爱达荷州立大学中国学生学者联谊会

Chinese Association of Idaho State University (CAISU)

Coping With the Many Challenges of Hyperthyroidism

Try thinking like this, when you are eating fish for dinner 4 Day Thyroid Diet Review or sprinkling flaxseed on your morning cereal as giving yourself a low dose of natural pain relief medicine. Remember you must eat well to be well.For those who are wondering why they have all the symptoms of hypothyroidism (low thyroid hormone) but always test in the 'normal' range, take heart-you are not crazy and there may indeed be something not quite right with your thyroid. First of all, the thyroid tests used by laboratories are notoriously inaccurate, being 'off by three standard deviations' (pretty much useless except in certain cases).Adding to the confusion is the difference between T3 and rT3 (Triiodothyronine and reverse Triiodothyronine). T3 is the active form of thyroid hormone in the blood and is converted from T4, which is produced in much larger amounts than T3. Synthetic T4 is what is provided in pharmaceutical medicines, which works fine as long as everything else in the pathway is working.

The tricky part comes when T3 is no longer being converted from T4, instead being converted into rT3 (reverse triiodothyronine). Think of it like this: reverse forms of the natural substances that we need are chemical mirror images. They are exactly flipped and don't work the same way. Because the chemical 'lock' is oriented either right or left and the reversed form is oriented in the opposite direction, the reversed 'key' just doesn't fit.For instance, our bodies use D-glucose (dextrose) with is a right-rotatory molecule. L-glucose-a left-rotatory molecule--cannot be metabolized. It can taste the same, look the same, often have the same properties (dissolving in water the same, burning the same, etc) but it still is not D-glucose. So since the tissues of the body need T3, and rT3 won't fit the lock, the symptoms of hypothyroidism occur.

Thyroid problems have become rampant in the modern world, thanks to greedy manufacturers. Between dumping poisonous sodium fluoride waste (from aluminum can and weapons manufacturing) into our toothpaste, soda drinks and public water supplies, and chlorine (another poison) into our water, cleaning products and medicines, the thyroid has very little chance of functioning properly.Fluorine, Chlorine, and Bromine (which is also added to sodas and medicines), iodine and astatine are 'halogenated compounds' all of which can take the place of iodine. These extremely reactive oxidizing agents don't exist by themselves very long-they must combine with other substances to be stable. Because they are highly reactive, they tend to bond very strongly with other molecules (Teflon is fluorine bonded with carbon, table salt is chlorine bonded with sodium, bleach is chlorine bonded with sodium, and PCB's are polychlorinated biphenyls).

Here's the problem: the thyroid, a gland found in the neck area, needs iodine to function properly. All those other halogenated elements can bind to the same areas that iodine can. So what do you think happens when a person drinks a lot of sodas every day...uses a lot a table salt...or spends a lot of time in or around swimming pools? Right-they get their thyroid iodine receptors filled up with bromine, chlorine, and fluorine. That means thyroid hormone is not produced properly.Since thyroid hormones are necessary for so many metabolic functions other than just producing heat in the body-such as: protein, carbohydrate, and fat metabolism, protein synthesis, catecholamine sensitivity, and some kind of neuronal activity (thought to be involved in hibernation cycles)--the lack of thyroid function is a serious matter. T3 (Triiodothyronine), the active form of thyroid hormone in the blood, has iodine in it. That would be a very different compound if it was trichlorthyronine (which has been found to cause angina and depression of serum protein-bound iodine) or tribromothyronine (which, while effective, is about 10% less effective than triiodothyronine).

https://asrightasrain.co/4-day-thyroid-diet-reviews/

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