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Hypothyroid, Cold, Tired & Depressed? Try Replacing 50µg of T4 With 12.5µg of T3 - Study Shows, 65% of Patients Would not Want to Go Back to Synthyroid (T4), Only!

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Image 1: Are you taking copious amounts of synthyroid (levothyroxin, T4), already, and feel as if your hypothyroidism became rather worse than better? Does Your Dr tell you that your TSH is fine and you should just exercise more and eat less to stop gaining weight like mad? Than this post is for you! The issue of optimal thyroid medication resurfaced as of late on the SuppVersity facebook wall , when I posted the link to a recently conducted retrospect study in patients who had undergone total thyroidectomy and were now receiving postoperative levothyroxin only hormone therapy by Ito et al. Not to my personal, but obviously to the researchers surprise, the textbook prescription of the "metabolically inactive"  T4 (essentially that is as almost 90% of "general knowledge about thyroid hormone metabolism incorrect as T4 can very well interact with thyroid receptors, it is though TR-alpha specific and has little metabolically activating effects, cf.  Koury. 2009) did ...

Dietary Thyroid Treatment: Beef, Green Vegetables, Full-Fat Milk & Butter Normalize TSH in Subclinical Hypothyroidism

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Image 1: "Nutritional thyroid medication" - Sirloin of beef in smoked butter (thestaffcanteen.com) "Hypo- what?" This is probably the answer your grandparents would have gotten, if they had told one of their friends that they suspected to be hypothyroid, or, put simply, had an "underactive" thyroid gland. What used to be medicinal rarity, though, has become more and more of a plague in the course of the last decades. And while "full-blown" hypothyrodism, which is (quite ridiculously) defined by TSH values of >10mU/l, is still pretty rare, the number of people with oftentimes undiagnosed "subclinical hypothyrodism" who have elevated TSH levels, but remain below the more or less artificially defined upper cut-off level, or normal TSH levels, but low levels of the thyroid hormones T4 and, more importantly, T3, is on a constant rise. "Subclinical" hypothyroidism: Not just a thread to your weight, but also to your health ...
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