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#11000 - 09/08/05 04:50 AM
Re: Hypothyroidism
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Member
Registered: 05/14/05
Posts: 243
Loc: Long Island, New York
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DJ--what you said totally described me!!! I really have to sit down & research all my ailments. I have to change my diet because I might be diabetic---I may as well look into all my ailments & see which would be best. Speaking of Oreos.....( my last doggies name!) Has anyone tried the new 100 calorie packs?!! Or is it just not worth it?!!! Kind of like those fat free cookies...where the box tastes better than the cookie?! GIRL SCOUT COOKIE SEASON IS COMING!!!!:)Has anyone else discovered that Keebler brand of cookies taste quite close to GS ones?!!!
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#11001 - 09/08/05 06:47 AM
Re: Hypothyroidism
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Member
Registered: 11/22/02
Posts: 1149
Loc: Ohio
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Songbird how did you treat your thyroid problem? Kay B I quit buying GS cookies when they started watering them down -- it's been a while now. But I remember one year I was so looking forward to the thin mints or the peanut butter cookies and they were so darn bland. It made me angry, so I quit buying them. Now I don't eat cane sugar anyway so it's not an issue.
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#11002 - 09/08/05 09:06 PM
Re: Hypothyroidism
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Member
Registered: 06/03/04
Posts: 2830
Loc: Massachusetts, USA
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DJ- I was put on medication, which was changed due to side effects. I was given the second and only choice available then. I had to visit the Dr. regularly and have a blood test each month. But I decided to stop going after some time-(Not that I'm proud of my decision).
But I had a long way to go getting better. I had a hard time getting out of bed, cause I was exhausted- And I've never been a couch potato. My kids were between 6-10. My metabolism was working so fast that I couldn't even write a word or two.
The worst part is that my spouse was never able or willing to understand what I was going through and it almost cost me my marriage. I don't wish this for anyone!
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#11003 - 09/08/05 09:34 PM
Re: Hypothyroidism
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Member
Registered: 11/22/02
Posts: 1149
Loc: Ohio
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quote: But, in my case, the doctor insisted it was not diet related.
That's the problem with doctors in this country!!!!! They're trained to look at symptoms then put a bandaid on the symptoms, basically. After years of trying to get myself feeling right, I think that medical science (again, msotly in Australia and New Zealand) has finally come up with some answers. And guess what -- it ALL seems to be diet related! Now we have to seek out the doctors that have studied nutrition, or at least who are willing to admit that they didn't learn all the answers in med school.
The digestive, immuno, and endocrine systems have to be in balance. If one's out of whack, then the others get out of whack. Certainly our hormones change, so that can upset things and maybe we can't control our hormones. But we can control our diets. Statistics show that American women have more problems with PMS and various female cancers than other women in the world. We also have a cuisine that's dominated by the food processing industry. So, I decided to fight back. I'm healthier now than I've been probably in my entire life (yes, I grew up eating jello and dessert every night).
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#11005 - 09/08/05 11:44 PM
Re: Hypothyroidism
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Member
Registered: 11/22/02
Posts: 1149
Loc: Ohio
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Maybe one of the reasons I've been willing to discipline myself to change eating habits is that I'm hyper sensitive to medications -- they usually keep me awake. Even Aleve, and Belladonna and other stuff that's been prescribed for me to sleep. So finally I decided that I love to sleep as much as I love to eat, and sometimes I love it even more -- especially when I'm super tired and am teaching 3 90-minute classes in a row. Doing that after only sleeping an hour a night would probably drive anyone to desperation. When I started to see results, as my sleeping improved, I was sold. And now my taste buds have adjusted so that artifically sweetened foods are _way_ too sweet for me. Not only that, I've discovered so many wonderful new taste sensations that I never tried before.
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#11006 - 09/11/05 05:24 PM
Re: Hypothyroidism
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Member
Registered: 04/08/03
Posts: 267
Loc: Florida
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I suffered from hypothrodism for YEARS and my blood tests were always "normal." Yet my hair was falling out, I was always cold, and I gained a horrid amount of weight. Then I found an MD who's also an alternative health doctor and he diagnosed me with hypotyroidism based on my symptoms, not a blood test. The main test, he said, is if your hands are always cold. Mine were.
He put me on medication and within a few months my hair stopped falling out, I lost 25 pounds, and I didn't have to sleep as much.
The blood test for hypothroidism doesn't work. I don't understand why most physicians insist on basing a diagnosis on that.
He also gave me some supplements to help boost my adrenals, and that helped, too. There's a great book out on Adrenal Fatigue, don't recall the author off-hand, but it came out about 2 years ago and described me to a T.
Kelly
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#11007 - 09/22/05 01:51 AM
Re: Hypothyroidism
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Member
Registered: 09/18/05
Posts: 99
Loc: Arizona
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Ladies I've seen so many lives ruined and ended because of misdiagnosis and precription drugs that doctors dole out unsparingly. So I've become a true believer in trying natural remedies first. And top on the list is a change in diet.
There is an interesting article in the September 5th issue of "First" magazine that made so much sense to me that I decided to put their test to the test. It's working! I've lost seven pounds in the last 2 weeks and I haven't been able to lose more than 2 lbs a month for the last year and keep it off. I would hardly eat and I would lose 2 and gain 5 or so it seemed. Here is the gist of the article: Even though your lab tests indicate a healthy thyroid, it doesn't mean that your thyroid is working up to speed. A sluggish thyroid as you know slows the metobolic process. Try these strategies for a week. They are "designed to reveal even minor thyroid slowdowns(the kind blood tests consistently miss) If a slightly sluggish gland is to blame for your wieght problems these four steps will immediately begin to repair and restore your thyroid so it can function at its natural, healthy peak. And the changes will be dramatic:"
1. Eat at least one cup of fresh fruit or vegetables at every meal.
2. Limit soy to protect metabolism boositing hormones: No more than 9 oz. soy milk, 5 oz tofu or 3 tsp soy sauce or miso daily. The reason they prevent nutrients such as iodine and tyrosine(amino acid)that your body uses to produce thryoid hormones (T3 & T4) from doing their job.
3. Consume one serving of protein at every meal to make sure your body gets a steady supply of tyrosine. (1 oz nuts, 8 oz milk or yogurt, 1 egg, or 1 Tbs peanut butter or 4 oz poultry, meat or fish.)
4. Elimate these foods from you diet - Broccoli, cabbage, cauliflower, turnips and other cruciferous veggies. These veggies contain Goitrogens and are so poerful that they can even trigger a full blown goiter (enlarged thyroid gland) and they interfer with the absorption of iodine. Other goitrogens: pine nuts, cassava (tapioca)sweet potatoes and lima beans.
Be sure to drink at least six 8 oz glasses of water daily which will flush out the metabolic wastes produced when body fat is burned for fuel. Otherwise you may experience a lot of bloating.
This article also suggests reading "Is Your Thyroid Making You Fat" Autor is Sanford Siegal, MD
Hope you find this information useful
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#11008 - 09/22/05 05:15 AM
Re: Hypothyroidism
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Member
Registered: 10/08/04
Posts: 1274
Loc: MD
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Bookie, I wonder if they caused my 3 1/2 cn thyroid goitor cyst on my right lobe . I hate Broccili anyway . Love cabbage some of these are suppose to prevent cancer . So, what to do!
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