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Might Wilson’s Temperature Syndrome Explain Why The Thyroid Treatment I’m Taking Now Isn’t Working?

Yes.

You can take thyroid medicine and have normal blood tests and still have a low body temperature and classic symptoms. Body temperature is what correlates the best with the symptoms. Therefore, thyroid system evaluation or management that does not take body temperature patterns into account is misdirected and often ineffective. Chapter 12 of the Doctor’s Manual is devoted to explaining the treatment and management of patients who are not doing well on T4-containing medicine. As it turns out, patients who have hypothyroidism (low thyroid gland function) may also be suffering from Wilson’s Temperature Syndrome. And if the Wilson’s Temperature Syndrome is left untreated those patients will continue to experience troublesome symptoms.

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.

2 Comments

  1. Linda August 29, 2016 at 1:44 pm - Reply

    Do I need to visit one of the doctors to get or to know how to use the products you recommend for thyroid and adrenal? Can I take both products at the same time the ThyroCare and Adaptogen? I have lots of anxiety and becoming panic attacks, I have recently had a blood test shown some what slow on my thyroid .

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