The Dr. Hyman Show - The Hidden Epidemic of Low Thyroid Function | Know Your Numbers
Episode Date: February 2, 2024View the Show Notes For This Episode Get Free Weekly Health Tips from Dr. Hyman Sign Up for Dr. Hyman’s Weekly Longevity Journal Get Ad-free Episodes & Dr. Hyman+ Audio Exclusives Do you feel fatigu...ed, lethargic, and sluggish, especially when you wake up in the morning? Do you have poor-quality, cracked nails? Are you cold all the time? Do you have dry skin, coarse hair, or hair loss? Are you depressed? Are you constipated? Do you have muscle and joint pains? If you answered yes to any of the above, you may be one of the 38 million Americans with low thyroid function. In today’s episode of a new series I’m calling Know Your Numbers, I dive deep into thyroid dysfunction. I discuss why millions of people suffer with undetected thyroid issues, how conventional medicine misses the mark in measuring thyroid levels, how Functional Medicine treats hypothyroidism and hyperthyroidism, and much more. You can test your magnesium levels with Function Health, a company I co-founded. It has been a lifelong dream for me. Function is the first-ever membership that includes 100+ lab tests and personalized insights from globally renowned doctors based on your results. Join Function at FunctionHealth.com. This episode is brought to you by Mitopure and AG1. Support essential mitochondrial health and save 10% on Mitopure. Visit TimelineNutrition.com/Drhyman and use the code DRHYMAN10. Get your daily serving of vitamins, minerals, adaptogens, and more with AG1. Head to DrinkAG1.com/Hyman and get 10 FREE travel packs plus a FREE Welcome Kit with your first order. Here are more details from the episode (audio version / Apple Subscriber version): Symptoms and prevalence of hypothyroidism (4:29 / 2:29) Autoimmune thyroid disorders: Hashimoto’s thyroiditis and hyperthyroidism (7:37 / 5:37) What does a healthy, hypo- and hyper- thyroid gland do? (8:55 / 6:55) Risk factors for thyroid problems (15:58 / 13:58) Gluten and other drivers of thyroid problems (17:40 / 15:40) How conventional medicine misses the mark with thyroid testing and treatment (22:15 / 20:15) The Functional Medicine approach to thyroid testing and treatment (25:21 / 23:21) Addressing poor thyroid function using diet, lifestyle, and supplements diet (28:59 / 26:59)
Transcript
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Coming up on this week's episode of The Doctor's Pharmacy.
From 2009 to 2019, the percent of our population with low thyroid function went from 4.6% to 11.7%.
So what is going on with the more than doubling of the prevalence of thyroid problems?
Hey everyone, it's Dr. Mark.
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of The Doctor's Pharmacy. Welcome to The Doctor's Pharmacy. I'm Dr. Mark Hyman,
and that's pharmacy with an F, a place for conversations that matter.
Welcome to my new podcast series called Know Your Numbers.
It's designed to help you understand how your body works, what your own lab and biological
data mean through the lens of functional medicine, which is a science of creating health.
Now for too long, healthcare has required you to go through your doctor to access your
own blood tests and biology, and rely solely on your doctor to guide you.
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including critical tests that traditional medicine often ignores.
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going to learn how to interpret your own lab tests, the true optimal ranges, and understand
how all your biomarkers relate to one another. And most importantly, you're going to learn how
to optimize your health based on your own personal medical history and biological data.
You're also going to learn when it's important to go see your doctor for further testing or
treatment. Now, in a perfect world, I'd have the chance to see millions of patients, but the truth is I'm just one doctor.
After over 30 years of seeing millions of biomarkers and tens of thousands of patients,
I've come to understand that much is being missed by conventional healthcare.
We often wait until we have symptoms or diseases and then get tested, but the transition from
wellness to illness can often be detected
decades before any symptom or diagnosis. I want people to have access to their own health data
and the ability to engage in self-care and lifestyle practices that can optimize health.
And that is why I recently co-founded a company called Function Health, where I'm the chief
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health and put control of your health firmly back in your hands. And now let's get started with
this week's episode of Know Your Numbers. Now, do you feel fatigued, lethargic, sluggish,
especially when you wake up in the morning? Do you have poor quality cracked nails? Are you cold all
the time? Do you have dry skin, coarse hair, hair loss? Maybe you're a little depressed or
constipated. Do you have muscle pains and joint pains?
Have you lost your outer third of your eyebrow maybe?
Do you have trouble losing weight no matter what you do?
Well, if your answer is yes to any of these questions,
you may be suffering from a condition that is super common,
underdiagnosed, and potentially life-threatening called hypothyroidism.
And this occurs when the production, conversion, or action of your
thyroid hormones in your body is not working or inhibited, resulting in too little active
thyroid hormone in your blood. Now, while the symptoms above might not sound like a major
problem on the surface, a problem with your thyroid can actually have catastrophic impact
on your health and also on your weight. It's often a hidden factor in many diseases, including
depression, heart disease, chronic fatigue, fibromyalgia, PMS, or premenstrual syndrome, worse menopausal symptoms, muscle and
joint pains, irritable bowel syndrome, constipation, autoimmune diseases, and obesity.
Now, when I see anybody with a chronic illness, I always think the thyroid may play a role.
Now, is this a big problem? Well, heck yeah, it's a big problem. One in five women and one in 10 men have low thyroid function.
38 million Americans are suffering from this. Now, from 2009, this is interesting, from 2009
to 2019, the percent of our population with low thyroid function went from 4.6% in 2009
to 11.7%. So what is going on with the more than doubling of the prevalence of
thyroid problems? Now, the other issue here is that 60% don't even know they have a problem
because it's like, oh, I'm a little tired or I'm a little, you know, my hair's a little thin or,
you know, I'm constipated or my mood's a little low and my sex drive is down or my cholesterol's
a little high and they don't connect the dots
between what's going on and their thyroid. In a retrospective analysis in 2022 from the Journal
of the Endocrine Society, they found that untreated hypothyroidism went up from 12 to 14.5%.
And if it is untreated, it increases your risk of heart disease, heart attacks,
cognitive decline, and even early death. Now, what are the common symptoms of a poorly functioning or low thyroid
condition? Well, you're fatigued, you're lethargic, sluggish, especially in the morning.
You may have brittle or cracked nails. You might be cold a lot. When other people are fine,
you're cold. You might have dry skin, mouth, eyes, coarse hair. You might have hoarseness of your
voice, hair loss, which is not uncommon might have hoarseness of your voice,
hair loss, which is not uncommon, especially the outer third of your eyebrows.
You might have depression, constipation, joint and muscle pain, hard time losing weight,
cholesterol might be high, your blood pressure might be low. You might have irregular periods,
weird menstrual cycles, severe PMS, menopausal symptoms, low libido and sex drive,
maybe trouble with memory, focus, concentration. Now, any of these can just seem kind of like
normal things that happen as you get older, but they're not. They're often untreated thyroid
issues. The other issue is that there's a lot of autoimmune thyroid condition going on.
And 90% of the low thyroid conditions, not just low thyroid, it's an autoimmune disease.
And it's the most prevalent autoimmune disease we have in America. It's called Hashimoto's
thyroiditis. And essentially it's your immune system making antibodies that attack your thyroid
as if it was a foreign body. And it's much more common in women. Like I said, you know,
one in five women and one in 10 men have thyroid issues, but this is seven to 10 times more common in women. There may be some genetic or hormonal
factors and it affects men as well though. So it can cause erectile dysfunction, low sperm count,
infertility, low libido, hair loss. So it also affects men. High thyroid function or hyper
thyroidism, it's not as common, but when your thyroid makes
too much thyroid hormone, it's overactive.
And it's basically like the opposite.
You're on speed.
Your blood pressure is high.
You lose weight.
You're hungry all the time.
You can't sleep.
You're anxious, irritable.
You have diarrhea.
It's sort of the opposite.
And that common cause of this is Graves' disease.
Four out of five cases of high thyroid in America is Graves' disease, another autoimmune
disease.
And this affects about one in 100 Americans.
And it can cause quite severe problems and cause goiter and could be causing eye issues
and be quite issues, quite a problem.
Now, what is your thyroid?
Where is it located?
Well, it's an endocrine organ, produces hormones.
It's a butterfly shape.
It's right in front of your neck, here below the Adam's apple and above the collarbone.
And it basically functions as a regulator, the control center of your body. It's like the master
regulator of your metabolism. Think of it like the governor on your car. Like if you got, you know,
those golf carts or those electric bikes only go to a certain speed, but because it's got a limiter
on it, that's kind of what it is. It's kind of the governor and the slower it is, the slower
everything is. It slows your metabolism. It's really important. So what does your thyroid gland do? It regulates metabolism. If your thyroid's working properly, it increases energy
production, fat burning, mitochondrial function. It makes your body temperature in the proper
regulation. It can affect growth and development. It's really important for fetal brain development,
nervous system development. In fact, the whole term cretinism, it's a horrible term by the way,
but that was used to describe low thyroid in
babies. When mothers were hypothyroid and they gave birth to babies, they would be, quote,
cretins because of the effect of low thyroid during pregnancy on the fetus and the development.
It also regulates your heart function, so heart rate, cardiac output, very important,
muscle function, bone health, brain function, mood function mood cognition the making of new brain
cells it regulates your bodies of calcium and phosphate levels and and it promotes the storage
of calcium in your bones if you're hyperthyroid you can actually lose bones pretty quickly
also as i mentioned really important in reproductive health fertility hormone balance
you know all the symptoms of PMS, weird periods,
all common in people with low thyroid function. And it also is involved in sort of a crosstalk
with your stress hormones, your sex hormones, your adrenal hormones. So it's really, it's really
important. It's not just isolated. You've got this hormonal soup of sex hormones, thyroid hormones,
adrenal hormones, insulin, they're all connected. Now, when a healthy thyroid works properly,
what happens is that the brain, the pituitary, which is the command and control center,
gets a message from the hypothalamus that says, okay, it's time to release a little more thyroid,
you need a little more. So the hypothalamus releases something called thyrotropin-releasing
hormone, or TRH, and that tells the pituitary to make thyroid-stimulating hormone,
or TSH, which is the test that is usually done by most physicians. Now, this is inadequate in and of
itself to properly diagnose thyroid problems. You need to look at the full spectrum of thyroid tests.
You don't get that. Instead of one test by your doctor, you get five. You get TSH, the free T3,
free T4, and thyroid antibodies.
Two different ones.
We'll go through those in a minute.
But your TSH is really important because it stimulates your thyroid to produce a little more thyroid hormone.
So you produce mostly T4 and a little bit of T3.
Now, T4 is the inactive thyroid hormone.
90% of the thyroid hormone produced in the thyroid gland is T4.
And then the T4 gets converted to T3
in the thyroid, the liver, the kidneys via an enzyme called 5'-diadenase. You don't probably
need to know that, but it's important because this enzyme can get screwed up by a lot of things. If
you're low in selenium, which is the main enzyme that activates it, if you have heavy metals,
if you have yeast, if you have environmental toxins, various factors will cause this enzyme to not work properly,
which causes low T3. Now, most doctors even don't properly check these. They check total T3 or total
T4. You want to check the free form, which is the active form. That's what we do in functional
health. The next thyroid hormone is T3 or triiodothyronine. Thyroxine is T4. And this is the active form of the hormone. This 10%
is produced in the thyroid gland, but then the rest is converted peripherally in your tissues
from T4 to T3. And T3 is the actual actor in your body. It binds to the thyroid receptors
on the nucleus of your cells. So it really is a transcription factor for gene expression.
It's so important.
That's why it regulates everything.
And it forms a complex with this thyroid response element on your DNA.
And it leads to protein synthesis.
And it's really important because the binding of this requires vitamin D and vitamin A.
And so if you have low levels of these nutrients, which is common, your thyroid won't work properly.
And T3 basically
ensures every system in your body is working at the right speed. Your metabolism, fat burning,
energy production, your cholesterol, memory, your hair growth, bowel speed, your weight, everything.
When it's too high, then the feedback loop comes to your brain and says, okay, lower TSH. And then
it halts the TSH production, so it's not telling your thyroid to make more. So there's kind of a constant feedback loop of hormones. Now what's
happening when your thyroid is too low, when you have hypothyroidism, we have too little T3, or
maybe not enough conversion of T4 to T3, or you have low T4 too. T4 also, I mean, not T4 too,
although there is a T2. And so what happens then? Well, your metabolism
goes down, you gain weight, you have trouble losing weight, you get cold, you can't warm up,
your cholesterol is high, your mood's low, your libido is low, you don't want to have sex,
all the symptoms we talked about. And when you have this, it's usually often caused, like I said,
nine times out of 10 by an autoimmune disease called Hashimoto's. So we got to check those
thyroid antibodies. And it's amazing how many people have elevated antibodies.
We found that 12% of our people that we tested in over 20,000 people had elevated thyroid antibodies,
meaning they had an autoimmune thyroid condition that mostly was undiagnosed. And this was shocking
because it does affect everything. And it affects people's wellbeing. And these are people who are
doing function or typically are health forward people and generally healthy. So it was very disturbing for me to see
the prevalence of this autoimmunity in the population. And what we measure is thyroid
peroxidase antibody, their TPO. And it basically adds an iodine to the thyroid globulin to make
thyroid hormone. And when you have antibodies against this hormone, this enzyme, it basically inhibits the process of making thyroid.
Your immune system is basically making these other antibodies too called thyroid globulin antibodies.
And thyroid globulin is the precursor of thyroid hormone.
So it's like the building block.
And then the thyroid globulin antibody attacks the thyroid globulin protein and you can't make thyroid
hormones. So you end up with these two different antibodies through different mechanisms causing
a slowdown of your thyroid. And what happens is you get into all these troubles that we mentioned
and it's really fixable and we have to get to the root cause. Now we're going to talk about what
that is and how to deal with this. Just a little note on high thyroid, if you have too much T3 or
T4 because of another
autoimmune condition called Graves' disease, it causes the opposite phenomenon. You get increased
metabolism, weight loss, sweating, nervousness, heart racing, palpitations, trouble sleeping,
your eyes bulge out, you're heat intolerant instead of cold intolerant, you're irritable,
you have diarrhea, hair loss, sometimes too, and maybe you lose your period, you'll be shaky and tremorous, you might have a goiter. So these are the common things you get with high
thyroid. Now, again, that's very rare compared to Hashimoto's of one in 100 versus one in 10,
although it seems like it's maybe more than one in 10 based on our data.
So who's most at risk? Obviously, women, as I mentioned. And it's really common. In pregnancy, you see this a lot. You get postpartum
thyroiditis. And in pregnancy, you increase the demand for thyroid hormone. It can mess things up.
Menopause, you'll see this often. Estrogen affects thyroid globulin also. So if estrogen is too high,
you get all sorts of things like PCOS, fibroids, endometriosis. Basically, you get less T4.
And sometimes you'll see also lower thigh globulin, menopause, where you'll have decreased thyroid hormones.
So there's various ways in which your sex hormones interact with thyroid hormone that kind of mess things up.
But we also know that we see the autoimmune thyroid condition associated with other autoimmune conditions,
like celiac disease. And one of the biggest things, and I've seen this, I would say probably
about 35% of the patients that I have, have high level of gluten antibodies or anti-glycan
antibodies, meaning they have some degree of gluten sensitivity or celiac that's causing
the Hashimoto's. So often getting off gluten will really help, getting selenium will help.
And a lot of things we'll talk about in terms of treatment. Also, you might have lupus or rheumatoid arthritis
or Sjogren's, which is where you get dry eye, mouth, and other things. Type 1 diabetes,
Addison's disease, which is an adrenal autoimmune disease, pernicious anemia, which is an inability
to absorb B12. So you get all these different problems that are a result of some trigger or some factor that's causing
the autoimmunity. So the key in functional medicine is to get to the root cause. And we're
going to talk about that. Now there's some genetics involved. There may be a family history
of thyroid issues. It's common as we get older, you know, over 60. But the issue is why are we
seeing this increased prevalence? I mean, it's in the population. It's always been, but it seems to be increasing. So why is that? Well, one of the reasons I think is because of the type
of gluten we have. We basically changed the gluten in our environment from being these heirloom
wheats and grains to a dwarf wheat, which has much higher numbers of gliadin proteins,
more inflammatory proteins, more starch and sugar, more likely to
cause injury to the gut and leaky gut and this whole cascade of autoimmunity. And we see this
link very clearly in the literature, scientific literature. And by the way, all of the things
that I'm saying are referenced and we're going to include all these scientific reference in the
show notes if you want to go ahead and have a look at those as well. So celiac prevalence is like four times higher in those with autoimmune thyroiditis. So it's a
well-established fact. Now, if you have non-celiac gluten sensitivity, not full-blown celiac,
it can cause, again, a lot of thyroid issues. There's something called molecular mimicry where gluten um
resembles something called transglutaminase which is in the thyroid gland and it's also present in
the gut and then it attacks the thyroid gland at the same time as it attacks gluten so you get this
kind of cross activity so you basically the gluten creates this autoimmunity is essentially what i'm
saying the other big factor is you know thyroid thyroid is like the canary in the coal
mine. It's very sensitive to environmental toxins. They used to put a canary in the coal mine,
and when the air was bad, the canary would die, and the coal miners knew to get the heck out of
the coal mine because they were going to die too if they stayed there. So our thyroid is kind of
like our canary. And I've written an article about this. I'll post it as well as in the show notes.
It's an article I wrote in a medical journal about thyroid. But endocrine disrupting chemicals are common. They're everywhere. It's basically the
petrochemical plastics. In a 2021 review in nutrients, these endocrine disrupting chemicals
are found in food, in food packaging, in our water, in our personal care products, things like
BPA, phthalates, flame retardants, PCBs. And they basically interfere with our thyroid gland and
they interfere with thyroid hormone transfer in the body the body also heavy metals are another big one mercury
lead arsenic another big factor um if you see higher levels of mercury so your lower levels
of t3 hormone so i think it's really important for people to make sure that they they assess
these things also air pollution that's something we can do a lot about except have an air filter but a 2020 review found that there was higher levels of autoimmune thyroid disease
in people who lived in polluted areas near petrochemical plants where there was
maybe cement plants where they were contaminated with pesticides in their environment or pcbs
also mold which is ubiquitous can definitely cause thyroid issues. Also, the thyroid gland and function depends on a lot of nutrients.
And there's so much nutritional deficiency in this country across the board.
This is based on national surveys and testing of the American populations.
And not my opinion, you know, there's 90 plus percent of Americans are deficient in at least
one nutrient at the minimum level of the RDA.
You know, probably 80% are deficient in vitamin D, nutrient at the minimum level of the RDA. Probably 80% are
deficient in vitamin D, which is important for thyroid function. 45% are deficient in magnesium.
Omega-3 is probably plus 90 plus percent. So the thyroid needs a lot of cofactors and helpers.
For example, selenium helps convert T4 to T3. And that comes from Brazil notes. For example,
iodine, which is from fish and seaweed,
actually is needed to make the thyroid hormone. The thyroid hormone is built from iodine molecules.
Also needs zinc, which helps make thyroid-releasing hormone, TSH. Thyroid hormone needs vitamin A and D to synthesize thyroid hormone, to activate the receptor and gene expression. Also needs B12.
So these are really common problems. We see a lot of zinc deficiency, vitamin D deficiency, and so forth. Also stress,
you know, we know there's a huge interaction between stress response, your adrenals, and your
thyroid gland. They really work in tandem. So too much cortisol can interfere with your thyroid
hormone production. And we see this, people who have chronic stress will get hypothyroid symptoms
and they will sort of downregulate this. And we see this in chronic who have chronic stress will get hypothyroid symptoms and they will
sort of downregulate this.
And we see this in chronic disease.
It's kind of hypothyroidism of chronic illness.
Also, even any kind of stress, inflammation, any kind of inflammation.
By the way, we are all inflamed.
Our bodies are all inflamed.
We're eating ultra processed food, sugar, starch, and that messes up thyroid hormone
production through interfering with TSH secretion.
Also, a lot of people eat a lot of sugar and
starch. You get imbalances in your gut microbiome. You get yeast overgrowth. That can really drive it
as well. And certain medications will interfere with it. So conventional medicine is not terrible
at this, but it's not great either. And I could say this is one of the most satisfying areas of
functional medicine for me because we can diagnose what's going on. We are aggressive in diagnosing it based on any symptoms. We screen
for these questions. And many of these things we call subclinical hypothyroidism. So it may not be
overt, but it may not be fully expressed, but it may be a partial problem with your thyroid gland
that's causing hypothyroid function. And you might not not know and it can often go undetected and
undiagnosed. In fact, 50% of the time it's undiagnosed. Conventional medicine doctors do
not run a full thyroid panel. Really important. They only usually do TSH. And also it's important
to know the doctors are kind of habits of creature. We have these order forms or these basically
sheets that we check off with thyroid hormone
testing. And there's panels on there that are, you know, decades old before we had newer assays
that could measure free T3, measure free T4. They do things like, like total T4 or
free thyroxin index or T3 uptake. I mean, just stuff that's, it's just so out of date and it's
just checked on the panel.
I'm like, why are they doing this?
It's like using basically a magnifying glass to look at the scars instead of a giant telescope.
So it's really important to do the right test.
When they do test, they usually only test TSH.
And they often will not test anything else.
Sometimes they'll test free T4, but they don't test the most important hormone, which is
free T3.
This is the one that does the work.
And they also don't test thyroid antibodies, like thyroid peroxidase antibodies or antithyroid
globulin antibodies.
These are the autoimmune antibodies that we're talking about.
So the reference range is also important to understand.
The reference range, you notice, goes from 0.5 to 5. That's a tenfold range.
Now, what's the optimal range? Probably like 1 to 2. And when you look at the American College
of Endocrinology, they said the optimal range might be now not 5, but maybe under 3.5. The
National Academy of Clinical Biochemistry says anything over 2.5 is abnormal. So the optimal
range is probably like, you know,
0.5 to two at the most. And often their tests will come back normal, the TSH, but it'll miss
the fact that the T3 is low, that they're sour to antibodies. It may be in the kind of upper
range of normal. So you have to look at the whole issue. And this is why they go undiagnosed and
untreated. And they kind of wait until TSH is way out of range. And then it's often too late or often you've already suffered for years.
So the other problem is when doctors will prescribe thyroid hormone, they'll often prescribe
the wrong one.
They give you the inactive hormone, which is called levothyroxine or a synthroid.
And the problem is a lot of people can't convert T3 and T4 fully.
There's a lot of reasons for it. The environmental toxins I mentioned, nutritional deficiencies, gut dysbiosis, stress, many things,
cortisol, all these things interfere with this process. So the patient may get a little better,
but doesn't feel fully well. And so it's important to make sure you treat them the right way. And
I'll talk about that in a minute. Now, from a functional medicine perspective, how do we look
at the problem? The first is comprehensive lab testing. We have to look at the full thyroid panel, TSH,
free T3, free T4, the thyroid antibodies. Really, really important. We also need to look at the root
cause because there may be other things. We want to look at gluten, for example, if the thyroid's
off. We look at cortisol. We look at other things that may matter like inflammation, CRP, and white cell count. We look at the sex hormones to see what's going on there.
We look at liver enzymes to see if there's toxicity. For example, you have elevated liver
enzymes and 75% of Graves' disease. We look at the metabolic health, blood sugar, insulin, and
heavy metals like mercury and lead and arsenic we can test as well.
Iodine, selenium, these are things that you can add on to your test as function health
if you're concerned.
We also do the celiac panel, which looks at the full range of tissue transglutaminase,
antiglycine antibodies.
Really important to do the right tests.
Maybe it can also be some infections sometimes like Lyme disease is a big trigger of autoimmune
disease.
We might look at celiac genetics. So we do a lot of different things. We look at food
sensitivities because that can play a role. So gluten and many other food sensitivities. We
might look at the stool test, look at the microbiome and leaky gut. So we go for the
root cause and then we treat with the personalized treatment of lifestyle, diet and supplements and
medications if needed. So we really look at the whole problem. Now, what are the root causes of some of these abnormal biomarkers, right? You mentioned gluten,
which can cause these abnormal thyroid antibodies. And you can even see abnormal antibodies,
but normal TSH or normal free T3 and 4, and people are still having issues. It still affects
how they feel. And if you're symptomatic, I treat them. This is my personal view.
Now, this is what
I've seen after treating thousands of patients with this. Sometimes your biomarkers will be off
in pregnancy. They'll be off with chronic stress. You'll have high cortisol, CRP. Sometimes you're
over-exercising and you're a high-level athlete. That can affect you. Psychological stress,
nutritional deficiency we've mentioned, mainly selenium, iodine, vitamin D, vitamin A,
food sensitivities, particularly dairy, soy, we'll talk about gluten and soy and dairy,
environmental toxins, as we mentioned, endocrine disruptors, heavy metals,
imbalances in the gut and leaky gut, various allergens, mold, various infections, yeast
overgrowth, medication sometimes can affect it. Birth control use can definitely cause thyroid issues.
And it seems that based on large data from the NHANES trials, which was published in
BMJ Open, a British medical journal, if you were having a history of birth control for
over 10 years, you had four times the risk of having a low thyroid function.
Sometimes iodine absorption can be affected by estrogen progesterone issues.
So estrogen excess can also cause thyroid cell destruction.
And why I'm saying this is because we often have a culture of high estrogen.
We have lots of sugar and lots of starch that causes our body to put on more fat.
Fat produces estrogen, not just your ovaries.
Men can get high estrogen levels.
So it's really common.
Also, sometimes if you're on lithium or psychiatric disorders, that can cause thyroid dysfunction.
It's important to check that.
Chronic use of anti-inflammatories like Advil, Aleve, they interfere with the binding of T3 and 4.
So I think there's some issues there.
If you're on chronic steroids like cortisol-like drugs like prednisone, that can cause suppression of TSH and various other drugs.
So it's important to understand that there may be conditions related to some of these biomarkers we
talked about and how to kind of look at all those together and be paying attention to sort of the
whole picture, not just one test. So how do you address poor thyroid function using functional
medicine approach, using diet, lifestyle, getting the root cause? Well, the first is remove the bad stuff. Get rid of the inflammatory foods,
ultra-processed foods, things that are in a box package can, artificial sweeteners, trans fats,
sugar-sweetened beverages, alcohol. Gluten would be the first thing to go. Also, wheat, barley,
rice, spelt, camomile, oats, not oats or not health food. Trust me, I've written about this,
but they're not a whole food um a 2023
systematic review and meta-analysis published in frontiers endocrinology and like i said all
these references are going to be in the show notes they showed that a gluten-free diet for
six months reduces the thyroid antibodies and reduces tsh which is a good thing and increase
t4 so this is just this is just a simple gluten-free diet
having a profound impact on autoimmune thyroid disease. So the impact of this gluten-free diet
on a thyroid function, inflammation in patients with hypothyroidism is really important. Also,
reduce your exposure to food sources of environmental toxins like mercury, containing fish, tuna, swordfish, shark, king mackerel, tilefish, Chilean sea bass, all the big fish.
And there's lots of guides.
We'll put a show note guide on how to use, for example, the NRDC guide on low mercury fish.
Also PFAS, which is plastic packaging, produce packaging, packaged foods, pesticides, which are on our food.
Use the Environmental Working Group guides for reducing your exposures. You can go to ewg.org
and it'll link to Skin Deep for healthy skincare products and healthy household cleaning products,
what foods you should eat, what you shouldn't eat. Like for example, certain vegetables and
foods are worse. Sometimes you might need to deal with food sensitivities like gluten and dairy
and even soy and try eliminating those. Coffee and caffeine may be an issue.
Certain foods are called goitrogens. They can interfere with thyroid function,
but it's usually raw foods. So raw soybeans or raw peanuts or raw spinach, raw turnips, rutabaga, cabbage, broccoli, collards, mustard greens, kale. People
like kale juice like crazy. I don't think that's a good idea because you're getting highly
concentrated amounts. So cook your kale, cook your vegetables, and cooking really reduces that. So
I think I highly encourage people to eat these cruciferous vegetables like broccoli, collards,
kale, but cook them, okay? And keep your serving of soy low, like less than half a cup per day. People are drinking like gallons of
soy milk and so forth. Soy lattes. I don't recommend that. Also eat real whole food. Get
an anti-inflammatory diet. Get rid of the processed food, the ultra processed food,
get lots of good protein, fruits, vegetables, nuts, seeds, whole grains can be fine if they're gluten-free.
Sometimes paleo can be good for autoimmune disease, so no grains or beans or dairy,
but you can have fish, eggs, meat, fruits and vegetables, root vegetables. The autoimmune
paleo is a little more aggressive. That takes out nightshades like eggplant, tomatoes, peppers,
takes out nuts and seeds, as well as grains and beans and dairy and coffee and alcohol.
I don't recommend that that often, only if someone's really stuck.
Sometimes other things can be helpful in increasing the conversion of T4 to T3.
You know, if you're doing keto, that actually might not be good for your thyroid.
It might be good for blood sugar, but you need a little bit of insulin to convert T3 to T4.
It's all the right balance.
So focus on balancing your blood sugar.
And also you need to add in the right nutrients, right?
You need iodine when that comes from where?
Fish, seaweed, like guacame, nori, kombu, iodized salt,
selenium, which can be gotten from Brazil nuts,
about two a day.
Some of the fish, the small fish, herring, mackerel, sardines,
scallops are good at selenium. Omega-3
fat's also really important. I call it the smash fish, small wild salmon, mackerel, anchovies,
sardines, and herring. They're my favorite, but I don't know if you like them. Tough for you,
but I like them. Oysters, scallops, walnuts, flax seeds, pumpkin seeds, all are a great source of
omega-3. Vitamin D, hard. You need a lot of herring or a lot of porcini mushrooms
but basically sunlight's great but taking vitamin d i think is really important considering how we
live also b12 important for liver function vitamin a for the binding i mentioned that comes from
animal foods primarily you're not going to get it from plant foods you'll get beta carotene which
has to be converted but liver is the best source uh pououltry also, chicken, turkey, lots of fiber for
your gut, nut seeds. All that's really helpful. Now supplements, should you take supplements? Yeah,
I think sometimes it's important. Now, if you have heavy metals or you have something like that,
you need to be treated with proper metal detoxification. And I won't cover that in this
podcast, but we will do a session on heavy metals. You can just take a basic multivitamin and mineral,
omega-3, magnesium, vitamin D.
So it's really important to know what your numbers are and do your testing to see you're on the right dose.
Sometimes if you're having chronic stress,
sometimes the adaptogens can help like rhodiola, ashwagandha,
which are basically to help reduce stress
and improve thyroid function.
Lifestyle practices are also really important.
So meditation, yoga, journaling, walking nature, breath work,
you know, whatever works for you.
I like steams and hot, cold plunges also help me relax and de-stress.
Making sure you prioritize sleep seven, eight hours a night.
Exercise.
Make sure you do proper strength training and muscle building
that helps glucose control and make sure your hormones are properly balanced. And get rid of
the toxins, as I mentioned. Buy foods that are low in toxins. You can use the Dirty Dozen Guide
to avoid the most contaminated foods that you should not buy if they're not organic. And then you can look at
the Clean 15, which are maybe okay to buy if they're not organic. As I mentioned, the skincare
product guide, the Skin Deep Guide from the EWG is important. I always filter water. Some of these
chlorinated things in chlorinated water, fluoride in water, they can really interfere with thyroid
function. They're kind of like in the iodineine family so it can kind of screw up your thyroid function so also reduce your
indoor air pollution which is a big issue with an air filter i encourage people to use a lot of
saunas hot yoga hot baths to remove toxins it was actually a study on red light therapy believe it
or not that regenerated thyroid follicular cells. There were 43 patients, randomized controlled trial, who had autoimmune thyroid issues.
And when they had 10 sessions of red light therapy, they were able to eliminate their thyroid replacement over 30 days.
After nine months, they need to launch a lower dose.
And they're lower thyroid antibodies.
And their thyroid look
better on ultrasound.
So I'm pretty impressive with red light therapy.
And then if you need medication, and often you do, sometimes you can't, if you do all
these things, it can normalize, but you have to know what you're doing.
Maybe work with a functional medicine doctor.
But most doctors, as I mentioned, conventionally just use the T4, which is Synthroid, Levoxil,
Levothyroxine.
And it really only leads to a partial improvement for most people.
They don't check T3.
And you need to take a T3 as well.
So there are versions of T3 like Cytomel that are short-acting.
They're sustained release ones that are compounded.
I particularly like the desiccated porcine thyroid.
It's called Armour thyroid or Natrothroid.
There's a whole bunch of them out there.
Traditional doctors don't like them. They have this belief that they're not safe that they're unregulated that they don't the doses are variable that they cause all these problems but
they really don't the one thing you have to know is if you're taking one of these compounds that
is a natural thyroid basically it's like mimicking our own thyroid like bioidentical thyroid it does
suppress t8 tsh so you have because t3 feeds back to the brain to suppress TSH.
So if you're taking T3, you'll get a low TSH.
And your doctor will think you're taking too much thyroid hormone.
So you have to go by the levels of free T3 and free T4.
And you have to make sure you check in with your symptoms.
How do you feel?
If your heart's racing and you're anxious and you can't sleep, well, you're taking too much. You also want to check your bone density because taking thyroid
can sometimes cause, if it's too much, it can cause a low bone density. So you want to make
sure your bone density is checked at baseline and then over time. By the way, men and women
both can have thyroid problems. So with hyperthyroidism, there's some other things
that can be used. This is mostly just for low thyroid. For hyperthyroidism, it's a little bit different.
They'll use beta blockers to slow your heart rate.
They have anti-thyroid medication to slow the thyroid down.
They use sometimes radioiodine therapy to basically nuke your thyroid or, you know,
it's kind of a little riskier, but then you need to be on thyroid your whole life after
that, which isn't the worst thing because I think of this as a natural molecule that
our bodies make.
So it's important to recheck regularly your levels make sure you're balanced to do all the other
biomarkers we need to do that's really why it's so important and the function health panel as part
of your membership you get the full panel of tests that helps you identify everything from heavy
metals and as i said i was really shocked to see in the 20 000 people that have gone through so far
that the prevalence of antibodies was 12
which is a little bit high and it means there's a lot of people walking around who don't even know
they have this issue it can be really hard to detect so um and regular medicine kind of sucks
it actually do proper screening and testing and functional medicine is much better looking at the
root cause with comprehensive lab testing a a thyroid panel, hormone panels, toxin panels, sex hormones, inflammatory markers, cortisol, and getting
the root cause.
So once you do that, you can treat it all with basic lifestyle things.
We talked about supplements.
And often you'll see improvement.
We talked about red light therapy.
Selenium can lower it.
Getting rid of gluten can lower it.
So a lot of things will have an impact independent of taking medication.
So as I said, you know, if I could, I'd see millions of patients, but with Function Health,
we're aiming to democratize much of what I do, offering you the keys to your own health. Now we're in a new era of medicine, democratized data-driven healthcare system, giving each of
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