Thyroid Pearls & Tips

Wow I see all this almost every day in my office -- same exact thyroid related medical issues/complaints. After ten years of endocrinology research and 33 years in practice, I've concluded that a lot of my fellow doctors weren't really taught the nuances of thyroid care. Those include how patients need levels optimized, or how to really listen to patient's symptoms (and treat accordingly), and which labs to get at what time. So, I always tell patients to believe their ‘lying eyes’ (their symptoms are real), and not always the lab results (which can be inaccurate or not interpreted correctly). If you have a good medical clinician, your symptoms of hypothyroidism are more important than the lab results. 

It is very complicated but let me make it simpler. If your hands and feet are ice cold, you are probably NOT on enough thyroid medication. It is almost NEVER Raynaud's phenomenon, but is undiagnosed hypothyroidism and/or under-treated hypothyroidism. Download my thyroid book Out of The Deep Freeze: No More Cold Hand, Cold Feet now ($0.99 on Kindle) and start with that. Even at the most basic level what looks like hypothyroidism is not always hypothyroidism but could be a zinc, selenium, and/or B12 deficiency.

Why do doctors check the Free T4 (FT4) instead of the active part of the thyroid, the Free T3 (FT3)? It depends how these doctors are educated in medical school/residency. In the 1970s, Knoll Pharmaceutical developed Synthroid (synthetic T4) and ‘captured’ the endocrinologists in the medical schools who still believe in this concept today only using Synthroid. Heaven forbid they use ‘animal thyroid’ (as they derisively call Armour or Nature Thyroid).

Hypothyroid.jpeg

Neither you nor I know what is happening with your thyroid, unless you know your FT3 lab result. Ideally, you want a normal FT4 and a FT3 that is optimized up to near the top of the normal range at 4.1 pmol/L. Being at the bottom of the range guarantees misery (cold hands. cold feet, weight gain, sluggishness, hair loss, etc.). FT3 is where it counts!

Thyroid resistance is just as real as insulin resistance and you need a lot more thyroid hormone to treat. I often see it in thyroid cancer survivors who need more thyroid than normal. If you have Grave’s disease or thyroid resistance, make sure you are taking extra CoQ10 (i.e. ubiquinol). I suggest Qunol 200-300mg a day since hyperthyroidism blows through your CoQ10 causing fatigue and brain fog.

Suffering from Hasimoto’s disease requires a higher dose of thyroid to get optimal results. If you are a fan of Thyromin from Young Living Essential Oils, the max dose you should take is five at night before bed and three in the morning upon arising. I've seen this insight work many times with my patients.

Contact us at (801) 796-7667 or info@danpursermd.com for help. Check back often for the newest updates!

 

Dan Purser MD

Dr. Purser was from the graduating class of 1981, Brigham Young University. Dr. Purser graduated from “Old Miss” (the University of Mississippi, School of Medicine) where he completed medical school near the top of his class. 

Dr. Purser began with a practice in family medicine with an emphasis on geriatrics during the 1980’s. In the late 1990’s, coupled with his prior education and vast experience with aging patients, Dr. Purser continued with in depth medical studies and interests in neurological studies, with an emphasis in pituitary dysfunction, as well as intensive preventive care of the body, and how these inter-relate. With Dr. Purser’s vastly accumulated experience, he’s enjoyed tremendous success with his patients in both his preventive medicine and traumatic brain injury practices since the late 1990’s. Currently his “day job” involves work in a plastic surgery group where he deals with complex wound healing issues. He also consults for, and designs products that you can feel working for a number of nutraceutical companies.

These intense studies and long standing experience in the medical profession have led Dr. Purser to be a very unique contributor to an outstanding textbook for physicians “Program 120: A Physician’s Handbook on Proactive Preventive Medicine”. This text is used as his curriculum in educating fellow physicians throughout the United States and abroad. Dr. Purser’s current writings include a book directly addressing the pituitary endocrinology issues of Fibromyalgia. Dr. Purser is a long standing Utah Medical Association delegate with honors, certificates and outstanding achievements from the American Medical Association and has been the Utah County representative for physicians practicing there to the Utah Medical Association the last several years.  Also Dr. Purser is involved in ongoing research in cardiology, pituitary endocrinology, and pharmacology with a team in the Los Angeles area.

http://danpursermd.com
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