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<html>
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<head>
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<title>
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TSH, temperature, pulse rate, and other indicators in hypothyroidism
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</title>
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</head>
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<body>
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<h1>
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TSH, temperature, pulse rate, and other indicators in hypothyroidism
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</h1>
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<p>
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<strong>Each of the indicators of thyroid function can be useful, but has to be interpreted in relation to
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the physiological state.</strong>
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</p>
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<p>
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<strong>Increasingly, TSH (the pituitary thyroid stimulating hormone) has been treated as if it meant
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something independently; however, it can be brought down into the normal range, or lower, by substances
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other than the thyroid hormones.</strong>
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</p>
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<p>
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<strong>"Basal" body temperature is influenced by many things besides thyroid. The resting heart rate helps
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to interpret the temperature. In a cool environment, the temperature of the extremities is sometimes a
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better indicator than the oral or eardrum temperature.</strong>
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</p>
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<p>
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<strong>The "basal" metabolic rate, especially if the rate of carbon dioxide production is measured, is very
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useful. The amount of water and calories disposed of in a day can give a rough idea of the metabolic
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rate.</strong>
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</p>
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<p>
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<strong>The T wave on the electrocardiogram, and the relaxation rate on the Achilles reflex test are
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useful.</strong>
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</p>
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<p>
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<strong>Blood tests for cholesterol, albumin, glucose, sodium, lactate, total thyroxine and total T3 are
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useful to know, because they help to evaluate the present thyroid status, and sometimes they can suggest
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ways to correct the problem.</strong>
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</p>
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<p>
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<strong>Less common blood or urine tests (adrenaline, cortisol, ammonium, free fatty acids), if they are
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available, can help to understand compensatory reactions to hypothyroidism.</strong>
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</p>
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<p>
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<strong>A book such as McGavack's <em>The Thyroid,</em> that provides traditional medical knowledge about
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thyroid physiology, can help to dispel some of the current dogmas about the thyroid.</strong>
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</p>
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<p>
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<strong>Using more physiologically relevant methods to diagnose hypothyroidism will contribute to
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understanding its role in many problems now considered to be unrelated to the thyroid.</strong>
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</p>
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<p>
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<hr />
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<hr />
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</p>
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<p>
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I have spoken to several people who told me that their doctors had diagnosed them as "both hypothyroid and
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hyperthyroid." Although physicists can believe in things which are simultaneously both particles and not
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particles, I think biology (and medicine, as far as it is biologically based) should occupy a world in which
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things are not simultaneously themselves and their opposites. Those illogical, impossible diagnoses make it
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clear that the rules for interpreting test results have in some situations lost touch with reality.
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</p>
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<p>
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Until the 1940s, hypothyroidism was diagnosed on the basis of signs and symptoms, and sometimes the
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measurement of oxygen consumption ("basal metabolic rate") was used for confirmation. Besides the
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introduction of supposedly "scientific" blood tests, such as the measurement of protein-bound iodine (PBI)
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in the blood, there were other motives for becoming parsimonious with the diagnosis of hypothyroidism. With
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the introduction of synthetic thyroxine, one of the arguments for increasing its sale was that natural
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Armour thyroid (which was precisely standardized by biological tests) wasn't properly standardized, and that
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an overdose could be fatal. A few articles in prestigious journals created a myth of the danger of thyroid,
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and the synthetic thyroxine was (falsely) said to be precisely standardized, and to be without the dangers
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of the complete glandular extract.
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</p>
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<p>
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Between 1940 and about 1950, the estimated percentage of hypothyroid Americans went from 30% or 40% to 5%,
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on the basis of the PBI test, and it has stayed close to that lower number (many publications claim it to be
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only 1% or 2%). By the time that the measurement of PBI was shown to be only vaguely related to thyroid
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hormonal function, it had been in use long enough for a new generation of physicians to be taught to
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disregard the older ideas about diagnosing and treating hypothyroidism. They were taught to inform their
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patients that the traditional symptoms that were identified as hypothyroidism before 1950 were the result of
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the patients' own behavior (sloth and gluttony, for example, which produced fatigue, obesity, and heart
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disease), or that the problems were imaginary (women's hormonal and neurological problems, especially), or
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that they were simply mysterious diseases and defects (recurring infections, arthritis, and cancer, for
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example).
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</p>
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<p>
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As the newer, more direct tests became available, their meaning was defined in terms of the statistical
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expectation of hypothyroidism that had become an integral part of medical culture. To make the new TSH
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measurements fit the medical doctrine, an 8- or 10-fold variation in the hormone was defined as "normal."
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With any other biological measurement, such as erythrocyte count, blood pressure, body weight, or serum
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sodium, calcium, chloride, or glucose, a variation of ten or 20 percent from the mean is considered to be
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meaningful. If the doctrine regarding the 5% prevalence of hypothyroidism hadn't been so firmly established,
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there would have been more interest in establishing the meaning of these great variations in TSH.
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</p>
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<p>
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In recent years the "normal range" for TSH has been decreasing. In 2003, the American Association of
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Clinical Endocrinologists changed their guidelines for the normal range to 0.3 to 3.0 microIU/ml. But even
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though this lower range is less arbitrary than the older standards, it still isn't based on an understanding
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of the physiological meaning of TSH.
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</p>
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<p>
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Over a period of several years, I never saw a person whose TSH was over 2 microIU/ml who was comfortably
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healthy, and I formed the impression that the normal, or healthy, quantity was probably something less than
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1.0.
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</p>
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<p>
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If a pathologically high TSH is defined as normal, its role in major diseases, such as breast cancer,
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mastalgia, MS, fibrotic diseases, and epilepsy, will simply be ignored. Even if the possibility is
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considered, the use of an irrational norm, instead of a proper comparison, such as the statistical
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difference between the mean TSH levels of cases and controls, leads to denial of an association between
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hypothyroidism and important diseases, despite evidence that indicates an association.
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</p>
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<p>
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Some critics have said that most physicians are "treating the TSH," rather than the patient. If TSH is
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itself pathogenic, because of its pro-inflammatory actions, then that approach isn't entirely useless, even
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when they "treat the TSH" with only thyroxine, which often isn't well converted into the active
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triiodothyronine, T3. But the relief of a few symptoms in a small percentage of the population is serving to
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blind the medical world to the real possibilities of thyroid therapy.
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</p>
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<p>
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TSH has direct actions on many cell types other than the thyroid, and probably contributes directly to edema
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(Wheatley and Edwards, 1983), fibrosis, and mastocytosis. If people are concerned about the effects of a TSH
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"deficiency," then I think they have to explain the remarkable longevity of the animals lacking pituitaries
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in W.D. Denckla's experiments, or of the naturally pituitary deficient dwarf mice that lack TSH, prolactin,
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and growth hormone, but live about a year longer than normal mice (Heiman, et al., 2003). Until there is
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evidence that very low TSH is somehow harmful, there is no basis for setting a lower limit to the normal
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range.
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</p>
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<p>
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Some types of thyroid cancer can usually be controlled by keeping TSH completely suppressed. Since TSH
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produces reactions in cells as different as fibroblasts and fat cells, pigment cells in the skin, mast cells
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and bone marrow cells (Whetsell, et al., 1999), it won't be surprising if it turns out to have a role in the
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development of a variety of cancers, including melanoma.
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</p>
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<p>
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Many things, including the liver and the senses, regulate the function of the thyroid system, and the
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pituitary is just one of the factors affecting the synthesis and secretion of the thyroid hormones.
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</p>
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<p>
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A few people who had extremely low levels of pituitary hormones, and were told that they must take several
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hormone supplements for the rest of their life, began producing normal amounts of those hormones within a
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few days of eating more protein and fruit. Their endocrinologist described them as, effectively, having no
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pituitary gland. Extreme malnutrition in Africa has been described as creating ". . . a condition resembling
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hypophysectomy," (Ingenbleek and Beckers, 1975) but the people I talked to in Oregon were just following
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what they thought were healthful nutritional policies, avoiding eggs and sugars, and eating soy products.
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</p>
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<p>
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Occasionally, a small supplement of thyroid in addition to a good diet is needed to quickly escape from the
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stress-induced "hypophysectomized" condition.
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</p>
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<p>
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Aging, infection, trauma, prolonged cortisol excess, somatostatin, dopamine or L-dopa, adrenaline
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(sometimes; Mannisto, et al., 1979), amphetamine, caffeine and fever can lower TSH, apart from the effect of
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feedback by the thyroid hormones, creating a situation in which TSH can appear normal or low, at the same
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time that there is a real hypothyroidism.
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</p>
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<p>
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A disease or its treatment can obscure the presence of hypothyroidism. Parkinson's disease is a clear
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example of this. (Garcia-Moreno and Chacon, 2002: "... in the same way hypothyroidism can simulate
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Parkinson's disease, the latter can also conceal hypothyroidism.")
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</p>
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<p>
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The stress-induced suppression of TSH and other pituitary hormones is reminiscent of the protective
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inhibition that occurs in individual nerve fibers during dangerously intense stress, and might involve such
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a "parabiotic" process in the nerves of the hypothalamus or other brain region. The relative disappearance
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of the pituitary hormones when the organism is in very good condition (for example, the suppression of ACTH
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and cortisol by sugar or pregnenolone) is parallel to the high energy quiescence of individual nerve fibers.
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</p>
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<p>
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These associations between energy state and cellular activity can be used for evaluating the thyroid state,
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as in measuring nerve and muscle reaction times and relaxation rates. For example, relaxation which is
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retarded, because of slow restoration of the energy needed for cellular "repolarization," is the basis for
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the traditional use of the Achilles tendon reflex relaxation test for diagnosing hypothyroidism. The speed
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of relaxation of the heart muscle also indicates thyroid status (Mohr-Kahaly, et al., 1996).
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</p>
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<p>
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Stress, besides suppressing the TSH, acts in other ways to suppress the real thyroid function. Cortisol, for
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example, inhibits the conversion of T4 to T3, which is responsible for the respiratory production of energy
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and carbon dioxide. Adrenaline, besides leading to increased production of cortisol, is lipolytic, releasing
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the fatty acids which, if they are polyunsaturated, inhibit the production and transport of thyroid hormone,
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and also interfere directly with the respiratory functions of the mitochondria. Adrenaline decreases the
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conversion to T4 to T3, and increases the formation of the antagonistic reverse T3 (Nauman, et al., 1980,
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1984).
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</p>
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<p>
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During the night, at the time adrenaline and free fatty acids are at their highest, TSH usually reaches its
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peak<strong>.</strong> TSH itself can produce lipolysis, raising the level of circulating free fatty acids.
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This suggests that a high level of TSH could sometimes contribute to functional hypothyroidism, because of
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the antimetabolic effects of the unsaturated fatty acids.
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</p>
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<p>
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These are the basic reasons for thinking that the TSH tests should be given only moderate weight in
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interpreting thyroid function.
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</p>
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<p>
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The metabolic rate is very closely related to thyroid hormone function, but defining it and measuring it
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have to be done with awareness of its complexity.
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</p>
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<p>
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The basal metabolic rate that was commonly used in the 1930s for diagnosing thyroid disorders was usually a
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measurement of the rate of oxygen consumption, made while lying quietly early in the morning without having
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eaten anything for several hours. When carbon dioxide production can be measured at the same time as oxygen
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consumption, it's possible to estimate the proportion of energy that is being derived from glucose, rather
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than fat or protein, since oxidation of glucose produces more carbon dioxide than oxidation of fat does.
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Glucose oxidation is efficient, and suggests a state of low stress.
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</p>
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<p>
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The very high adrenaline that sometimes occurs in hypothyroidism will increase the metabolic rate in several
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ways, but it tends to increase the oxidation of fat. If the production of carbon dioxide is measured, the
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adrenaline/stress component of metabolism will be minimized in the measurement. When polyunsaturated fats
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are mobilized, their spontaneous peroxidation consumes some oxygen, without producing any usable energy or
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carbon dioxide, so this is another reason that the production of carbon dioxide is a very good indicator of
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thyroid hormone activity. The measurement of oxygen consumption was usually done for two minutes, and carbon
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dioxide production could be accurately measured in a similarly short time. Even a measurement of the
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percentage of carbon dioxide at the end of a single breath can give an indication of the stress-free,
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thyroid hormone stimulated rate of metabolism (it should approach five or six percent of the expired air).
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</p>
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<p>
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Increasingly in the last several years, people who have many of the standard symptoms of hypothyroidism have
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told me that they are hyperthyroid, and that they have to decide whether to have surgery or radiation to
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destroy their thyroid gland. They have told me that their symptoms of "hyperthyroidism," according to their
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physicians, were fatigue, weakness, irritability, poor memory, and insomnia.
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</p>
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<p>
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They didn't eat very much. They didn't sweat noticeably, and they drank a moderate amount of fluids. Their
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pulse rates and body temperature were normal, or a little low.
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</p>
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<p>
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Simply on the basis of some laboratory tests, they were going to have their thyroid gland destroyed. But on
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the basis of all of the traditional ways of judging thyroid function, they were hypothyroid.
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</p>
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<p>
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Broda Barnes, who worked mostly in Fort Collins, Colorado, argued that the body temperature, measured before
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getting out of bed in the morning, was the best basis for diagnosing thyroid function.
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</p>
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<p>
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Fort Collins, at a high altitude, has a cool climate most of the year. The altitude itself helps the thyroid
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to function normally. For example, one study (Savourey, et al., 1998) showed an 18% increase in T3 at a high
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altitude, and mitochondria become more numerous and are more efficient at preventing lactic acid production,
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capillary leakiness, etc.
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</p>
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<p>
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In Eugene during a hot and humid summer, I saw several obviously hypothyroid people whose temperature seemed
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perfectly normal, euthyroid by Barnes' standards. But I noticed that their pulse rates were, in several
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cases, very low. It takes very little metabolic energy to keep the body at 98.6 degrees when the air
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temperature is in the nineties. In cooler weather, I began asking people whether they used electric
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blankets, and ignored their temperature measurements if they did.
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</p>
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<p>
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The combination of pulse rate and temperature is much better than either one alone. I happened to see two
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people whose resting pulse rates were chronically extremely high, despite their hypothyroid symptoms. When
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they took a thyroid supplement, their pulse rates came down to normal. (Healthy and intelligent groups of
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people have been found to have an average resting pulse rate of 85/minute, while less healthy groups average
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close to 70/minute.)
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</p>
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<p>
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The speed of the pulse is partly determined by adrenaline, and many hypothyroid people compensate with very
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high adrenaline production. Knowing that hypothyroid people are susceptible to hypoglycemia, and that
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hypoglycemia increases adrenaline, I found that many people had normal (and sometimes faster than average)
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pulse rates when they woke up in the morning, and when they got hungry. Salt, which helps to maintain blood
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sugar, also tends to lower adrenalin, and hypothyroid people often lose salt too easily in their urine and
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sweat. Measuring the pulse rate before and after breakfast, and in the afternoon, can give a good impression
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of the variations in adrenalin. (The blood pressure, too, will show the effects of adrenaline in hypothyroid
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people. Hypothyroidism is a major cause of hypertension.)
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</p>
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<p>
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But hypoglycemia also tends to decrease the conversion of T4 to T3, so heat production often decreases when
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a person is hungry. First, their fingers, toes, and nose will get cold, because adrenalin, or adrenergic
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sympathetic nervous activity, will increase to keep the brain and heart at a normal temperature, by reducing
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circulation to the skin and extremities. Despite the temperature-regulating effect of adrenalin, the reduced
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heat production resulting from decreased T3 will make a person susceptible to hypothermia if the environment
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is cool.
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</p>
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<p>
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Since food, especially carbohydrate and protein, will increase blood sugar and T3 production, eating is
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"thermogenic," and the oral (or eardrum) temperature is likely to rise after eating.
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</p>
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<p>
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Blood sugar falls at night, and the body relies on the glucose stored in the liver as glycogen for energy,
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and hypothyroid people store very little sugar. As a result, adrenalin and cortisol begin to rise almost as
|
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soon as a person goes to bed, and in hypothyroid people, they rise very high, with the adrenalin usually
|
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peaking around 1 or 2 A.M., and the cortisol peaking around dawn; the high cortisol raises blood sugar as
|
||||
morning approaches, and allows adrenalin to decline. Some people wake up during the adrenalin peak with a
|
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pounding heart, and have trouble getting back to sleep unless they eat something.
|
||||
</p>
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<p>
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If the night-time stress is very high, the adrenalin will still be high until breakfast, increasing both
|
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temperature and pulse rate. The cortisol stimulates the breakdown of muscle tissue and its conversion to
|
||||
energy, so it is thermogenic, for some of the same reasons that food is thermogenic.
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||||
</p>
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<p>
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After eating breakfast, the cortisol (and adrenalin, if it stayed high despite the increased cortisol) will
|
||||
start returning to a more normal, lower level, as the blood sugar is sustained by food, instead of by the
|
||||
stress hormones. In some hypothyroid people, this is a good time to measure the temperature and pulse rate.
|
||||
In a normal person, both temperature and pulse rate rise after breakfast, but in very hypothyroid people
|
||||
either, or both, might fall.
|
||||
</p>
|
||||
<p>
|
||||
Some hypothyroid people have a very slow pulse, apparently because they aren't compensating with a large
|
||||
production of adrenalin. When they eat, the liver's increased production of T3 is likely to increase both
|
||||
their temperature and their pulse rate.
|
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</p>
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||||
<p>
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||||
By watching the temperature and pulse rate at different times of day, especially before and after meals,
|
||||
it's possible to separate some of the effects of stress from the thyroid-dependent, relatively "basal"
|
||||
metabolic rate. When beginning to take a thyroid supplement, it's important to keep a chart of these
|
||||
measurements for at least two weeks, since that's roughly the half-life of thyroxine in the body. When the
|
||||
body has accumulated a steady level of the hormones, and begun to function more fully, the factors such as
|
||||
adrenaline that have been chronically distorted to compensate for hypothyroidism will have begun to
|
||||
normalize, and the early effects of the supplementary thyroid will in many cases seem to disappear, with
|
||||
heart rate and temperature declining. The daily dose of thyroid often has to be increased several times, as
|
||||
the state of stress and the adrenaline and cortisol production decrease.
|
||||
</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p>
|
||||
Counting calories achieves approximately the same thing as measuring oxygen consumption, and is something
|
||||
that will allow people to evaluate the various thyroid tests they may be given by their doctor. Although
|
||||
food intake and metabolic rate vary from day to day, an approximate calorie count for several days can often
|
||||
make it clear that a diagnosis of hyperthyroidism is mistaken. If a person is eating only about 1800
|
||||
calories per day, and has a steady and normal body weight, any "hyperthyroidism" is strictly metaphysical,
|
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or as they say, "clinical."
|
||||
</p>
|
||||
<p>
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||||
When the humidity and temperature are normal, a person evaporates about a liter of water for every 1000
|
||||
calories metabolized. Eating 2000 calories per day, a normal person will take in about four liters of
|
||||
liquid, and form about two liters of urine. A hyperthyroid person will invisibly lose several quarts of
|
||||
water in a day, and a hypothyroid person may evaporate a quart or less.
|
||||
</p>
|
||||
<p>
|
||||
When cells, because of a low metabolic rate, don't easily return to their thoroughly energized state after
|
||||
they have been stimulated, they tend to take up water, or, in the case of blood vessels, to become
|
||||
excessively permeable. Fatigued muscles swell noticeably, and chronically fatigued nerves can swell enough
|
||||
to cause them to be compressed by the surrounding connective tissues. The energy and hydration state of
|
||||
cells can be detected in various ways, including magnetic resonance, and electrical impedance, but
|
||||
functional tests are easy and practical.
|
||||
</p>
|
||||
<p>
|
||||
With suitable measuring instruments, the effects of hypothyroidism can be seen as slowed conduction along
|
||||
nerves, and slowed recovery and readiness for new responses. Slow reaction time is associated with slowed
|
||||
memory, perception, and other mental processes. Some of these nervous deficits can be remedied slightly just
|
||||
by raising the core temperature and providing suitable nutrients, but the active thyroid hormone, T3 is
|
||||
mainly responsible for maintaining the temperature, the nutrients, and the intracellular respiratory energy
|
||||
production.
|
||||
</p>
|
||||
<p>
|
||||
In nerves, as in other cells, the ability to rest and repair themselves increases with the proper level of
|
||||
thyroid hormone. In some cells, the energized stability produced by the thyroid hormones prevents
|
||||
inflammation or an immunological hyperactivity. In the 1950s, shortly after it was identified as a distinct
|
||||
substance, T3 was found to be anti-inflammatory, and both T4 and T3 have a variety of anti-inflammatory
|
||||
actions, besides the suppression of the pro-inflammatory TSH.
|
||||
</p>
|
||||
<p>
|
||||
Because the actions of T3 can be inhibited by many factors, including polyunsaturated fatty acids, reverse
|
||||
T3, and excess thyroxine, the absolute level of T3 can't be used by itself for diagnosis. "Free T3" or "free
|
||||
T4" is a laboratory concept, and the biological activity of T3 doesn't necessarily correspond to its
|
||||
"freedom" in the test. T3 bound to its transport proteins can be demonstrated to enter cells, mitochondria,
|
||||
and nuclei. Transthyretin, which carries both vitamin A and thyroid hormones, is sharply decreased by
|
||||
stress, and should probably be regularly measured as part of the thyroid examination.
|
||||
</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p>
|
||||
When T3 is metabolically active, lactic acid won't be produced unnecessarily, so the measurement of lactate
|
||||
in the blood is a useful test for interpreting thyroid function. Cholesterol is used rapidly under the
|
||||
influence of T3, and ever since the 1930s it has been clear that serum cholesterol rises in hypothyroidism,
|
||||
and is very useful diagnostically. Sodium, magnesium, calcium, potassium, creatinine, albumin, glucose, and
|
||||
other components of the serum are regulated by the thyroid hormones, and can be used along with the various
|
||||
functional tests for evaluating thyroid function.
|
||||
</p>
|
||||
<p>
|
||||
Stereotypes are important. When a very thin person with high blood pressure visits a doctor, hypothyroidism
|
||||
isn't likely to be considered; even high TSH and very low T4 and T3 are likely to be ignored, because of the
|
||||
stereotypes. (And if those tests were in the healthy range, the person would be at risk for the
|
||||
"hyperthyroid" diagnosis.) But remembering some of the common adaptive reactions to a thyroid deficiency,
|
||||
the catabolic effects of high cortisol and the circulatory disturbance caused by high adrenaline should lead
|
||||
to doing some of the appropriate tests, instead of treating the person's hypertension and "under nourished"
|
||||
condition.
|
||||
</p>
|
||||
<p><strong><h3>REFERENCES</h3></strong></p>
|
||||
<p>
|
||||
Clin Chem Lab Med. 2002 Dec;40(12):1344-8. <strong>Transthyretin: its response to malnutrition and stress
|
||||
injury. Clinical usefulness and economic implications.</strong> Bernstein LH, Ingenbleek Y.
|
||||
</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p>
|
||||
Endokrinologie. 1968;53(3):217-21.<strong>[Influence of hypophysectomy and pituitary hormones on dextran
|
||||
edema in rats]</strong> German. Boeskor A, Gabbiani G.
|
||||
</p>
|
||||
<p>
|
||||
J Clin Endocrinol Metab. 2001 Nov;86(11):5148-51. <strong>Sudden enlargement of local recurrent thyroid
|
||||
tumor after recombinant human TSH administration.</strong>
|
||||
Braga M, Ringel MD, Cooper DS.
|
||||
</p>
|
||||
<p>
|
||||
J Investig Med. 2002 Sep;50(5):350-4; discussion 354-5. <strong>The nocturnal serum thyrotropin surge is
|
||||
inhibited in patients with adrenal Incidentaloma.</strong>
|
||||
Coiro V, Volpi R, Capretti L, Manfredi G, Magotti MG, Bianconcini M, Cataldo S, Chiodera P.
|
||||
</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p>
|
||||
Rev Neurol (Paris). 1992;148(5):371-3.<strong>
|
||||
[Hashimoto's encephalopathy: toxic or autoimmune mechanism?]</strong> [Article in French] Ghawche F,
|
||||
Bordet R, Destee A. Service de Clinique Neurologique A, CHU, Lille. A 36-year-old woman presented with
|
||||
partial complex status epilepticus. Magnetic resonance imaging with T2-weighted sequences showed a
|
||||
high-intensity signal in the left posterior frontal area. Hashimoto's thyroiditis was then discovered. The
|
||||
disappearance of the high-intensity signal after corticosteroid therapy was suggestive of an autoimmune
|
||||
mechanism. However, improvement could be obtained only with a hormonal treatment, which supports the
|
||||
hypothesis of a pathogenetic role of the Tyrosine-Releasing Hormone (TRH).
|
||||
</p>
|
||||
<p>
|
||||
Am J Clin Nutr. 1986 Mar;43(3):406-13. <strong>Thyroid hormone and carrier protein interrelationships in
|
||||
children recovering rom kwashiorkor.
|
||||
</strong>
|
||||
Kalk WJ, Hofman KJ, Smit AM, van Drimmelen M, van der Walt LA, Moore RE. We have studied 15 infants with
|
||||
severe protein energy malnutrition (PEM) as a model of nutritional nonthyroidal illness. Changes in
|
||||
circulating thyroid hormones, binding proteins, and their interrelationships were assessed before and during
|
||||
recovery. Serum concentrations of total thyroxine and triiodothyronine and of thyroxine-binding proteins
|
||||
were extremely reduced, and increased progressively during 3 wk of refeeding. The T4:TBG molar ratio was
|
||||
initially 0.180 +/- 0.020, and increased progressively, parallel to the increases in TT4, to 0.344 +/- 0.038
|
||||
after 21 days (p less than 0.025). The changes in free T4 estimates varied according to the methods
|
||||
used--FTI and analogue FT4 increased, dialysis FT4 fraction decreased. Serum TSH levels increased
|
||||
transiently during recovery. It is concluded 1) there is reduced binding of T4 and T3 to TBG in untreated
|
||||
PEM which takes 2-3 wk to recover; 2) there are methodological differences in evaluating free T4 levels in
|
||||
PEM; 3) <strong>increased TSH secretion appears to be an integral part of the recovery from PEM.</strong>
|
||||
</p>
|
||||
<p>
|
||||
Neuroendocrinology. 1982;35(2):139-47. <strong>
|
||||
Neurotransmitter control of thyrotropin secretion.
|
||||
</strong>
|
||||
Krulich L. "The central dopaminergic system seems to have an inhibitory influence on the secretion of
|
||||
thyrotropin (TSH) both in humans and rats."
|
||||
</p>
|
||||
<p>
|
||||
Endocrinology 1972 Mar;90(3):795-801. <strong>TSH-induced release of 5-hydroxytryptamine and histamine rat
|
||||
thyroid mast cells.</strong> Ericson LE, Hakanson R, Melander A, Owman C, Sundler F.
|
||||
</p>
|
||||
<p>
|
||||
Rev Neurol. 2002 Oct 16-31;35(8):741-2. <strong>[Hypothyroidism concealed by Parkinson's disease][</strong
|
||||
>in Spanish] Garcia-Moreno JM, Chacon J. Servicio de Neurologia, Hospital Universitario Virgen Macarena,
|
||||
Sevilla, Espana.
|
||||
|
||||
<a href="mailto:Sinue@arrakis.es" target="_blank">Sinue@arrakis.es</a> AIMS: Although it is commonly
|
||||
recognised that diseases of the thyroids can simulate extrapyramidal disorders, a review of the causes of
|
||||
Parkinsonism in the neurology literature shows that they are not usually mentioned or, if so, only very
|
||||
briefly. The development of hypothyroidism in a patient with Parkinson s disease can go undetected, since
|
||||
the course of both diseases can involve similar clinical features. Generally speaking there is always an
|
||||
insistence on the need to conduct a thyroidal hormone study in any patient with symptoms of Parkinson, but
|
||||
no emphasis is put on the need to continue to rule out dysthyroidism throughout the natural course of the
|
||||
disease, in spite of the fact that the concurrence of both pathological conditions can be high and that, in
|
||||
the same way hypothyroidism can simulate Parkinson s disease, the latter can also conceal hypothyroidism.
|
||||
CASE REPORT: We report the case of a female patient who had been suffering from Parkinson s disease for 17
|
||||
years and started to present on off fluctuations that did not respond to therapy. Hypothyroidism was
|
||||
observed and the hormone replacement therapy used to resolve the problem allowed the Parkinsonian
|
||||
fluctuations to be controlled. CONCLUSIONS: We believe that it is very wise to suspect hypothyroidism in
|
||||
patients known to be suffering from Parkinson s disease, and especially so in cases where the clinical
|
||||
condition worsens and symptoms no longer respond properly to antiparkinsonian treatment. These observations
|
||||
stress the possible role played by thyroid hormones in dopaminergic metabolism and vice versa.
|
||||
</p>
|
||||
<p>
|
||||
Endocrine. 2003 Feb-Mar;20(1-2):149-54.<strong>
|
||||
Body composition of prolactin-, growth hormone, and thyrotropin-deficient Ames dwarf mice.</strong>
|
||||
Heiman ML, Tinsley FC, Mattison JA, Hauck S, Bartke A. Lilly Research Labs, Corporate Center, Indianapolis,
|
||||
IN, USA.<strong>
|
||||
Ames dwarf mice have primary deficiency of prolactin (PRL), growth hormone (GH), and thyroid-stimulating
|
||||
hormone (TSH), and live considerably longer than normal</strong>
|
||||
<strong>
|
||||
animals from the same line.</strong>
|
||||
</p>
|
||||
<p>
|
||||
(Lancet. 1975 Nov 1;2(7940):845-8<strong>.. Triiodothyronine and thyroid-stimulating hormone in
|
||||
protein-calorie malnutrition in infants.</strong> Ingenbleek Y, Beckers C.)
|
||||
</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p>
|
||||
Am J Med Sci. 1995 Nov;310(5):202-5. <strong>Case report: thyrotropin-releasing hormone-induced myoclonus
|
||||
and tremor in a patient with Hashimoto's encephalopathy.</strong>
|
||||
Ishii K, Hayashi A, Tamaoka A, Usuki S, Mizusawa H, Shoji S.
|
||||
</p>
|
||||
<p>
|
||||
Rev Neurol (Paris). 1985;141(1):55-8. [<strong>Hashimoto's thyroiditis and myoclonic encephalopathy.
|
||||
Pathogenic hypothesis]</strong> [Article in French] Latinville D, Bernardi O, Cougoule JP, Bioulac B,
|
||||
Henry P, Loiseau P, Mauriac L. A 49 year old caucasian female with Hashimoto thyroiditis, developed during
|
||||
two years a neurological disorder with tonic-clonic and myoclonic seizures and confusional states. Some
|
||||
attacks were followed by a transient postictal aphasia.<strong>
|
||||
Some parallelism was noted between the clinical state and TSH levels.</strong> Neurological events
|
||||
disappeared with the normalisation of thyroid functions. This association of Hashimoto thyroiditis and
|
||||
myoclonic encephalopathy has been rarely published. Pathogenesis could be double. Focal signs could be due
|
||||
to an auto-immune mechanism, perhaps through a vasculitis. A non-endocrine central action could explain
|
||||
diffuse signs: tonic-clonic seizures, myoclonus and confusional episodes.
|
||||
</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p>
|
||||
J Clin Endocrinol Metab. 1992 Jun;74(6):1361-5. <strong>Fatty acid-induced increase in serum dialyzable free
|
||||
thyroxine after physical exercise: implication for nonthyroidal illness.</strong> Liewendahl K, Helenius
|
||||
T, Naveri H, Tikkanen H.
|
||||
</p>
|
||||
<p>
|
||||
Adv Exp Med Biol. 1990;274:315-29. <strong>Role of monokines in control of anterior pituitary hormone
|
||||
release.</strong> McCann SM, Rettori V, Milenkovic L, Jurcovicova J, Gonzalez MC.
|
||||
</p>
|
||||
<p>
|
||||
Acta Endocrinol (Copenh). 1979 Feb;90(2):249-58. <strong>Dual action of adrenergic system on the regulation
|
||||
of thyrotrophin secretion in the male rat.</strong>
|
||||
Mannisto, Ranta T, Tuomisto J. <strong><em>"</em></strong>
|
||||
<em>....noradrenaline (NA) (1 h), and L-Dopa (1 h) were also effective in decreasing serum TSH
|
||||
levels...."</em>
|
||||
</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p>
|
||||
Endocrinology 1971 Aug;89(2):528-33. <strong>TSH-induced appearance and stimulation of amine-containing mast
|
||||
cells in the mouse thyroid.
|
||||
</strong>
|
||||
Melander A, Owman C, Sundler F.
|
||||
</p>
|
||||
<p>
|
||||
Epilepsy Res. 1988 Mar-Apr;2(2):102-10. <strong>Evidence of hypothyroidism in the genetically epilepsy-prone
|
||||
rat.</strong> Mills SA, Savage DD. Department of Pharmacology, University of New Mexico School of
|
||||
Medicine, Albuquerque 87131. A number of neurochemical and behavioral similarities exist between the
|
||||
genetically epilepsy-prone (GEPR) rat and rats made hypothyroid at birth. These similarities include lower
|
||||
brain monoamine levels, audiogenic seizure susceptibility and lowered electroconvulsive shock seizure
|
||||
threshold. Given these similarities, thyroid hormone status was examined in GEPR rats. Serum samples were
|
||||
collected from GEPR-9 and non-epileptic control rats at 5, 9, 13, 16, 22, 31, 45, 60, 90, 150 and 350 days
|
||||
of age. Serum thyroxine (T4) levels were significantly lower in GEPR-9 rats compared to control until day 22
|
||||
of age.<strong>
|
||||
GEPR-9 thyrotropin (TSH) levels were significantly elevated during the period of diminished serum T4.
|
||||
GEPR-9 triiodothyronine (T3) levels were lower than control throughout the first year of life. The data
|
||||
indicate that the GEPR-9 rat is hypothyroid from at least the second week of life up to 1 year of age.
|
||||
The</strong> critical impact of neonatal hypothyroidism on brain function coupled with the development
|
||||
of the audiogenic seizure susceptible trait by the GEPR-9 rat during<strong>
|
||||
the third week after birth suggests that neonatal hypothyroidism could be one etiological factor in the
|
||||
development of the seizure-prone state of GEPR-9 rats.</strong>
|
||||
</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p>
|
||||
Przegl Lek. 1998;55(5):250-8. <strong>[Mastopathy and simple goiter--mutual relationships]</strong> [Article
|
||||
in Polish] Mizia-Stec K, Zych F, Widala E. <strong>"Non-toxic goitre was found in 80% patients with
|
||||
mastopathy, and the results of palpation examination of thyroid were confirmed by thyroid
|
||||
ultrasonographic examination. Non-toxic goitre was significantly more often in patients with mastopathy
|
||||
in comparison with healthy women,</strong>
|
||||
and there was found significantly higher thyroid volume in these patients." Endocrinology. 1997
|
||||
Apr;138(4):1434-9. <strong>Thyroxine administration prevents streptococcal cell wall-induced inflammatory
|
||||
responses.</strong> Rittenhouse PA, Redei E.
|
||||
</p>
|
||||
<p>
|
||||
Eur J Appl Physiol Occup Physiol. 1998;77(1-2):37-43. <strong>Pre-adaptation, adaptation and de-adaptation
|
||||
to high altitude in humans: hormonal and biochemical changes at sea level.
|
||||
</strong>
|
||||
Savourey G, Garcia N, Caravel JP, Gharib C, Pouzeratte N, Martin S, Bittel J.
|
||||
</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p>
|
||||
Endocrinol Jpn. 1992 Oct;39(5):445-53. <strong>Plasma free fatty acids, inhibitor of extrathyroidal
|
||||
conversion of T4 to T3 and thyroid hormone binding inhibitor in patients with various nonthyroidal
|
||||
illnesses.</strong> Suzuki Y, Nanno M, Gemma R, Yoshimi T.
|
||||
</p>
|
||||
<p>
|
||||
Natl Med J India. 1998 Mar-Apr;11(2):62-5. <strong>Neuropsychological impairment and altered thyroid hormone
|
||||
levels in epilepsy.</strong> Thomas SV, Alexander A, Padmanabhan V, Sankara Sarma P. Department of
|
||||
Neurology, Sree Chitra Tirunal Institute for Medical Sciences and Technology, Thiruvananthapuram, Kerala,
|
||||
India. BACKGROUND: Neuropsychological impairment is a common problem in epilepsy which interferes with the
|
||||
quality of life of patients. Similarly, thyroid hormone levels have been observed to be abnormal in patients
|
||||
with epilepsy on various treatments. This study aimed to ascertain any possible correlation between
|
||||
neuropsychological performance and thyroid hormone levels among epilepsy patients. METHODS: Thyroid hormone
|
||||
levels, indices of neuropsychological performance and social adaptation of 43 epilepsy patients were
|
||||
compared with those of age- and sex-matched healthy control subjects. RESULTS: Epilepsy patients exhibited
|
||||
significantly (p < 0.001) lower scores on attention, memory, constructional praxis, finger tapping time,
|
||||
and verbal intelligence quotient (i.q.) when compared with controls. <strong>Their T3, T4 and Free T3 levels
|
||||
were significantly lower;
|
||||
</strong>
|
||||
and <strong>TSH and Free T4 levels were significantly higher than that of controls.
|
||||
</strong>There was no statistically significant correlation between the indices of neuropsychological
|
||||
performance and thyroid hormone levels. CONCLUSION: We did not observe any correlation between
|
||||
neuropsychological impairment and thyroid hormone levels among patients with epilepsy.
|
||||
</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p>
|
||||
Crit Care Med. 1994 Nov;22(11):1747-53. <strong>Dopamine suppresses pituitary function in infants and
|
||||
children.</strong> Van den Berghe G, de Zegher F, Lauwers P.
|
||||
</p>
|
||||
<p>
|
||||
Ned Tijdschr Geneeskd. 2000 Jan 1;144(1):5-8.<strong>
|
||||
[Epilepsy, disturbances of behavior and consciousness in presence of normal thyroxine levels: still,
|
||||
consider the thyroid gland]
|
||||
</strong>
|
||||
[Article in Dutch] Vrancken AF, Braun KP, de Valk HW, Rinkel GJ. Afd. Neurologie, Universitair Medisch
|
||||
Centrum Utrecht. Three patients, one man aged 51 years, and two women aged 49 and 52 years, had severe
|
||||
fluctuating and progressive neurological and psychiatric symptoms. All three had normal thyroxine levels but
|
||||
elevated thyroid stimulating hormone levels and positive thyroid antibodies. Based on clinical, laboratory,
|
||||
MRI and EEG findings they were eventually diagnosed with <strong>Hashimoto's encephalopathy, associated with
|
||||
Hashimoto thyroiditis.</strong> Treatment with prednisone in addition to thyroxine suppletion resulted
|
||||
in a remarkable remission of their neuropsychiatric symptoms. The disease is probably under-recognized.
|
||||
</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p>
|
||||
Cell Immunol. 1999 Mar 15;192(2):159-66. <strong>Neuroendocrine-induced synthesis of bone marrow-derived
|
||||
cytokines with inflammatory immunomodulating properties.
|
||||
</strong>Whetsell M, Bagriacik EU, Seetharamaiah GS, Prabhakar BS, Klein JR.
|
||||
</p>
|
||||
|
||||
© Ray Peat Ph.D. 2007. All Rights Reserved. www.RayPeat.com
|
||||
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|
||||
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|
||||
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