Guest guest Posted March 22, 2009 Report Share Posted March 22, 2009 Strange that cortisol is used to get the T3 into the cells and yet high cortisol suppresses natural T4 to T3 conversion. Go figure. ________________________________ From: cindy.seeley <cindy.seeley@...> hypothyroidism Sent: Sunday, March 22, 2009 6:26:08 PM Subject: Re: Fw: [thyroidless] Dr Jefferies - Safe Uses of Cortisol Hi Roni! This article is discussing side-effects of pharmacological doses. The book Darla is referring to by Dr. Jefferies is discussing cortisol (hydrocortisone) in physiological dosages...very, very different. The physiological doses are only recommended after saliva testing that determines that there is even a need. Without saliva testing, it would be unadvisable and possibly even dangerous... for example, my blood serum cortisol test showed that in the afternoon, my cortisol levels are double the upper limit. I am hoping that since T3 uses cortisol to get to the cells that my increased Armour dosage will get my cortisol levels down to where they should be. This seems to be happening since my temps are no longer shooting up in the afternoons, but I haven't confirmed this with lab tests yet. > http://www.vitamins -supplements. org/hormones/ cortisol. php > > > Roni > <>Just because something > isn't seen doesn't mean it's > not there<> > > > > > From: Gracia <circe@...> > Subject: Fw: [thyroidless] Dr Jefferies - Safe Uses of Cortisol > hypothyroidism > Date: Sunday, March 22, 2009, 9:28 AM > > > > > > Ok, opened my new book and I haven't even gotten through the > acknowledgments and have already found a couple of interesting things. > > 1) Dr Jefferies calls Cortisol the most promising therapeutic agents > of all time. > > 2) Cortisol has helped patients with crippling rheumatoid arthritis, > lupus, scleroderma, bronchial asthma, hay fever, eczema, and some > types of leukemia. There is even convincing evidence that it can > improve resistance to the common cold and influenza. > > But the thing that I thought was important when talking to some docs > that think this is outdated information. (I have heard some say this) > > 3)The 3rd eddition was written in 2004. So ppbbbffff to those doctors. > > More to come. > > Darla :-) > > > > > > > ------------ --------- --------- --------- --------- --------- - > > > > No virus found in this incoming message. > Checked by AVG - http://www.avg. com > Version: 8.0.175 / Virus Database: 270.9.1/1781 - Release Date: 11/11/2008 8:59 AM > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 22, 2009 Report Share Posted March 22, 2009 blood testing for cortisol is inaccurate. I did blood, saliva and 24 hr urine and got 3 completely different values---normal, high and low. Gracia Hi Roni! This article is discussing side-effects of pharmacological doses. The book Darla is referring to by Dr. Jefferies is discussing cortisol (hydrocortisone) in physiological dosages...very, very different. The physiological doses are only recommended after saliva testing that determines that there is even a need. Without saliva testing, it would be unadvisable and possibly even dangerous...for example, my blood serum cortisol test showed that in the afternoon, my cortisol levels are double the upper limit. I am hoping that since T3 uses cortisol to get to the cells that my increased Armour dosage will get my cortisol levels down to where they should be. This seems to be happening since my temps are no longer shooting up in the afternoons, but I haven't confirmed this with lab tests yet. > http://www.vitamins-supplements.org/hormones/cortisol.php > > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ No virus found in this incoming message. Checked by AVG - www.avg.com Version: 8.0.238 / Virus Database: 270.11.24/2017 - Release Date: 03/22/09 17:51:00 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 23, 2009 Report Share Posted March 23, 2009 When you got three different values on three different tests, what made you decide which one was accurate? Roni <>Just because something isn't seen doesn't mean it's not there<> From: Gracia <circe@...> Subject: Re: Re: Fw: [thyroidless] Dr Jefferies - Safe Uses of Cortisol hypothyroidism Date: Sunday, March 22, 2009, 7:37 PM blood testing for cortisol is inaccurate. I did blood, saliva and 24 hr urine and got 3 completely different values---normal, high and low. Gracia Hi Roni! This article is discussing side-effects of pharmacological doses. The book Darla is referring to by Dr. Jefferies is discussing cortisol (hydrocortisone) in physiological dosages...very, very different. The physiological doses are only recommended after saliva testing that determines that there is even a need. Without saliva testing, it would be unadvisable and possibly even dangerous...for example, my blood serum cortisol test showed that in the afternoon, my cortisol levels are double the upper limit. I am hoping that since T3 uses cortisol to get to the cells that my increased Armour dosage will get my cortisol levels down to where they should be. This seems to be happening since my temps are no longer shooting up in the afternoons, but I haven't confirmed this with lab tests yet. > http://www.vitamins-supplements.org/hormones/cortisol.php > > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ No virus found in this incoming message. Checked by AVG - www.avg.com Version: 8.0.238 / Virus Database: 270.11.24/2017 - Release Date: 03/22/09 17:51:00 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 23, 2009 Report Share Posted March 23, 2009 Actually, my thyroid MD who is trained in natural medicine, Prudence Hall, says the most accurate is the 24 hour urine test, Not the salvia test, because there are proteins in your salvia that bind with the cortisol thus making the test inaccurate. -- Re: Fw: [thyroidless] Dr Jefferies - Safe Uses of Cortisol Actually Gracia, blood testing for cortisol is not the best method, not because it is inaccurate, in and of itself. The inaccuracy comes to bear when the timing is disregarded. Mine, however, was not. It was based on expected ranges at 3:00 pm draw and drawn at 3:00 pm. Also, the results matched the symptoms I was experiencing. Blood serum testing for cortisol only provides a 'snapshot' of the moment, whereas saliva (the most accurate) provides multiple snapshots throughout the entire cycle. The 24 hour urine test averages the entire cycle, therefore a person can be low in the morning and high in the afternoon, but end up appearing to be normal as the low/high effects cancel each other out. As I think I mentioned before, one should NOT supplement cortisol without first having a complete saliva panel done, because without this, one would not know how much, nor when throughout the day, they needed to supplement. > > > blood testing for cortisol is inaccurate. I did blood, saliva and 24 hr urine and got 3 completely different values---normal, high and low. > Gracia Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 23, 2009 Report Share Posted March 23, 2009 I think cortisol is what the body makes and cortisone is what they give you. They're pretty much the same thing though. Roni <>Just because something isn't seen doesn't mean it's not there<> From: <res075oh@...> Subject: Re: Fw: [thyroidless] Dr Jefferies - Safe Uses of Cortisol hypothyroidism Date: Monday, March 23, 2009, 2:00 PM Where is the cortisol in the body that the body reacts to? Personally I would suspect in the cells, and it gets to the cells from the blood. Cortisol in the urine is what the body is dumping. I don't know exactly to what cortisol in saliva relates to. I don't think you can get a measurement of cortisol in cells with the normal means but there's lots I don't know. Lastly, is the correct term cortisol or cortisone??? .. .. > > Posted by: " Gracia " circe@... > <mailto:circe@...?Subject=%20Re%3A%20Fw%3A%20%5Bthyroidless%5D%20Dr\ %20%20Jefferies%20-%20Safe%20Uses%20of%20Cortisol> > graciabee <graciabee> > > > Sun Mar 22, 2009 7:38 pm (PDT) > > > blood testing for cortisol is inaccurate. I did blood, saliva and 24 > hr urine and got 3 completely different values---normal, high and low. > Gracia > > Hi Roni! > This article is discussing side-effects of pharmacological doses. The > book Darla is referring to by Dr. Jefferies is discussing cortisol > (hydrocortisone) in physiological dosages...very, very different. The > physiological doses are only recommended after saliva testing that > determines that there is even a need. Without saliva testing, it would > be unadvisable and possibly even dangerous... > for example, my blood serum cortisol test showed that in the > afternoon, my cortisol levels are double the upper limit. I am hoping > that since T3 uses cortisol to get to the cells that my increased > Armour dosage will get my cortisol levels down to where they should > be. This seems to be happening since my temps are no longer shooting > up in the afternoons, but I haven't confirmed this with lab tests yet. > ------------------------------------ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 23, 2009 Report Share Posted March 23, 2009 You can take phosphaditylserine to lower cortisol. On Mar 23, 2009, at 8:23 AM, " cindy.seeley " <cindy.seeley@...> wrote: , you may just have hit on something that I've been trying to process and decide what my next step should be...I think I'll just take a wait and see attitude for the time being, now! Thanks... I was not aware that high cortisol also suppresses natural T4 to T3 conversion. > > Strange that cortisol is used to get the T3 into the cells and yet high cortisol suppresses natural T4 to T3 conversion. Go figure. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 23, 2009 Report Share Posted March 23, 2009 I question the " high cortisol " theory. if you give your body what it needs, everything settles down. Gracia , you may just have hit on something that I've been trying to process and decide what my next step should be...I think I'll just take a wait and see attitude for the time being, now! Thanks... I was not aware that high cortisol also suppresses natural T4 to T3 conversion. > > Strange that cortisol is used to get the T3 into the cells and yet high cortisol suppresses natural T4 to T3 conversion. Go figure. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ No virus found in this incoming message. Checked by AVG - www.avg.com Version: 8.0.238 / Virus Database: 270.11.25/2019 - Release Date: 03/23/09 18:51:00 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 23, 2009 Report Share Posted March 23, 2009 ?? I have never heard this. I don't have weight gain on cortisol. this is the mythology of cortisol I guess. Gracia Yes, but even people with totally destroyed/absent adrenals have side effects from small replacement doses of cortisol: e.g. weight gain. Marla > > Hi Roni! > This article is discussing side-effects of pharmacological doses. The book Darla is referring to by Dr. Jefferies is discussing cortisol (hydrocortisone) in physiological dosages...very, very different. The physiological doses are only recommended after saliva testing that determines that there is even a need. Without > > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ No virus found in this incoming message. Checked by AVG - www.avg.com Version: 8.0.238 / Virus Database: 270.11.25/2019 - Release Date: 03/23/09 18:51:00 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 23, 2009 Report Share Posted March 23, 2009 I have never heard of a test which tells you how much and when to supplement cortef. all the peeps I know go by symptoms and use Jefferies as their guide. cortef 2.5/5/7.5mg 4X a day. Gracia Actually Gracia, blood testing for cortisol is not the best method, not because it is inaccurate, in and of itself. The inaccuracy comes to bear when the timing is disregarded. Mine, however, was not. It was based on expected ranges at 3:00 pm draw and drawn at 3:00 pm. Also, the results matched the symptoms I was experiencing. Blood serum testing for cortisol only provides a 'snapshot' of the moment, whereas saliva (the most accurate), provides multiple snapshots throughout the entire cycle. The 24 hour urine test averages the entire cycle, therefore a person can be low in the morning and high in the afternoon, but end up appearing to be normal as the low/high effects cancel each other out. As I think I mentioned before, one should NOT supplement cortisol without first having a complete saliva panel done, because without this, one would not know how much, nor when throughout the day, they needed to supplement. > > > blood testing for cortisol is inaccurate. I did blood, saliva and 24 hr urine and got 3 completely different values---normal, high and low. > Gracia ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ No virus found in this incoming message. Checked by AVG - www.avg.com Version: 8.0.238 / Virus Database: 270.11.25/2019 - Release Date: 03/23/09 18:51:00 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 23, 2009 Report Share Posted March 23, 2009 Roni <>Just because something isn't seen doesn't mean it's not there<> From: Gracia <circe@...> Subject: Re: Re: Fw: [thyroidless] Dr Jefferies - Safe Uses of Cortisol hypothyroidism Date: Monday, March 23, 2009, 3:47 PM ?? I have never heard this. I don't have weight gain on cortisol. this is the mythology of cortisol I guess. Gracia Yes, but even people with totally destroyed/absent adrenals have side effects from small replacement doses of cortisol: e.g. weight gain. Marla > > Hi Roni! > This article is discussing side-effects of pharmacological doses. The book Darla is referring to by Dr. Jefferies is discussing cortisol (hydrocortisone) in physiological dosages...very, very different. The physiological doses are only recommended after saliva testing that determines that there is even a need. Without > > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ No virus found in this incoming message. Checked by AVG - www.avg.com Version: 8.0.238 / Virus Database: 270.11.25/2019 - Release Date: 03/23/09 18:51:00 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 23, 2009 Report Share Posted March 23, 2009 Well, I didn't go by symptoms when I supplemented cortisol, but by my lab work. I cannot tell at all if I'm taking cortisol or not by any signs or symptoms. If I miss a dose, I don't notice. If I take extra for any reason, I don't notice any difference. Most of the people on the NaturalThyroidHormonesADRENALS don't own a copy of Jefferies. I do own a copy but haven't read it yet so it's definitely not my guide. Based on saliva tests, I stated on Cortisol and ramped up to 45 mg along with T3. I keep having to reduce my T3 since it appears my rt3 is being flushed out, I've cut back from 110 mcg/day of T3 all the way back to 0 two days ago. I also think I need to cut back on my cortisol so I'm ramping down from a current 35 mg/day over the next 8 weeks down to 0. I'm adrenals are likely in good shape now. I'm of the opinion that my rt3 problem is resolved, I might not need T3 or any thyroid med of any kind if I only use a little support like L-tyrosine and/or coconut oil daily. Since T3 did lower my cholesterol, I'll be checking that in a week or so to see where it stands with RT3 out of the way. I also am of the opinion that cortisol blood, 24 hour urin, and saliva all have the potential to be accurate within the realm of their posibilities. Blood ranges need to based on time of blood draw. Right now that's not true. The lows of the afternoon and highs of the morning are used for the high/low range which means if your low but get blood work drawn at 8:00 AM, your low status will not show up because it will be compared to the normal low of the afternoon. If you cortisol is high and you get your blood drawn in the afternoon, it will be compared with the high of the morning which is much higher than the afternoon and you will be considered normal. So, if you are having a blood cortisol done AND you think you will be high, go right when the lab opens since that will be highest reading for the day with respect to the lab's hours. If you think you will be low, go just before the lab closes since that will be your lowest point with respect to the lab's hours. 24 hour urine testing most likely will not show people who are too high or too low for some parts of the day. In other words, it a coarser test than a multiple test saliva test and will get only people who are low or high for most or all of the day. Saliva testing 4 samples is more likely to give a useful result, but took two sets of 4 samples for two different labs on the very same day with samples within minutes of each other and got 4 readings that were all low at one lab and only 2 readings that were low at the other with 2 readings normal. Go figure. Blood work with ranges set for the time of blood draw have the potential to be the most accurate but so far, those ranges are still broad enough to encompasses the entire day. There is an AM/PM cortisol draw but again, those ranges are still to wide. When one goes in to be tested can have to much of an impact on the outcome. Steve Gracia wrote: > I have never heard of a test which tells you how much and when to supplement cortef. all the peeps I know go by symptoms and use Jefferies as their guide. cortef 2.5/5/7.5mg 4X a day. > Gracia > > Actually Gracia, blood testing for cortisol is not the best method, not because it is inaccurate, in and of itself. The inaccuracy comes to bear when the timing is disregarded. Mine, however, was not. It was based on expected ranges at 3:00 pm draw and drawn at 3:00 pm. Also, the results matched the symptoms I was experiencing. Blood serum testing for cortisol only provides a 'snapshot' of the moment, whereas saliva (the most accurate), provides multiple snapshots throughout the entire cycle. The 24 hour urine test averages the entire cycle, therefore a person can be low in the morning and high in the afternoon, but end up appearing to be normal as the low/high effects cancel each other out. As I think I mentioned before, one should NOT supplement cortisol without first having a complete saliva panel done, because without this, one would not know how much, nor when throughout the day, they needed to supplement. > > > > > > > > > blood testing for cortisol is inaccurate. I did blood, saliva and 24 hr urine and got 3 completely different values---normal, high and low. > > Gracia -- Steve - dudescholar4@... Take World's Smallest Political Quiz at http://www.theadvocates.org/quiz.html " If a thousand old beliefs were ruined on our march to truth we must still march on. " --Stopford Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 23, 2009 Report Share Posted March 23, 2009 Nancie, 24-hour urine doesn't give the 4 diurnal snapshots to show levels and rhythm at particular points in the day, as done by saliva testing. Cortisol has a diurnal rhythm which is missed in 24 hr collections. From: Nancie Barnett <deifspirit@...> Subject: Re: Re: Fw: [thyroidless] Dr Jefferies - Safe Uses of Cortisol hypothyroidism Cc: HypothyroidManagement Date: Monday, March 23, 2009, 2:12 PM Actually, my thyroid MD who is trained in natural medicine, Prudence Hall, says the most accurate is the 24 hour urine test, Not the salvia test, because there are proteins in your salvia that bind with the cortisol thus making the test inaccurate. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 23, 2009 Report Share Posted March 23, 2009 Not according to my physician whose speciality is Natural medicine. I think she knows her stuff and I defer to her. The point is that the salvia has proteins in it and those proteins bind to the cortisol which interferes with the results. Ergo you are getting skewed results. -- Re: Re: Fw: [thyroidless] Dr Jefferies - Safe Uses of Cortisol hypothyroidism Cc: HypothyroidManagement Date: Monday, March 23, 2009, 2:12 PM Actually, my thyroid MD who is trained in natural medicine, Prudence Hall, says the most accurate is the 24 hour urine test, Not the salvia test, because there are proteins in your salvia that bind with the cortisol thus making the test inaccurate. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 24, 2009 Report Share Posted March 24, 2009 the key to getting well starts with iodine which is a very big deal. find a doc who understands how to use iodine and how to use hormones and which tests are actually accurate. Gracia This has also been my observations from reading on the adrenal support boards, where they discuss physiologic dosing of cortisol. I've also observed that many who have this result have identified additional deficiencies as well, that when corrected, resulted in their ability to finally start losing the extra weight. > > Yes, but even people with totally destroyed/absent adrenals have side effects from small replacement doses of cortisol: e.g. weight gain. > Marla ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ No virus found in this incoming message. Checked by AVG - www.avg.com Version: 8.0.238 / Virus Database: 270.11.26/2020 - Release Date: 03/24/09 09:19:00 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 25, 2009 Report Share Posted March 25, 2009 Hi venizia- I am not sure. It depends if the PCP believes in natural medicine. The lab that it was sent to, was not a local lab. It was I believe in Washington state. Prudence hall told me that not too many local labs do this kind of testing and that is why she send it out of state. I posted the name a while back on the list, so I will have to try and find that email. I don't have any of the paperwork anymore. But, I am due to go in to recheck my labs for the new year. I could find out then. There is a book called " From Fatigued to Fantastic " by Teitelbaum, MD that talks about Fibro and chronic fatigue. I recommend that either your sister get it or both of you get it. I have the book because I too have fibro and chronic fatigue and lupus. Here is the direct link at amazon.com http://www.amazon com/Fatigued-Fantastic--Teitelbaum/dp/1583332898/ref=pd_bbs_sr_1?ie=UTF8 s=books & qid=1238009353 & sr=8-1 hugs, nancie -- Re: Fw: [thyroidless] Dr Jefferies - Safe Uses of Cortisol Nancie, Will primary care doctors do the 24 hr urine? Or do they feel the same way about it as the saliva test? I have a sister that has ALL the symptoms of adrenal fatigue and cannot get her doctor to take her seriously. I am so frustrated with her because she will not even try to find a doctor that will listen to her. She even agrees that she probably has adrenal fatigue. She looks like death warmed over. She is not sleeping at night. She says she struggles to stay awake until around 11pm so maybe she will sleep during the night but will then wake at 3:00am EVERY night. I do not know what to do to convince her she needs to look into this further. I am really concerned for her. She is also one who suffers from hypoT and fibromyalgia. Venizia .. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 25, 2009 Report Share Posted March 25, 2009 Where is Prudence Hall located? You say she is an MD and a holistic doctor? Roni <>Just because something isn't seen doesn't mean it's not there<> From: venizia1948 <nelsonck@...> Subject: Re: Fw: [thyroidless] Dr Jefferies - Safe Uses of Cortisol hypothyroidism Date: Wednesday, March 25, 2009, 1:40 PM Thanks Nancie. Venizia > > Hi venizia- > I am not sure. It depends if the PCP believes in natural medicine. The lab > that it was sent to, was not a local lab. It was I believe in Washington > state. Prudence hall told me that not too many local labs do this kind of > testing and that is why she send it out of state. > I posted the name a while back on the list, so I will have to try and find > that email. I don't have any of the paperwork anymore. But, I am due to go > in to recheck my labs for the new year. I could find out then. > There is a book called " From Fatigued to Fantastic " by Teitelbaum, MD > that talks about > Fibro and chronic fatigue. I recommend that either your sister get it or > both of you get it. I have the book because I too have fibro and chronic > fatigue and lupus. > Here is the direct link at amazon.com > http://www.amazon > com/Fatigued-Fantastic--Teitelbaum/dp/1583332898/ref=pd_bbs_sr_1?ie=UTF8 > s=books & qid=1238009353 & sr=8-1 > > hugs, > nancie > -------Original Message------- > ------------------------------------ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 25, 2009 Report Share Posted March 25, 2009 But, it doesn't. Prudence used to use the salvia cortisol tests and the 24 hour urine tests, but she found that the salvia test results were not accurate and so she researched it and found out why; that the salvia has proteins in it that bind to the cortisol. This causes the cortisol to be unavailable to the lab regents which makes the results skewed. Now all she uses is the 24 hour urine tests. -- Re: Fw: [thyroidless] Dr Jefferies - Safe Uses of Cortisol I don't know about medical science, but coming from an applied science (electronics/electrical) background, when there is a skew involved, that is taken into account in the calculations...science being what it is, I would think this would apply to medical science as well. > > Actually, my thyroid MD who is trained in natural medicine, Prudence Hall, > says the most accurate is the 24 hour urine test, Not the salvia test, > because there are proteins in your salvia that bind with the cortisol thus > making the test inaccurate. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 25, 2009 Report Share Posted March 25, 2009 She is located in Santa , Ca. http://www.thehallcenter.com She is a MD who specializes in natural medicine. -- Re: Fw: [thyroidless] Dr Jefferies - Safe Uses of Cortisol hypothyroidism Date: Wednesday, March 25, 2009, 1:40 PM Thanks Nancie. Venizia > > Hi venizia- > I am not sure. It depends if the PCP believes in natural medicine. The lab > that it was sent to, was not a local lab. It was I believe in Washington > state. Prudence hall told me that not too many local labs do this kind of > testing and that is why she send it out of state. > I posted the name a while back on the list, so I will have to try and find > that email. I don't have any of the paperwork anymore. But, I am due to go > in to recheck my labs for the new year. I could find out then. > There is a book called " From Fatigued to Fantastic " by Teitelbaum, MD > that talks about > Fibro and chronic fatigue. I recommend that either your sister get it or > both of you get it. I have the book because I too have fibro and chronic > fatigue and lupus. > Here is the direct link at amazon.com > http://www.amazon > com/Fatigued-Fantastic--Teitelbaum/dp/1583332898/ref=pd_bbs_sr_1?ie=UTF8 > s=books & qid=1238009353 & sr=8-1 > > hugs, > nancie > -------Original Message------- > ------------------------------------ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 25, 2009 Report Share Posted March 25, 2009 The best test for Cortisol is saliva done 4X in a day, that has been proven over and over again. Mia _____ From: hypothyroidism [mailto:hypothyroidism ] On Behalf Of Nancie Barnett Sent: Tuesday, March 24, 2009 1:11 AM hypothyroidism Subject: Re: Re: Fw: [thyroidless] Dr Jefferies - Safe Uses of Cortisol Not according to my physician whose speciality is Natural medicine. I think she knows her stuff and I defer to her. The point is that the salvia has proteins in it and those proteins bind to the cortisol which interferes with the results. Ergo you are getting skewed results. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 25, 2009 Report Share Posted March 25, 2009 Nope, not true, I was on 40mg of cortisol and lost a lot of weight! Now I take 20mg and am still losing weight and I have NO side effects whatsoever on cortisol, except I can breath now and I don't have to take asthma and allergy medicines anymore!! Woo-Hoo - now that is a great side effect!! Mia Yes, but even people with totally destroyed/absent adrenals have side effects from small replacement doses of cortisol: e.g. weight gain. Marla Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 25, 2009 Report Share Posted March 25, 2009 A 24 hour urine test is good if you are trying to determine total cortisol, but most of us have other issues, like now cortisol in the morning, but HIGH cortisol at night, which keeps us up late at night, so that is why the saliva is much more accurate. I did both on me and I am SO glad that I did, I found out that my evening cortisol was very high and that explained a lot for me. Mia _____ From: hypothyroidism [mailto:hypothyroidism ] On Behalf Of Nancie Barnett Sent: Wednesday, March 25, 2009 9:09 PM hypothyroidism Subject: Re: Re: Fw: [thyroidless] Dr Jefferies - Safe Uses of Cortisol But, it doesn't. Prudence used to use the salvia cortisol tests and the 24 hour urine tests, but she found that the salvia test results were not accurate and so she researched it and found out why; that the salvia has proteins in it that bind to the cortisol. This causes the cortisol to be unavailable to the lab regents which makes the results skewed. Now all she uses is the 24 hour urine tests. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 25, 2009 Report Share Posted March 25, 2009 How did you correct your evening-high cortisol? From: Mia Harrod <miaharrod@...> Subject: RE: Re: Fw: [thyroidless] Dr Jefferies - Safe Uses of Cortisol hypothyroidism Date: Wednesday, March 25, 2009, 7:20 PM A 24 hour urine test is good if you are trying to determine total cortisol, but most of us have other issues, like now cortisol in the morning, but HIGH cortisol at night, which keeps us up late at night, so that is why the saliva is much more accurate. I did both on me and I am SO glad that I did, I found out that my evening cortisol was very high and that explained a lot for me. Mia _____ From: hypothyroidism [mailto:hypothyroidism ] On Behalf Of Nancie Barnett Sent: Wednesday, March 25, 2009 9:09 PM hypothyroidism Subject: Re: Re: Fw: [thyroidless] Dr Jefferies - Safe Uses of Cortisol But, it doesn't. Prudence used to use the salvia cortisol tests and the 24 hour urine tests, but she found that the salvia test results were not accurate and so she researched it and found out why; that the salvia has proteins in it that bind to the cortisol. This causes the cortisol to be unavailable to the lab regents which makes the results skewed. Now all she uses is the 24 hour urine tests. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 25, 2009 Report Share Posted March 25, 2009 That is not correct. I have the results and they broken down to 8 hour segments. One for the AM, the afternoon and the evening. I also once again defer to my physician who is a MD Trained in Natural Medicine and she knows what she is talking about.... -- Re: Re: Fw: [thyroidless] Dr Jefferies - Safe Uses of Cortisol But, it doesn't. Prudence used to use the salvia cortisol tests and the 24 hour urine tests, but she found that the salvia test results were not accurate and so she researched it and found out why; that the salvia has proteins in it that bind to the cortisol. This causes the cortisol to be unavailable to the lab regents which makes the results skewed. Now all she uses is the 24 hour urine tests. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 25, 2009 Report Share Posted March 25, 2009 I guess we will have to agree to disagree. I defer to my physician who is a MD trained in natural medicine. She knows her stuff. -- Re: Re: Fw: [thyroidless] Dr Jefferies - Safe Uses of Cortisol Not according to my physician whose speciality is Natural medicine. I think she knows her stuff and I defer to her. The point is that the salvia has proteins in it and those proteins bind to the cortisol which interferes with the results. Ergo you are getting skewed results. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 26, 2009 Report Share Posted March 26, 2009 I was a very active lucid dreamer too. Its been quite a while though. ________________________________ From: <res075oh@...> hypothyroidism Sent: Wednesday, March 25, 2009 10:10:28 PM Subject: Re: Fw: [thyroidless] Dr Jefferies - Safe Uses of Cortisol Research at sleep labs show that while some people claim to never dream if they are awakened at various times and immediately questions there is basically _always_ some kind of dreams or mentation going on. What actually happens is that in those who don't remember dreams the conversion from short term to long term memory does not occur, so the dreams are forgotten. The fact is you are probably _never_ actually unconscious when you sleep. What happens is that when you go to sleep you transition from a subjective mental state that is created from data input from the objective universe to a subjective mental state in which the input is created within the brain. Although external stimuli may be included. Since the critical faculty tends to be disabled at such times our dreams can be totally bizarre, while the brain does the best it can to make some kind of " story " to fit the often disjointed and chaotic input. I have personally done a lot of experimenting with lucid dreams and the hypnogogic state and have used the latter to go directly from the awake state to the asleep/dreaming state with no loss of consciousness or of my train of thought many dozens or hundreds of times. Unfortunately I can no longer do so. I would suspect that in your case something has happened that facilitates the conversion of short term memory to long term memory, so you now remember your dreams. .. .. > > Posted by: " cindy.seeley " cindy.seeley@ gmail.com > <mailto:cindy.seeley@ gmail.com?Subject=%20Re% 3A%20Fw%3A% 20%5Bthyroidless %5D%20Dr% 20% 20Jefferies% 20-%20Safe% 20Uses%20of% 20Cortisol> > cindy.seeley <http://profiles. / cindy.seeley> > > > Wed Mar 25, 2009 5:54 am (PDT) > > Some of these people on the adrenal board do supplement iodine as part > of their regimen, and do find that it is helping them. My husband and > I have started iodine as well (with my doctor's approval), but so far, > I haven't noticed any improvement in either of us. If anything, I am > tireder after taking it. I fall asleep within a couple hours after I > take it if I don't stay on my feet and keep moving, which my back > won't take. I had hoped that the iodine supplementation would > eventually allow me to reduce my thyroid meds, but so far, it's not > looking like that is going to happen...then again, they say sleep is > when our bodies do the most healing, so maybe I just need to go with > the flow and sleep a lot allowing my body to heal all it needs to. > After years of no dreams, since the increase in thyroid meds, I > finally started dreaming again. In the last 24 hours, I dreamed a lot! > I didn't start supplementing the iodine until I had worked my way up > on the Armour, so we're in our 2nd month...so far, with no detox > symptoms either, but I also started us with support supplements at the > same time. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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