Guest guest Posted December 10, 2004 Report Share Posted December 10, 2004 HAHAHA, Best joke of the year & very good article!!! Actually, my worst heart problems occur when hypo ( & I took the dangerous synthetic thyroid meds). I needed a natural medicine Crataegus to fix my troubled & probably enlarged heart, before I was able to reach my optimal dose of Armour. Think about it. Margreet. > > Question: Six months ago, I was losing a lot of hair. I started > studying hair loss and found out it might be caused by a thyroid > problem. I went to see my doctor, and as it turned out, I was right. > My TSH level was 20.8. My doctor said I'm hypothyroid and prescribed > 75 mcg of Synthroid. Since I've been using the Synthroid, I've felt > worse and worse, and my hair is still falling out. My doctor says > that since my TSH is now 1.8, the Synthroid is working fine. After > studying more, I found out that many hypothyroid people don't do > well with Synthroid but get better with Armour. My doctor has talked > it down, saying that in lab test studies, Synthroid worked better. > He said that if I take Armour, the T3 in my blood will peak, and > that may cause me to have a heart attack. I don't want to risk that. > At 27 years old, I'm not ready to die. What are my other options? Is > there some other treatment I can get, or am I doomed to stay on > Synthroid, feel horrible, and lose all my hair? > > Answer: Your best options are to reeducate your doctor or find one > who's more knowledgeable about thyroid hormone therapy. I suspect > that your doctor has been mislead by two groundless beliefs > promulgated by the endocrinology specialty—beliefs with disastrous > consequences for hypothyroid patients such as you. The beliefs are > about potential harm from using thyroid hormone products, such as > Armour, that contain T3 as well as T4. > > The endocrinology specialty first promotes the belief that only a > steady blood level of T3 is normal and healthy; it follows through > with a second, corollary belief: that is, if the T3 blood level > peaks briefly, as after taking Armour, the patient is in peril. > He'll probably have troubling heart palpitations, but worse, he may > drop dead from a heart attack. The way around these potential > problems, says the specialty, is to use T4 alone, as in Synthroid. > > It is true that for some some patients, a brief peak T3 level is > indeed dangerous. But these patients aren't likely to walk into > doctors' offices and ask for Armour or T3. The reason is, they're > lying on their death beds in nursing homes, and a sip of coffee or > tea might make their fragile hearts shutter and threaten to stop > beating. > > True, the hearts of these decrepit patients may not tolerate peak T3 > levels well. This doesn't mean, however, that the same is true of > the hearts of all patients. But concluding that it is true of all is > an absurdly invalid deduction the endocrinology specialty has made. > > For most patients, the brief peak T3 level from T4/T3 or T3 products > is entirely inconsequential. I have observed— scrutinized is more > accurate—many hundreds of patients who were using Armour or plain > T3. Not a single one complained of troublesome palpitations during > the peak T3 level. And not one reported a symptom during that peak > T3 time that intimated an impending heart attack. In fact, no > patient reported a symptom that suggested even a mild heart > dysfunction. > > The belief that the peak T3 level is troubling or dangerous for most > hypothyroid patients has no scientific grounds. But as a scare > tactic, it is an excellent marketing strategy. The belief has > undoubtedly frightened hundreds of thousands of doctors, such as > yours, into prescribing Synthroid in lieu of Armour. And as a > result, it's led to the sustained suffering of millions of patients, > such as you. > > The solution to this problem—as with so many other health problems > today—is to reeducate your doctor. Or, if his mind is closed, the > solution is to find another one who already knows how to treat you > safely and effectively. Best of luck at it. > > http://www.drlowe.com/QandA/askdrlowe/mostrecent.htm#November% 2027,% > 202004 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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