, nine months that I > have really been suffering. Up til last Fall I was really behaving > normally - able to go out for a day shopping with a friend, do all > the housework/errands I needed, do Pilates class twice a week, etc. > When I was diagnosed in January and started on Armour, that's when I > have really noticed the more extreme fatigue ... and by " aching > muscles " I mean that aching fluey sensation you get before you get > sick, not necessarily aching muscles from after an exercise class. > I class that type of ache as a tired ache. But I guess that might > be what you mean anyway. > I have had to stop the Nutri Adrenal tabs I was taking because they > gave me diarrhoea, despite my persevering over a few months and > fiddling with the dose etc. Taking them or not taking them doesn't > seem to be related to how I feel. I have noticed tho that after > about a month on each increase of dose I get worse fatigue, which I > take to mean it's time to increase again. That's where I am right > now. All set to move up to 2 grains on Monday, with a blood test > set on 31st July ... so timed to just where you think it should > be! > When I last increased (to 1 1/2 grains nearly six weeks ago), I > didn't see the big improvement I was hoping. I was still a bit > depressed, a bit tired, and not many " well " days. Not like I had > seen before. I am puzzled why my fatigue is not getting better (in > fact it's really getting worse) with each increase in dose, although > I do think my depression is much better - I only feel a bit low > about once a week on average now. My eyebrows are worse too, as is > my brain fog/memory loss. > As for overdoing it .... I dunno - I'm really only doing the basic > household jobs and not much else. I don't go out every day, > although I really should to try and get those rays for the Vitamin > D. I had a busy day last Saturday and Monday was my birthday, but I > was fatigued before that anyway!!! Oh goodness .......... > Sooooo anyway, you think my doc has said I should think about my > symptoms perhaps being from hyperthyroid is because he thinks my > dosing might be making me hyper sometimes? > Btw, I never get rapid heartbeat - it's now 60-66 bpm from approx 54 > bpm before I started Armour. I don't think I have any other hyper > symptoms at all. > Katy Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 24, 2006 Report Share Posted June 24, 2006 Hi Topper > > I remember a while back we were comparing your Nutri brand and the US > brand Nutri-Meds... if I remember right they were pretty similar.... I > wonder if you were taking too much of it? That your body's response was > the diarrhea?? I did try and vary the dose trying to find a dose I could tolerate. I worked up from 1/2 tab a day and managed for a while at 2 a day but then had to cut back and back cos of the " problem " . Then I found even on 1/2 tab I was getting diarrhoea by lunchtime so decided maybe my body didn't need it and was excreting it pdq. HOWEVER, yesterday, after a week without, I took 1/2 a tab with breakfast and I actually felt much better in the morning! I felt exhausted in the evening, but this might have been because I did too much. I also got diarrhoea after dinner. ƒ¼ Today I had half a tab again at breakfast ¡K so far so good although I was shattered this morning. > > Lets look from a different angle... How is your sleep pattern? Do you > fall asleep right away and stay asleep? Do you wake often and go right > back to sleep or can't go back to sleep? How do you feel when you wake, > like you've had enough sleep or that you have to go back and get another > 10 hours??? Yes I fall asleep right away mostly and sleep soundly until the alarm goes. In the mornings, it varies, but since I have been taking Vitamin D, Calcium and Magnesium over the past two weeks I am usually quite alert, mentally (most unusual for me) but physically I feel like I need more sleep ¡V tired aching muscles still. I¡¦ve actually decided to stop taking the Vitamin D, Ca and Mg because the magnesium gives me diarrhoea and that means I can¡¦t take the Adrenal supplement on top, which also gives me diarrhoea unless I am careful! (Possibly it¡¦s the magnesium in the adrenal support that does that.) Goodness ¡V it is all so complicated! > > How is your day? Are you up and at 'em and rarin' to go in the morning? > Or is more of a slow start with your momentum picking up later in the > day, or the evening? I am definitely not raring to go! I have never been like that, being a night owl rather than a morning lark naturally. I usually feel better once I am up, breakfasted and had my supplements and Armour, then if I am having a good day I will often flag late afternoon and evening (like yesterday). Or I could feel not very good when I wake up and feel better later (like today). There isn¡¦t really a typical day. I¡¦m multi dosing, before you ask ¡K I take 1 grain just after breakfast sublingually, and the remaining half grain just after lunch, again sublingually. > > What about what you are eating... considering the type of food that you > ate say 10 years ago... more vegies or less? More meat or less? More > processed foods now or less? I¡¦m a low carber and have been for over 5 years. I avoid grains and sugar and I eat fresh fresh fresh and as natural as possible and practically never eat junk or processed foods. I¡¦m a big fan of Sally Fallon and Enig and ¡§Nourishing Traditions¡¨. I¡¦m also studying nutrition and hoping to do a Diploma in the next couple of years. I believe strongly that my change in diet held off the thyroid problems for a few years, I guess until age took over. But having been told I was going through the menopause in the Autumn, my periods have switched right back to normal after I started Armour ¡K so go figure. I am wonder ¡K. do you think that I may be hypoadrenal rather than hypothyroid? I am wondering whether the reason I am not significantly improving on Armour might perhaps be because my hypothyroidism is secondary to a hypoadrenal problem. This worries me (please reassure me by not agreeing!) In any case, if I go back onto the adrenal support from now on should this be sufficient to sort me out both from the adrenal point of view and the thyroid point of view in the long term, do you think? OK ¡K waiting for the next questions ¡K. Katy Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 24, 2006 Report Share Posted June 24, 2006 Hmmm I think we have to back up a step... A GOOD and proper adrenal supplement contains ONLY desiccated adrenal glandular and the stuff that makes it into a pill (the tableting agents).. if it's got vitamins, minerals, or herbs in it there is no actual adrenal hormone in it, it's an adrenal stimulator... not adrenal support. There are also specific adrenal hormones, like cortisol... Adrenal glandular contains some of all of the adrenal hormones, not just a specific one.... My own reason for choosing Whole adrenal glandular is that I felt that if Armour, natural thyroid, which is a whole desiccated Thyroid Glandular works SO much better for me than a single thyroid hormone.. the a whole adrenal should work better too. Others don't agree and choose to take a single adrenal hormone... so you have to decide what you feel most comfortable with. An Adrenal stimulator, with vitamins, minerals and herbs would work for someone that is not dealing with adrenal fatigue, like us... It's more for someone that is pushing their limits, like those folks that use coffee to wake up in the morning.. that is an adrenal stimulant too. So lets go over what you are taking again, I must have mixed up your Nutra with something someone else had brought up. Check the ingredient label... does it have stuff other than whole desiccated adrenal glandular and the tableting agents? Magnesium Oxide is the Magnesium in supplements that our bodies use. Magnesium Sterate is a tableting agent that makes the pills hold their shape. I can't get online to double check that.... so if I've goofed it up someone please jump in.... check the bottle of magnesium that you take... does it say Magnesium Oxide on it or only Magnesium Sterate? Something else you mentioned... you wait until after breakfast and then take your Armour after Breakfast... Sublingually, so it's not the food in your tummy that is the problem... but I'm wondering.. Could it be the timing? How much time passes between the time you get up and then time you actually take your Armour? What are you doing during that time (showering, dressing, preparing breakfast or??) ? Depending on how much time you are up and about and eating and doing stuff before dosing.. you could be dealing with your body not liking that deficit of hormone in the morning.... It's gone all night without food... then that time in the morning without food... no food means no conversion. That is a natural state for healthy folks, yes... but for some of us, like me... taking that dose immediately when I wake up makes a HUGE difference on how my day goes... perhaps you might want to give that a try?? Adrenals... we'll skip the part about what is in the tab that you are taking now and just talk about what the adrenals do when we wake up. They, for lack of a better term, dump a load of hormone into our blood stream. It's this hormone that gives us the mental an physical ability to get going in the morning. To be able to get up and start doing stuff and be able to think clearly until we can eat. The longer IN MY PERSONAL OPINION you wait to take adrenal support the more work your own adrenals have to do EVERY MORNING. To the way my brain thinks about how this all works, the less work the adrenals have to do in the morning, consistently the busiest part of their day and the heaviest consistent work load they have, the faster they are able to rest, recover, and go back to handling all their duties on their own. On that basis I also take my adrenal glandular as soon as I wake up. So.. my eyes come opening... I peak at the clock to see if it's time to get up, it generally is, I wake between 5 and 5:30.... I reach for my pill box and pull out my 'first dose cup' and dump it under my tongue. Adrenal glandular can be taken sublingually too. It tastes and dissolves very much the same as Armour, but it's not as sweet. By the time my thyroid and adrenal are dissolved I've got potty, dressed and breakfast is ready to eat. For me, this just seems to make a ton of sense.. getting the doses into me nearly as quickly as my own body used to.... Ponder on that... see how that might work for you and if you want to give it a try.... Is your hypothyroid secondary to hypoadrenal? I don't think so... Why? If your adrenals were working so poorly as to have affected your thyroid function I would think you'd show a LOT more severe issues with low adrenal levels... Some of the things that I dealt with before starting adrenal support and changing my morning routine to help them included: SEVERE difficulty falling asleep and staying asleep. And when I did sleep I did not go into a deep sleep, no dreaming.. and I was VERY easily waken. It was pretty much a given that if something woke me up I was looking at a minimum of two hours to fall back asleep, if I even did. Inability to handle anything out of the ordinary.. Telephone ringing sent me into a panic, what if I didn't answer fast enough? What if it was someone that I didn't want to talk to? Dropping something on the floor that required cleaning totally freaked me out. Seeing something sad on TV (not really bad, something as dumb as a flat tire or the police shooting the bad guy) set me bawling my eyes out. I NEVER laughed. Not at anything on TV, not at anything anyone sad.. just never, not even a smile. I had no sense of tomorrow. It was coming.. so what. Would it be good? who cares. Would it be bad? who cares. What if it didn't come? who cares. Tornado warning? Crap, no TV, can't do nothing. I'll just sit here, maybe it will hit the house and I won't hurt anymore.... Kinda get the idea? I giggle... I laugh... I will laugh out loud, loud enough for the neighbors to look up if they are outside and I have the window open, just from watching TV! Heck, there are emails that I get that have me cracking up.... I've talked about my multi-tasking in the kitchen... All kinds of stuff going on... timing coordinating... that's a FAR sight from getting flustered cuz I splashed water on the floor or dropped a CLOSED vegie can on the floor. How well are you handling everyday stuff? What happens if something out of the ordinary happens? Are you able do deal with it? Adrenal fatigue tends to follow thyroid malfunction, that goes for hyper or hypo thyroid. Cuz the adrenal glands have to pick up the slack for the low thyroid function. Yes, it can happen that stress, poor diet, illness and such can stress the adrenals causing the body to have difficulty being able to utilize thyroid hormone.. but I think you'd be showing a LOT more severe adrenal problem then you are if the adrenal came before the thyroid.... My opinion, of course... cuz I'm not a doc..... I'm just me. So I guess right now, if I were you.... Find out what is in your adrenal supplement.... consider taking your thyroid immediately when you wake... And if the adrenal is the 'good stuff' consider trying it sublingually and taking it the same time your take your Armour, when you first wake up.... and dropping the dose of the Adrenal to a quarter tab..... It's a pain when you have to start messing with timing..... but gosh.... it was the MAGIC trick for me... so I think it's worth playing with to see what your body is happier with..... IMHO of course... I had to giggle.... your comment about waiting for the next questions.... you're used to how I keep picking and volleying back and forth! ehehehehhe the more we gab the more little details come to the surface... it's the BEST way to figure out what needs tweaking, I think! Topper () *who's all cross-eyed from setting up pill boxes this morning!! hehehehe* On Sat, 24 Jun 2006 15:16:18 -0000 " Katy " writes: > Hi Topper > I did try and vary the dose trying to find a dose I could tolerate. > > I worked up from 1/2 tab a day and managed for a while at 2 a day > but then had to cut back and back cos of the " problem " . Then I > found even on 1/2 tab I was getting diarrhoea by lunchtime so > decided maybe my body didn't need it and was excreting it pdq. > HOWEVER, yesterday, after a week without, I took 1/2 a tab with > breakfast and I actually felt much better in the morning! I felt > exhausted in the evening, but this might have been because I did too > > much. I also got diarrhoea after dinner. ƒ¼ Today I had half a tab > > again at breakfast ¡K so far so good although I was shattered this > morning. > Yes I fall asleep right away mostly and sleep soundly until the > alarm goes. In the mornings, it varies, but since I have been > taking Vitamin D, Calcium and Magnesium over the past two weeks I am > usually quite alert, mentally (most unusual for me) but physically I > feel like I need more sleep ¡V tired aching muscles still. I¡¦ve > actually decided to stop taking the Vitamin D, Ca and Mg because the > magnesium gives me diarrhoea and that means I can¡¦t take the > Adrenal > supplement on top, which also gives me diarrhoea unless I am > careful! (Possibly it¡¦s the magnesium in the adrenal support that > does that.) Goodness ¡V it is all so complicated! > > I am definitely not raring to go! I have never been like that, > being a night owl rather than a morning lark naturally. I usually > feel better once I am up, breakfasted and had my supplements and > Armour, then if I am having a good day I will often flag late > afternoon and evening (like yesterday). Or I could feel not very > good when I wake up and feel better later (like today). There > isn¡¦t > really a typical day. I¡¦m multi dosing, before you ask ¡K I take 1 > grain just after breakfast sublingually, and the remaining half > grain just after lunch, again sublingually. > > I¡¦m a low carber and have been for over 5 years. I avoid grains > and > sugar and I eat fresh fresh fresh and as natural as possible and > practically never eat junk or processed foods. I¡¦m a big fan of > Sally Fallon and Enig and ¡§Nourishing Traditions¡¨. I¡¦m also > studying nutrition and hoping to do a Diploma in the next couple of > years. I believe strongly that my change in diet held off the > thyroid problems for a few years, I guess until age took over. > But having been told I was going through the menopause in the > Autumn, my periods have switched right back to normal after I > started Armour ¡K so go figure. > > I am wonder ¡K. do you think that I may be hypoadrenal rather than > hypothyroid? I am wondering whether the reason I am not > significantly improving on Armour might perhaps be because my > hypothyroidism is secondary to a hypoadrenal problem. This worries > me (please reassure me by not agreeing!) In any case, if I go back > onto the adrenal support from now on should this be sufficient to > sort me out both from the adrenal point of view and the thyroid > point of view in the long term, do you think? > > OK ¡K waiting for the next questions ¡K. > > Katy Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 25, 2006 Report Share Posted June 25, 2006 Tee hee Topper ... I LOVE it when you give such long practical replies! OK, first up, here is the low down on the adrenal tab I am taking: http://www.yournutritionshop.com/Manufacturers/Nut/info/glandular/nut ri_info_adrenal_extra_m.htm It does contain adrenal, pituitary and parotid tissue, so I don't know if that's good enough of not. Magnesium Oxide too. As for taking it first thing ... yes I can definitely take the Armour first thing. Right now, it is probably an hour and a half before I take it after getting up. I could take it as soon as I walk into the bathroom which is the very first thing I do, but probably a minute or two after I have taken my body temp. I may have to clean my teeth too first because it takes about an hour to dissolve and by then I would be two flights of stairs away from my toothbrush! However, I have thought of taking the adrenal tab sublingually but the taste makes me gag. It's a huge tab, too, for going under the tongue. Atm I am only taking 1/2 tab to build back up the dosage, but even so ... It says to take with food if swallowed, which I must do then because it tends to give me diarrhoea if I'm not careful and on an empty stomach ... Hmm ... > > How well are you handling everyday stuff? What happens if something out > of the ordinary happens? Are you able do deal with it? Yes I guess so. Not as bad as you have described. I was really quite depressed until about 1-2 months ago and now I do mostly feel better (but not fully recovered yet). Today, btw, I feel MUCH better than yesterday. I don't have the all over body muscle aching tiredness which I've been experiencing over the past couple of weeks, and the only thing I have done is start taking the adrenal tab again. > > Adrenal fatigue tends to follow thyroid malfunction, that goes for hyper > or hypo thyroid. Cuz the adrenal glands have to pick up the slack for the > low thyroid function. Yes, it can happen that stress, poor diet, illness > and such can stress the adrenals causing the body to have difficulty > being able to utilize thyroid hormone.. but I think you'd be showing a > LOT more severe adrenal problem then you are if the adrenal came before > the thyroid.... My opinion, of course... cuz I'm not a doc..... I'm just > me. OK that's good. How would I know I had the severe adrenal problem? Do you mean the severe depression and exhaustion that you just described? Anything else? These things are also how you can feel just being hypoT, isn't it? It's difficult to identify which gland is acting up! > > So I guess right now, if I were you.... Find out what is in your adrenal > supplement.... consider taking your thyroid immediately when you wake... > And if the adrenal is the 'good stuff' consider trying it sublingually > and taking it the same time your take your Armour, when you first wake > up.... and dropping the dose of the Adrenal to a quarter tab..... > > It's a pain when you have to start messing with timing..... but gosh.... > it was the MAGIC trick for me... so I think it's worth playing with to > see what your body is happier with..... Thank you! I will take my Armour when I wake tomorrow, but I might stick to 1/2 tab adrenal since I feel so much better today (third day on 1/2 tab). Perhaps I should have some food at the bedside to send down the adrenal tab with so I can swallow it?? Katy 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.