Thyroid Hormone Cycle Questions and Answers. T3, Insulin, Hormones

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Thyroid Hormone Usage Q&A
Thyroid Hormone Usage Q&A

Q. Should You Take Your Thyroid Hormone With Food vs. An Empty Stomach?

A. Food may delay or reduce the absorption of many drugs, including thyroid hormone. Food can often slow the process of the stomach entering, but it may also affect absorption of the drug you're taking by binding with it, by decreasing access to absorption sites, by altering the rate at which it dissolves, or by changing the stomach’s PH balance. This is why many doctors recommend that for best absorption of your thyroid hormone, you should take it first thing the morning, on an empty stomach, one hour before eating.

Q. What is the Impact of a High Fiber Diet?

A. Given that many people on thyroid replacement therapy are fighting an additional battle to lose weight, high fiber diets are also an issue. Anything that affects your digestion speed or speed of absorption of items into the stomach can have an effect on your absorption of thyroid hormone. Since high-fiber diets can, ahem, speed things up a bit, they are known to inhibit absorption for some people. So, should you forget about eating high-fiber? Absolutely not!!! Since the benefits of fruits, vegetables and a high-fiber diet are known, again, the issue here is consistency. If you are already eating a high-fiber diet regularly, and have regular TSH testing done, your dosage level is appropriate for you, given your diet. If you are starting a new regimen of eating high-fiber, plan to get tested around six to eight weeks after you change your diet, to make sure you're receiving the proper amount of thyroid hormone. But be consistent. Don't jump around, or you'll have erratic absorption, and that can wreak havoc on TSH levels...AND how you feel! But again, taking your thyroid hormone first thing a.m. on an empty stomach, and waiting at least an hour to eat, will ensure maximum absorption, whatever your diet is!

Q. What About Iodine and Kelp Supplements?

A. While some herbalists and vitamin proponents recommend iodine tablets or kelp supplements (which are high in iodine) for people with thyroid problems, you need to be extremely careful about any decision to take iodine or kelp supplements if you are on thyroid hormone replacement therapy.

The thinking behind taking iodine or kelp is that in many parts of the world, goiters and thyroid disease are related to iodine deficiency. In the U.S. and other developed countries, iodine deficiency is not very common anymore, due to the addition of iodine to salt -- iodized salt -- and other food products. In fact, the most common forms of thyroid disease found in the U.S. -- autoimmune thyroid diseases like Graves' Disease or Hashimoto's Thyroiditis -- have nothing to do with iodine deficiency at all. Actually, thyroids are extremely sensitive to iodine, and you need to be careful about adding too much iodine to the diet as it can irritate or aggravate the thyroid. Most doctors say not to worry about some iodized salt, or the iodine present in a food item such as an occasional sushi dinner. But even alternative nutritional doctor Stephen Langer, author of Solved: The Riddle of Illness, the follow-up book to Broda Barnes' Hypothyroidism: The Unsuspected Illness, advises against taking iodine or kelp supplements for people with autoimmune thyroid disease.

Q. How About "Goitrogenic" Foods Like Kale or Brussels Sprouts?

A. Goitrogenic foods like brussels sprouts, rutabaga, turnips, cauliflower, African cassava, millet, babassu (a palm-tree coconut fruit popular in Brazil and Africa) cabbage, and kale can act like the antithyroid drugs propylthiouracil and methimazole in disabling the thyroid function, so they should not be eaten in large amounts by someone on thyroid hormone replacement who still has a thyroid. It's thought that the enzymes involved in the formation of goitrogenic materials in plants can be destroyed by cooking, so thorough cooking may minimize goitrogenic potential.

Q. Is There a Problem with Antacids?

A. Antacids -- like Tums, or Mylanta, in liquid or tablet forms -- may delay or reduce the absorption of thyroid drugs, and therefore, should also be taken at least two hours apart from when you take your thyroid hormone.

Q. What About Calcium and Calcium-Fortified Orange Juice?

A. Like antacids, calcium can interfere with the absorption of thyroid drugs. You should take calcium at least two to three hours apart from taking your thyroid hormone. The same holds true for calcium-fortified orange or apple juice. You should not take your thyroid hormone at the same time as calcium-fortified juice.

Q. What about Over the Counter Drugs Like Cough Medicines, Cold Medicines, Decongestants?

A. Most packages of over-the-counter cough and cold medicines and decongestants say "Do not take if you have one of the following..." and then goes on to list thyroid disease. While you should always check with your doctor, it's generally understood that this warning is more applicable for people with hyperthyroidism (overactive thyroid) than hypothyroidism (underactive thyroid). Because these drugs contain stimulants, the logic is for someone with hyperthyroidism to avoid adding even further stimulation or strain on the heart from these drugs. That said, some people with hypothyroidism do find that they become sensitive to ingredients like pseudoephedrine, what you'd typically find in Sudafed or other decongestants. Some doctors will recomend you try only a partial dose, and see if you have a reaction, and only then try to work you way up to the normal dose and see if it bothers you.

Q. How Should You Take Vitamins with Iron?

A. Iron, whether alone, or as part of a multivitamin or prenatal vitamin supplement, interferes with thyroid hormone absorption. You should not take your vitamins with iron at the same time as your thyroid hormone, and should allow at least two hours between taking them.

Q. What About Thyroid Hormone and Estrogen? (i.e., Hormone Replacement Therapy, Birth Control Pills)

A. Women taking estrogen (either as hormone replacement -- i.e., Premarin -- or in birth control pills) may need to take more thyroid replacement hormone. Estrogen increases the body's production of a blood protein that binds thyroid hormone to it, making it inactive. For women without thyroids in particular, this can cause a need to increase the dosage level slightly, as there is no thyroid to compensate. After beginning any estrogen therapy, a woman should always have TSH tested to see if the estrogen is having an impact on overall TSH and thyroid function and might require a dosage adjustment.

Q. What Do You Need to Know About Some Other Prescription Drugs?

Antidepressants
Use of tricyclic antidepressants at the same time as thyroid hormones may increase the effects of both drugs, and may accelerate the effects of the antidepressant. Be sure your doctor knows you are on one before prescribing the other.

Insulin
Insulin and the similar oral hypoglycemic drugs for diabetes can reduce the effectiveness of thyroid hormone. Be sure your doctor knows you are on one before prescribing the other. If you're on insulin or an oral hypoglycemic, you should be closely watched during the initiation of thyroid replacement therapy.

Cholesterol-Lowering Drugs (Cholestyramine or Colestipol -- Colestrol, Questran, Colestid)
These cholesterol-lowering drugs bind thyroid hormones, and a minimum of four to five hours should elapse between taking these drugs and thyroid hormones.

Anticoagulants ("Blood Thinners")
Anticoagulant (blood thinning) drugs like Warfarin, Coumadin or Heparin can on occasion become stronger in the system when thyroid hormone is added to the mix. Be sure to mention to your doctor if you are on one or the other, and a new prescription is added.​
 
There's an epidemic of folks who don't know they're hypothyroid because of improper testing . The "old school" physicians are still drawling blood levels of TSH (thyroid stimulating hormone) as sole method to evaluate thyroid function. TSH is incapable of telling you or your doctor what's happening "inside your cells'.
It's fine to check as part of a comprehensive profile, but not by itself. People are often told they have "normal" thyroid levels, based upon their "normal" TSH.
TSH is a brain hormone and has nothing to do with intracellular (mitochondrial) levels of active thyroid hormone called "T3"
You see, TSH may very well be normal, while T3, (the hormone you want) is desperately low.
So you will hold weight, dry skin, low libido etc. Regardless of your "misery, you may still be told your okay, because your TSH is okay. Big mistake! Huge!

TSH is just a messenger hormone. People who fill great have adequate levels of "T3" inside their cells. Measuring a "free T3" gives you relevant, usable data.
I'd shoot for 3.5 to 4.2 pg/ml myself. During the same blood test, you should also measure T4 (which is inactive hormone, but it converts to T3.)
This is important to ascertain because it gives you a gauge to see how much hormone is available to eventually become active.
Just a thought............AnalogMan
 
There's an epidemic of folks who don't know they're hypothyroid because of improper testing . The "old school" physicians are still drawling blood levels of TSH (thyroid stimulating hormone) as sole method to evaluate thyroid function. TSH is incapable of telling you or your doctor what's happening "inside your cells'.
It's fine to check as part of a comprehensive profile, but not by itself. People are often told they have "normal" thyroid levels, based upon their "normal" TSH.
TSH is a brain hormone and has nothing to do with intracellular (mitochondrial) levels of active thyroid hormone called "T3"
You see, TSH may very well be normal, while T3, (the hormone you want) is desperately low.
So you will hold weight, dry skin, low libido etc. Regardless of your "misery, you may still be told your okay, because your TSH is okay. Big mistake! Huge!

TSH is just a messenger hormone. People who fill great have adequate levels of "T3" inside their cells. Measuring a "free T3" gives you relevant, usable data.
I'd shoot for 3.5 to 4.2 pg/ml myself. During the same blood test, you should also measure T4 (which is inactive hormone, but it converts to T3.)
This is important to ascertain because it gives you a gauge to see how much hormone is available to eventually become active.
Just a thought............AnalogMan

Bro, that is one hell of a good informative post!!! Thank You!

Also i will say this, My buddy had this same exact issue, he got so fat and over weight, that he looked like a totally different person, he would always be so tired that he once fell asleep in the middle of talking to my Mother-in-law, as if he had Narcolepsy lol, NO BS!! I was worried my Mother-in-law might think he was on drugs lol,

He was tested and tested and nothing was figured out until someone finally dug deep and found out he needed to take t3, it was the 10000% Most Amazing transformation I have EVER EVER EVER seen! He lost all the weight, and went from OBESE to Healthy lean and mean, and looked like a totally different human being! He energy levels went through the roof, I was so happy for him as he was a very good friend of mine since high school!

So anyhow, yes great post bro
 
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