What is Hashimoto's Thyroiditis?
Health & Fitness:Alternative Health
Can I Have Hashimoto's if My Thyroid Labs Are In Range? - Dr. Martin Rutherford
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Why do you still have thyroid symptoms when the doctor is telling you that your thyroid numbers are correct? There's a lot of nuances to that, a lot. Like about 25 different ones. But I'm going to talk about the core here real quickly. So normally when you go to the doctor, in this day and age maybe you already know you have Hashimoto's. So I think that's what the person is asking, this is a question that someone asked. So let's say you know you have Hashimoto's, you go to the doctor, they're checking your thyroid hormone. Most of the time they only check TSH still. And if your TSH, which is the thyroid stimulating hormone, which is the holy grail of endocrinology for 100 years or more for thyroid, you don't have enough data to really know why that is happening. And your doctor doesn't generally know that, because that's basically what they go by.
Some doctors will measure TSH T4 and T3. So T4 is with the thyroid makes, T3 is what the T4... The thyroid hormone T4 is inactive, T3 is what the inactive T4 turns into. T3 is active. It's all about T3. It's all about T3 getting into your little cells and giving you energy and then you lose weight, your hair stops falling out and things of that nature.
Problem is even when the doctors today run TSH T4 and T3, we have a significant disagreement between functional world and the pathological world, the doctor world, the medical doctor world, the endocrinology world, as to what those numbers should be. Most of the time what's happening is you're not converting the active T4 to T3. So you have this thyroid, it makes a proper amount of T4, so you take the test says your TSH is normal, your T4 is normal. There's a lot of argument as to what's normal for T3. The inactive thyroid hormone gets converted. Now there's a ton of things that will stop that conversion. One of them is half of the drugs that you're taking out there. I literally have two laminated sheets, both sides, notebook type paper type sheets of drugs that I have to look at before I do anything else and go, "This is maybe part of your problem. This may be stopping you from T4 to T3." Some of the most popular ones unfortunately are like hormone replacement, birth control or, for you guys are out there who liked the big muscles, steroids. And so those things will do it. But there's just so many. Some of the antidepressants, some of the antianxiety medication, so you got that.
But you convert your T4 to T3 in your liver, in your intestines, and at the very cell site where it goes into the cell. Within the framework of those three things, there's about 30 things that can go wrong. So this goes back to Hashimoto's. Hashimoto's is an autoimmune problem. We're not even talking about that automated problem right now. We're talking about just the basic of the thyroid itself showing normal. If you have liver problems, if you have fatty liver, if you have any of the one to 30 things that can happen in your intestines, autoimmune gastritis, SIBO, leaky gut, dysbiosis, alternating constipation and diarrhea. If you have any of those things you're probably going to have a hard time converting.
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Martin P. Rutherford, DC
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