Guest guest Posted December 10, 2004 Report Share Posted December 10, 2004 >>I have times where my muscles will go weak and I get soooo sleepy. If I lay down for 15-30 minutes it seems to help and it goes away sometimes. Do you know why these occur?<< This sounds like a typical thyroid crash! Just running out of T3. I used to do that all the time in my pre-Armour days. Increasing my dosage and splitting them has stopped this. I would even do this sometimes on 4.5 grains a day when I was dosing 2 times a day then I broke my dose up to four times a day where I have no more " slumps " as I call them. Mine had nothing to do with adrenals. It felt like suddenly I couldn;t raise my arms, legs or stay awake. A nap always seemed to help, but sometimes my naps ended up being 3-5 hours. I hardly ever nap now! *Artistic Grooming * Hurricane, WV Fat cat? Diabetes? Listowner for overweight or hypothyroid cats http://groups.yahoo.com/group/hypokitties/ --- Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free. Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com). Version: 6.0.809 / Virus Database: 551 - Release Date: 12/9/2004 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 10, 2004 Report Share Posted December 10, 2004 <<First off hypoglycemia is adrenal related. I was diagnosed in 1987. So my adrenals were not working properly as long ago as that and I can even remember back in high school when I got really hungry and did not eat I would get so sick I would throw up. That's all adrenals not functioning properly. >>> For what it is worth, I have had episodes of hypoglycemia since starting Armour 7 months ago. They are usually associated with changing my dose (either going up or down) and are very related to eating carbos alone. I have some degree of adrenal fatigue, and I figure in my mind that the hypoglycemic reactions are one way my adrenals demonstrate they don't have much reserve. They don't seem to adjust easily to either an up or down dose of thyroid, and the two glands work together. I have had great success in making myself always eat protein at all meals and snacks, mostly eating it first before any carbs. My hypoglycemia also seems to be helped tremendously by taking chromium at each meal, until I am no longer having the hypoglycemic reactions, and then I take a little less. I would also agree if your doctor is telling you that you are going to be very sick for 2-3 months when you come off of Cortef, that doesn't sound like a real positive plan! Other doctors talk about gradually coming off of it, and boosting other supplements at the same time to ease the transition. Also, lots of people are put on steroids routinely in adrenal suppressive doses (like my husband) for inflammatory conditions, and it is possible to get off of them, so I would think if you are on Cortef you can get off of it successfully. R. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 10, 2004 Report Share Posted December 10, 2004 <<First off hypoglycemia is adrenal related. I was diagnosed in 1987. So my adrenals were not working properly as long ago as that and I can even remember back in high school when I got really hungry and did not eat I would get so sick I would throw up. That's all adrenals not functioning properly. >>> For what it is worth, I have had episodes of hypoglycemia since starting Armour 7 months ago. They are usually associated with changing my dose (either going up or down) and are very related to eating carbos alone. I have some degree of adrenal fatigue, and I figure in my mind that the hypoglycemic reactions are one way my adrenals demonstrate they don't have much reserve. They don't seem to adjust easily to either an up or down dose of thyroid, and the two glands work together. I have had great success in making myself always eat protein at all meals and snacks, mostly eating it first before any carbs. My hypoglycemia also seems to be helped tremendously by taking chromium at each meal, until I am no longer having the hypoglycemic reactions, and then I take a little less. I would also agree if your doctor is telling you that you are going to be very sick for 2-3 months when you come off of Cortef, that doesn't sound like a real positive plan! Other doctors talk about gradually coming off of it, and boosting other supplements at the same time to ease the transition. Also, lots of people are put on steroids routinely in adrenal suppressive doses (like my husband) for inflammatory conditions, and it is possible to get off of them, so I would think if you are on Cortef you can get off of it successfully. R. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 10, 2004 Report Share Posted December 10, 2004 What types of proteins do you eat at meals? I can only eat chicken or turkey (no meat or fish). Can't eat soy products or dairy products either...allergies. So that leaves mainly chicken or turkey & that's it. I worry about that tho because there's no avaialability of organic or range-free chickens/turkeys around here. And I know there's hormones injected into all other chickens & turkeys raised for slaughter. So the hormones in them can upset my own hormonal imbalance just as much as the hormones injected into other meats from cattle, pigs, sheep, etc. can affect us adversely. So getting the right kind of protein in me is a really difficult problem as I'm hypoglycemic too. The only other kind of protein I can think of is in vegetables...leafy greens I guess mostly or beans mainly. Specially in Spirulina, blue green algae & wheat grass. But that stuff doesn't make a meal very filling or satisfying. From: mydgtd <mdstephenson@v...> wrote: <<First off hypoglycemia is adrenal related........I have had great success in making myself always eat protein at all meals and snacks, mostly eating it first before any carbs. My hypoglycemia also seems to be helped tremendously by taking chromium at each meal, until I am no longer having the hypoglycemic reactions, and then I take a little less. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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