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I’m feeling energetic and motivated

Dear Dr. Wilson, Many thanks for your research and persistence in determining an underlying cause of low body temperature. I have been running subnormal temps for the past twenty-one years and none of my physicians seemed to be terribly concerned. During these years, I had long suspected that my fatigue (never felt rested), slow but steady weight gain(despite various diets), and feeling of being “chilled to the bone” especially in the evening had something to do with my temperature running between 95.4 to 96.7 degrees on a regular basis. Unless I used an electric blanket or insisted that my husband warm my side of the bed before getting under the covers, I could lay in one spot for hours and never be able to warm the sheets directly under me.

A distant relative happened to mention that she had recently been diagnosed with WTS and went on to describe her symptoms of being chilled constantly. I immediately began asking questions, read your book and manual and suddenly began making sense out of the symptoms I had been experiencing.

I made a call to a physician in my area and inquired about his willingness to take me on as a patient. He read your book and manual, ran the appropriate blood work and proceeded to treat me following your protocol.

My temperature has gradually returned to close to normal (97.7 to 98.6), I am experiencing a sense of well-being that I haven’t felt for years. I actually wake in the morning feeling energetic and am motivated to accomplish things, rather than trying to struggle through the day seeing how little I can do to just get by. As an additional benefit, I have lost twenty-eight pounds and am wearing clothes that haven’t fit for several years.

Thank you again for your work in this field and the gift of restored health.

Sincerely,
Cynthia C.
Magalia, CA

About the Author:

Denis Wilson, MD described Wilson 's Temperature Syndrome in 1988 after observing people with symptoms of low thyroid and low body temperature, yet who had normal blood tests. He found that by normalizing their temperatures with T3 (without T4) their symptoms often remained improved even after the treatment was discontinued. He was the first doctor to use sustained-release T3.

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