Wednesday, May 15, 2013

Hashimoto's Thyroiditis Is No Big Deal - All Low Thyroid Patients Have It


Now before you smash the computer screen, hear me out. I just had another patient come in and tell me that her doctor had said that to her.

If you are suffering with any of the symptoms of Hashimoto's, you know that it is a BIG DEAL.
Some of the symptoms of Hashimoto's include:
• hair loss
• hair thinning
• constipation
• fatigue
• cold hands and feet
• sleep excessively to function
• brain fog, slow thinking
• dry skin, flaky skin
• occasional HYPERthyroid symptoms

In America the number one cause for low thyroid is an autoimmune condition called Hashimoto's Thyroiditis.

This means that the number one cause for low thyroid n America is an autoimmune attack. Here are some examples of other autoimmune conditions: MS, rheumatoid arthritis, Lupus.

An autoimmune condition means your immune system has turned on you and is targeting your thyroid...and is killing it.... and that's what's causing you to have low thyroid symptoms. Taking thyroid hormones will NOT do anything for this attack. You will continue to lose more and more of your thyroid. The standard of care for that is giving you thyroid hormones. I think you probably understand now that this not a thyroid hormone problem. That's not the battle. The battle is an immune system battle; an autoimmune battle.

Here is a good way to think about the autoimmune attack on the body. It would be like coming into my office in shorts. You bring along your dog or cat. And it is just starts biting and scratching your legs, just really attacking you. I look at you and say "Gee, you have a leg problem. Here are some band-aids. Take these and put them on your legs. Here is a script of band-aids for the rest of your life for that leg problem. You may need more or less of them as you go through life. If I told you this you would probably look at me like I had two heads. It wouldn't make any sense. The animal attacking your legs is the problem, not the legs. It is the same thing with Hashimoto's. The immune system attacking the thyroid is the problem, not the thyroid.

What most doctors are going to do for Hashimoto's is monitor your TSH or thyroid stimulating hormone level. They're going to try to make it stay within a certain numerical range, but that's going to fluctuate all over the place and it's not really getting to the problem.

The immune system will NOT only attack the thyroid, but it will start attacking the cells in the lining of your stomach that help you to be able to absorb B-12. When this happens you'll end up getting pernicious anemia. Since 80% of neurotransmitters are created in the stomach, you can also get brain fog, memory loss, and other neurological symptoms.

The brain is also targeted by the immune system. It likes to attack the cerebellum. You can end up having vertigo, dizziness, and balance problems.
The immune system also attacks your pancreas and can make you start having diabetic symptoms, insulin problems, and adrenal issues.

Since every cell in the body has a thyroid receptor site, any part of your body can be attacked when the immune system no longer can tell what is friend and what it foe.
When most patients suffering from low thyroid symptoms learn about the autoimmune attack on the body, it makes perfect sense to them. It makes sense because that is how they feel. Like their body is being attacked.

Focusing the clinical management on slowing and modulating the autoimmune attack is crucial in Hashimoto's Disease. How can you have a properly functioning thyroid if the body is continually attacking and killing it?

A functional approach to naturally supporting and modulating the immune system in autoimmune cases is the best way to help the body slow down or stop the attack on itself. Natural management of autoimmune conditions is complex. Support that is specific to the individual immune system is essential if you truly want to help Hashimoto's Disease.

You have to find out how their immune system has shifted. Our immune systems have two parts: TH-1 and a TH-2. They are supposed to be balanced. If they are not, then we have a problem.

You have to find out which one of those has become abnormally dominant and why.

Is it because of an antigen? Something that the immune system has been trying to kill for so long that it's increased its immune attack on this antigen and then it flipped the scales and now we have an autoimmune condition.

Or has the immune system become imbalanced because of dysregulation. Hormonal surges can do this. Stress can do this. Blood sugar problems. Inflammation can do this.

So if you know someone that's suffering with Hashimoto's, or with low thyroid, and they don't feel any better even with thyroid medication, it is time to get them this information. It's time to find someone who can investigate this further.

There are millions of you out there right now that have this problem and you don't know it.
The reason why you still have thyroid symptoms, even though you're taking medication, is likely because you have an autoimmune condition.

And yes, it is A VERY BIG DEAL.

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