00:00:00:01 - 00:00:22:22 Speaker 1 Well, Amy, I am excited that you are coming on board with us. We have so many questions from our audience about thyroid, and I want you to really help people understand because many people don't know that testosterone is important, nor do they know that t two is important to evaluate. So tell us more about thyroid and thyroid function in general. 00:00:22:23 - 00:00:28:18 Speaker 1 We would like to really kind of understand it from a different perspective because so many women are on thyroid medication. 00:00:29:07 - 00:00:53:19 Speaker 2 So many, so many. And it's one of those conditions that really goes undiagnosed and kind of mistreated. So those who are diagnosed, I always challenge my listeners, your listeners, I always challenge my audience with this question, How do you feel? So let's say you are on that standard of care synthroid, or maybe you're given a little bit of T3 or maybe you're on MDT. 00:00:53:19 - 00:01:19:20 Speaker 2 And the question is how do you feel? Because when you are being treated for hypothyroidism or Hashimoto's, it's important that you feel good. That's the ultimate goal when we're working with with women and with patients, with anybody that has hypothyroidism is getting them to the level of being optimized where all of their symptoms are, most of their symptoms are completely gone and they feel like how they did prior to that diagnosis. 00:01:20:13 - 00:01:48:06 Speaker 2 And then there's the group that are totally undiagnosed and they know that something is wrong, but no one is telling them what's wrong and that was really me when I first started this journey 20 some years ago. I was misdiagnosed six times and I knew my body and I knew something wasn't right. I had put on 25 plus pounds, I say plus because I stopped getting on the scale after the £25 mark and I was in a competition diet mode. 00:01:48:06 - 00:02:07:24 Speaker 2 So I was eating, I mean, perfectly, absolutely pristine. I was going to the gym twice a day. It didn't make sense that the scale was going up. And I had went to all of these doctors and they all told me, You're normal, everything's fine, you're just getting older, eat less, exercise more. I heard the whole medical gaslighting thing. 00:02:08:00 - 00:02:40:18 Speaker 2 I heard the whole spiel. And finally, when I was diagnosed, then I was mistreated. So that's the biggest thing with thyroid is there's so many people out there that are misdiagnosed, undiagnosed and then mistreated. And we have to remember that the thyroid is the master gland. It runs the show, it controls your hormone balance, it controls your insulin balance, it controls every single cell and organ in your body, every single cell has a receptor site on it for thyroid hormone. 00:02:41:20 - 00:02:55:12 Speaker 2 And yet it's overlooked in conventional medicine. And these women are going misdiagnosed. It blows my mind. So the biggest take home with the thyroid is it's the master gland and many different symptoms can be tied back to the thyroid. 00:02:56:21 - 00:03:21:24 Speaker 1 So let's talk a little bit about that. So when we're seeing people in practice and we do a test on them, thyroid stimulating hormone and it's normal and we do a T for our free T4 and it's normal and we let people kind of go on their way and we're not even looking at antibodies anymore because now it's said that if you have antibodies and they're up, it doesn't really matter because if your test is normal, your thyroid is working properly. 00:03:22:06 - 00:03:31:07 Speaker 1 So could we dig a little deeper into helping people understand and also talk a little bit about, you know, borderline hypothyroidism as well? 00:03:31:21 - 00:03:55:14 Speaker 2 Yeah, definitely. So standard of care, as you know, is just like you said, Marcel, it's going in. You get the test age, maybe free T4 and if those are within normal limits on that standard lab value range panel, then you're sent on your way there are so many other tests that we have to do. So the most important test that I look at free T3 and reverse T3, those are my top two. 00:03:55:14 - 00:04:19:02 Speaker 2 And then we'll talk about the antibody. So free T3, like I said earlier, every single cell has a receptor site on it for thyroid hormone, it has a receptor site on it for T 394. So here we are testing the free T4, T4 is just your storage. It's totally unusable by your body unless it is converted to the active thyroid hormone T3. 00:04:19:02 - 00:04:54:06 Speaker 2 So that's why we want to look at free T3, that unbound thyroid hormone that is ready to attach to the receptor site on your cell and if that is low and like you mentioned, borderline. So that's a term that we use for those people that they have all the symptoms. The PTS is even below a two. It might even be optimal for a functional range, but those thyroid hormones, the free T3, the free T4, they're really on that low end of the standard lab value range now for functional medicine, for optimal free T3. 00:04:54:14 - 00:05:19:21 Speaker 2 I want you out of that basement. I want you in the upper quadrant of that standard lab value range or maybe even over even if you were getting flagged high, that might be your optimal so free T3 upper quadrant of the range or over. That's optimal if you're in the bottom of the barrel of that range, but you're still coming in as normal air quotes, then you will be dismissed. 00:05:19:21 - 00:05:42:15 Speaker 2 You will be told that you are normal when in fact you are borderline hypothyroid or just flat out low thyroid function. Then we move on the reverse T3. Reverse T3 is the anti thyroid hormone. I always use the analogy of a bouncer at a club. So if you picture this bouncer outside of your cell, you know, here is your cell with a little receptor site on it for T3 and it's happy when it gets the T3 attached to it. 00:05:42:15 - 00:06:06:18 Speaker 2 But reverse T3 stands outside that cell and tells the T3 molecule, you can't get in, you can't you're not allowed in today. And so that T3 is just it's unbound and it can't get to the receptor site because there's too much reverse T3. The reason why this is a task that is often not done by conventional medicine and many of you may have heard this if you asked for it. 00:06:07:05 - 00:06:28:22 Speaker 2 We only do that in clinical setting reading if you're in the ICU or the E.R.. Well, if we think about the mechanism of action of reverse T3, it's a survival mechanism that's in our body. So that is going to go up when you are injured, when you're sick, when you're laying in a hospital bed. Obviously, your reverse T3 is going to be high because our bodies are so smart. 00:06:28:22 - 00:06:48:21 Speaker 2 Our bodies know that you don't need to burn fat, you don't need to grow hair, you don't really even need to have a lot of energy when you're trying to recover from a trauma or an injury or an illness. But we don't want reverse T3 high when you're trying to live life day to day. So we need to test that to know how well are you converting your T4 over to 83? 00:06:49:03 - 00:07:10:02 Speaker 2 And is your body in this weird survival mode where it thinks that you're dying in a hospital bed but you're not? So I want to know what that reverse T3 is and then we have to go into the antibodies. There is two antibodies, Viral Globule one and thyroid oxidase. Oftentimes I'll see one tested, not both. And like you said, early results. 00:07:10:03 - 00:07:37:14 Speaker 2 It's it's important to know the antibody number because any antibody is a marker for Hashimoto's. I don't care if it's less than nine or less than 40 or it's coming in within range. That tells us that something's going on with your immune system, that there's an autoimmune condition kind of brewing underneath the surface that we need to look at. 00:07:37:14 - 00:07:58:21 Speaker 2 And my argument to not looking at those antibodies and not paying attention or blowing them off like conventional does, you're going to wait until that poor woman is £40 heavier on the couch, lost her job, losing relationships doesn't feel like herself anymore. And then you're going to go, Oh, okay, now you have Hashimoto's. That doesn't make sense. Let's catch it early. 00:07:58:21 - 00:08:08:08 Speaker 2 Let's test and catch it early so we can start a protocol, a possibly putting Hashimoto's into remission or at least treating this poor person and eliminating their symptoms. 00:08:09:06 - 00:08:37:05 Speaker 1 Absolutely. So the other thing that's interesting is because I teach for AFM and one of the things we always talk about is, you know, adrenals first, then thyroid adrenals, also hormones. And what we know is if we have high cortisol levels, there's an enzyme that actually blocks activity three and increases reverse T three. So it's a huge association between fight flight and those women that spent all their time dieting or in the gym and the yo yo thing that also contributes to that as well. 00:08:37:05 - 00:08:53:12 Speaker 1 Especially now so many women are going on semi routine for weight loss and you know that's going to cascade that problem. Number one, most people getting the weight back. But the other thing is that it also is going to create problems because they're eating so little with the thyroid as well. So it's interesting. 00:08:54:03 - 00:08:54:18 Speaker 2 Definitely. 00:08:55:02 - 00:09:11:20 Speaker 1 So tell tell me a little bit more. So somebody is coming in and they think they have a thyroid problem. You're going to recommend a TSA t what about t two? So let's kind of talk a little bit about t two because we've not talked about that nor testosterone, and that's a part of this puzzle as well. So what are the things you're going to recommend? 00:09:11:20 - 00:09:15:23 Speaker 1 They ask their doctor to get tested or perhaps even work with you. 00:09:16:11 - 00:09:42:20 Speaker 2 Okay. So we're getting the full thyroid panel done, and I'll do testosterone first because that that is testable. T True is not there's no assay for T2. So we'll get to that. We we will absolutely 100% do a full hormone panel as well because I want to know where is your total estrogen estradiol, estrogen, estriol, progesterone, DHEA, free and total testosterone, sage, BG, LH, offstage, all the fun stuff. 00:09:43:14 - 00:10:06:18 Speaker 2 Testosterone. We tend to you know, with women, we tend to really focus on the estrogen and progesterone, right? We really focus there. And testosterone doesn't get enough love. Testosterone is the most abundant hormone in a woman's body, although it's just not as high as a man. So we have lower levels of testosterone, but it is the most abundant hormone. 00:10:07:03 - 00:10:30:03 Speaker 2 And especially when we go into menopause, it almost kind of takes over because if you're not on any kind of hormone replacement therapy, estrogen and progesterone will drop. And testosterone kind of, you know, almost gets the dominant becomes the dominant hormone. With testosterone, there is an optimal range. And the optimal range or my optimal range, rather. And I've kind of developed this over the years. 00:10:30:03 - 00:10:56:19 Speaker 2 I don't even know if this aligns with I have M or not, but I had my total testosterone optimal above of 40 until I interviewed Dr. Anthony J and he wrote the book for Generation and he's on my podcast, He's talking, He's like, you know, I don't like to see my women under 50 total. I want him All right, maybe I need to raise my my bar a little bit, because you're right, even 40 doesn't quite cut it once you get them over that 50 mark for total testosterone. 00:10:56:19 - 00:11:15:04 Speaker 2 And the free testosterone is at least halfway, if not above halfway on the standard lab value range. The women aren't feeling that well. And once you get them above and the one thing there, keep in mind, too, is that your standard model, your range for total testosterone for a woman, nine times out of ten gets cut off at 48. 00:11:15:12 - 00:11:43:21 Speaker 2 Right. So meaning like you're going to get flagged high when you're actually optimal. But that testosterone is very, very protective against autoimmune. So this is why we see more Hashimoto's in women than in that, because men have, you know, test levels of 800, 900, 1000. And that's very, very protective from Hashimoto's. It protects them against autoimmune women. We have those lower lab values. 00:11:43:21 - 00:12:03:00 Speaker 2 We have. If you're optimal, you're gonna be around 50. You're probably hanging out more around 20, 30, 44 total. And that makes you more susceptible to Hashimoto's. Now, if you're one of the really unlucky women, which I have seen in my practice with the testosterone that is undetectable, I have seen three, I have seen six, I have seen nine for total testosterone. 00:12:03:00 - 00:12:47:18 Speaker 2 Virtually nothing in their body is working. No testosterone whatsoever. They are usually this ball of autoimmune. They have all the symptoms. Hoshi is flaring. It's going into rheumatoid arthritis, maybe some celiac on top of that. And they just become these walking balls of autoimmune. So when we do both, when we treat thyroid and due to zoster and hormone replacement in addition to any of the other hormones that are necessary as well, we see that that inflammatory autoimmune attack go down and that helps along with using LDN going gluten free, dairy free, all those lifestyle things that helps to push down the thyroid antibodies. 00:12:47:23 - 00:13:19:21 Speaker 2 So there are a lot of different things that we can do to help a woman a feel better and just get rid of those symptoms that are really ruining her quality of life. And we literally protect her, her, her body from that autoimmune attack. And then it's also obviously helping with motivation, sex drive, fat loss, muscle retention. So as you age, you don't experience that sarcopenia you have better protection of your bones, cardiac protection, brain protection. 00:13:19:21 - 00:13:29:05 Speaker 2 I mean, all the other benefits of testosterone as well, though, are really honing in on the thyroid. That can be a game changer for patients with Hashimoto's. 00:13:29:05 - 00:13:48:23 Speaker 1 So let's talk about dosage for women that are coming in and we see that their total testosterone is low and they're they're free is even you know, not detectable. How much do you start them on and what kind of testosterone? Because as you know, in the world of the conventional world, it's pretty controversial that women on testosterone at all. 00:13:49:12 - 00:14:07:07 Speaker 2 Right. Right, Right. So first, we have to start with what the woman is comfortable with. I really like cream or injectable because it's it's just a little bit more controlled than pellets. So and that's just that's just my take. I read you and I haven't even talked about what you know, I. 00:14:07:07 - 00:14:12:18 Speaker 1 Completely agree with you. I've seen some disasters with palettes because it's you know, it's. 00:14:13:17 - 00:14:14:14 Speaker 2 A roller coaster. 00:14:14:14 - 00:14:22:20 Speaker 1 Yeah, it's a roller coaster when people can get really, really angry and feel like totally out of control. It's not a pretty picture if you if the dosage is incorrect. 00:14:23:10 - 00:14:43:04 Speaker 2 I have seen females post pallet go up to a 900 in their total testosterone. I'm like, I know a guy down the street that would kill for your testosterone level, but you're not a dude. So we need to do something about this pellets. No, I like cream or injectables or really whatever they're comfortable with when they're that low. 00:14:43:04 - 00:15:02:23 Speaker 2 I really like to do the injectable that's kind of more up and coming and becoming more mainstream in in our world. We'll say in the functional world, it's becoming way more mainstream to use tested aid for women. I use that. It gets my number up. I get to keep it nice and steady and then I can adjust it. 00:15:02:23 - 00:15:18:14 Speaker 2 So if I do feel like I'm getting any kind of androgenic properties like acne or excessive facial hair, I can back it off. I can do a half a dose every week. I can do I can space it out, maybe go every two weeks. I really do stay in tune with my body and kind of adjust my dose based on that. 00:15:19:00 - 00:15:34:20 Speaker 2 And then some women with the cream, they just prefer the cream and that's fine. The most important thing that I can tell ladies, they go on to ice cream is rub it in for 2 minutes, set a timer for 2 minutes. It's going to feel like you're rubbing it in forever and that your skin is dry, rubbing it for 2 minutes. 00:15:34:20 - 00:15:51:04 Speaker 2 That's going to ensure that that all gets absorbed. Because a lot of times, ladies that come to me on the cream, they're still in the base and their total testosterone, I go, How are you applying? And you see this, How are you buying? I think, Oh, I just put it on rug like this. And I go, Did you for 2 minutes? 00:15:51:04 - 00:16:08:06 Speaker 2 They go, Well, no, I just I wrote it on like face cream and it's just done and I move on with my day. I'm like, Yeah, That's why your testosterone still applies, you know, It's just not working. So we can do either treatment path. It doesn't matter. It really kind of is up to the woman and what she's comfortable with. 00:16:08:13 - 00:16:22:02 Speaker 2 But even with the injectable, we're doing it subcu, we're doing with a teeny tiny insulin needle. I always tell my ladies it's nothing you won't even feel like goes right into your fat. So it's super easy to do. But the bottom line is just getting that level up and keeping it nice and steady. 00:16:22:23 - 00:16:46:02 Speaker 1 Absolutely. And testosterone cream can be very effective. But one of the things that I've seen for some women is that they start the cream, they're really low or they used to some stone. And I see them after they've had this experience and they they immediately get agitated and angry even with the first couple of dosages. So how do you manage those people? 00:16:46:02 - 00:17:05:19 Speaker 2 It's very few and far between, but I have seen that as well. So number one, we really have to check are they? That's why I like to pull in a Dutch test. So are they are they pushing down that five hour reductase pathway? I mean, it's rare that we would see it, see a woman respond that quickly on my day two or three. 00:17:05:19 - 00:17:26:13 Speaker 2 But it could happen. If she's if she very much aromatase is ADHD, then yeah it's it's it could be an issue. I mean that's where you're going to get the androgenic effects and you're going to get the mood aggressive, irritable effects of it or maybe the compounding pharmacy. And I have seen this as well completely messed up the dose. 00:17:26:19 - 00:17:44:07 Speaker 2 So the woman was getting this astronomical amount of testosterone that her body just wasn't even ready for and couldn't handle. And we didn't start low and slow enough like we had planned to right on the dose. And and she didn't really get to experience that low and slow benefit. It was just kind of a big punch in the face. 00:17:44:07 - 00:17:50:10 Speaker 2 So then that ends up freaking the poor woman out. She never wants to test. I just bacteria. 00:17:50:11 - 00:17:51:17 Speaker 1 Right. Are doing those. 00:17:51:17 - 00:18:18:02 Speaker 2 Again. But the good news is, is that if you are one of those women that push down that five reductase pathway we can use I don't know if you use this Marcelle, but we can use a saw palmetto so we can actually use com some prostate formulas for guys that help block that pathway so that you're not getting that high DHT level, you're not getting the the acne, the breakouts, the aggression, maybe even on the proper low dose that we're starting on. 00:18:18:12 - 00:18:53:17 Speaker 1 Right, Right. Absolutely. So let's kind of talk about products, because as you know, controversial. And I mean, I was in practice for many, many, many years and many back. You know, when we started our practice in 85, we were already using alternative forms of thyroid replacement. So Synthroid is considered the the God's gift to humanity or levothyroxine or any of the kind of standard when people wanted then to go on, you know, natural thyroid, you know, combination of T4 and T3, they were oftentimes told absolutely not doesn't work as well. 00:18:53:18 - 00:19:05:22 Speaker 1 It's just ridiculous to even ask for it. And let's talk a little bit about that, because I think people are confused because they hear so many people say, no, no, no, no, no. You know, all you need is T4. 00:19:06:11 - 00:19:29:05 Speaker 2 Right, Right, exactly. So this is where we can pull in the T two, right? So there are four different thyroid hormones. There's T one, two, two, three, four. We have tests 43 and T four. That's what we talked about earlier. There's no current public test for t one and t to t one inactive. We just put that on side. 00:19:29:05 - 00:19:59:04 Speaker 2 We just put that over here. T two is a very, very powerful I call it the forgotten thyroid hormone. There's no assay for it to the general public, but we can test for it in studies. So that's how we figured out that hey, this t two hormone drops are really low in pregnancy, which is really interesting because it's almost like the body knows to go into a protective lower metabolic SSM kind of mode. 00:19:59:13 - 00:20:41:03 Speaker 2 And then we see t to go up in individuals with a really, really healthy thyroid with a healthy fast metabolism with abundant energy. So we can measure it in studies and see that this has a direct effect on the metabolism in the mitochondria. When we're looking at t four again, totally inactive t three is active. T two can tag on an extra iodine atom and become t three or it can just stay as t two itself, which is not a bad thing and have no thyroid mimetic effects, meaning it's not going to alter your thyroid labs to where your doctor is going to look at it and go, Oh my God, you're hypothyroid now. 00:20:41:18 - 00:21:08:01 Speaker 2 It's not going to alter your thyroid labs. It's not going to cause heart racing or heart palpitations that T3 can, although that's a little bit overblown in conventional medicine, too. But it can. So it just has a direct effect on the basal metabolic rate, increasing that and on the on ATP production at the mitochondrial level. So it's increasing your energy and increasing the amount of fat that you burn just sitting around your basal metabolic rate. 00:21:08:01 - 00:21:30:13 Speaker 2 That is just supplemental. So teach you it is found in natural desiccated thyroid. So when we look at armor or EMP thyroid, that is a natural desiccated, meaning a dried porcine thyroid gland and there is a little bit of t two in it. However, it's a very, very small amount. So it does exist in in medication, in thyroid hormone replacement. 00:21:30:24 - 00:21:54:02 Speaker 2 But we don't just give you two as a hormone replacement like we can give you t for like we can give you t three. It's, it's in the T, but we can take 2t2 supplemental. So that's a bonus. When it comes to thyroid hormone replacement, the medications that you were talking about t for only just I mean, I hate to say the word never, but it rarely, rarely, rarely works. 00:21:54:09 - 00:22:16:08 Speaker 2 Maybe one in a hundred people, they'll say, you know why I'm on synthroid only and I feel fantastic. Well, those people aren't coming to you and I so they're out there in the world somewhere and good for that. But most of the time people are feeling really kind of crappy on T for me and that's because A you're giving them the inactive thyroid hormone. 00:22:16:18 - 00:22:43:02 Speaker 2 B You are expecting that thyroid hormone, you can reverse it properly. So let's talk about all the things that hinders conversion because I always say T for two. T three conversion is like running ten Tough Mudders. There's a lot that can get in the way. You mentioned high cortisol earlier, estrogen dominance, insulin resistance, high insulin. There are well, it can be low iodine, low zinc, low magnesium, low vitamin D, that all contributes to it. 00:22:43:02 - 00:23:02:10 Speaker 2 There's two genetics nibs dill, one in diet, two that can make a person a non convertor. There is a lot that can get in the way. So why would we give someone the inactive form of thyroid hormone and then cross our fingers and wish on a rainbow that it converts properly? It doesn't even make sense. Why not give a little bit of T3? 00:23:02:15 - 00:23:28:08 Speaker 2 Why not use MDT that contains T for 43? Or let's add in some of irony and or side AML, which is just straight up synthetic. I'll come back to that synthetic T three Now I've changed the word synthetic. I now use Biossance it's a made up word, but I just don't like how people negatively pair up the word synthetic with something bad. 00:23:28:16 - 00:23:48:21 Speaker 2 So the synthetic thyroid hormones are really made to mimic your own thyroid hormone and there's nothing wrong with them. If they work for you, they work for you. We find the right combination, your optimize, you're feeling great. That's what we want. So I love adding in a little bit, a little bit or a little bit whatever a person needs of t three to get them optimized. 00:23:49:02 - 00:24:10:23 Speaker 1 Yeah, absolutely. I used to do that in practice all the time, no question about it. And it makes a world of difference for me. It was very unusual to see somebody on Synthroid and they felt great or levothyroxine, they felt great. They didn't, you know. And so many women are struggling with this. So let's talk a little bit about the weight gain issue, because one of the things that people come to me in my practice with is I've gained weight. 00:24:10:23 - 00:24:27:24 Speaker 1 I know it's my thyroid, I know it's my thyroid. And, you know, at the time I was doing testing through Genova Diagnostics, that really gave me much more information about that thyroid. And oftentimes it was thyroid, but then there were times that it wasn't as well because oftentimes people are like, I hope it is. I hope it is. 00:24:27:24 - 00:24:43:21 Speaker 1 And it's like it's not. So let's look at some other options here for us, right? Absolutely. It's about the weight gain issue, because it is certainly a problem for people, especially people that are doing everything right, everything right there, you know, 20 there, you know, and nothing changes. 00:24:43:21 - 00:25:05:00 Speaker 2 I'm doing all the things I know the frustration. I know. I know that feeling. I know the frustration. So when we're looking at the weight component and we set aside the diet, the exercise, let's just assume that all those are are on point. When you're doing all the things you're doing all the things that it comes down to. 00:25:05:17 - 00:25:27:22 Speaker 2 If it's not thyroid or even if it is, we start to look at these other components, insulin. So insulin resistance is huge, especially in today's society with how we eat the standard American diet. And I like to see a fasting insulin below a six. So your A1 see that's a marker, a three month snapshot of what your glucose, your blood sugar has been doing over three months. 00:25:28:03 - 00:25:57:10 Speaker 2 I like to see that between a 4.8 and 5.1, I like to see insulin below a six. If it's above those markers, then there is insulin resistance and that will absolutely hinder any kind of weight loss and possibly spur on some more weight gain. The other thing I look at is leptin, which is very much tied into your T three being optimized and insulin resistance and then thyroid or testosterone like we talked about. 00:25:57:10 - 00:26:22:14 Speaker 2 So if a woman's testosterone is low, that is 100% going to impair fat metabolism because you're you don't have the building blocks, you don't have the fire to have a proper metabolism. And then the triple whammy to weight would be to have all three, which I see quite often. There's a thyroid problem, there's insulin resistance, there's low testosterone. 00:26:22:22 - 00:26:43:08 Speaker 2 And it's like for those ladies, I just have to tell them we are literally rebuilding your body from the ground up. We are reigniting the fire, we are rebuilding your metabolism, because right now you have none. So don't beat yourself up. Don't blame yourself. Don't get it in your head that you should have done this or should have done that diet or taken this supplement or whatever. 00:26:43:20 - 00:27:04:01 Speaker 2 You have no metabolism whatsoever. So once we rebuild it, then all of that great eating that you're doing and the lifestyle changes and the sleep and the exercise and the lifting heavy, that's all going to come together and work now and you're going to get rewarded for your efforts because we gave you the metabolism back. 00:27:04:14 - 00:27:27:24 Speaker 1 Absolutely. I completely agree. The other thing that I sometimes did also, Amy, is I sometimes did a two hour post printed insulin because they gave me additional information. I was surprised how often the fasting was relatively good. And then the two hour postprandial was like, Oh my God, oh my God. So that was the other thing. And I would just suggest that people consider, well, let's talk about iodine. 00:27:28:12 - 00:27:51:01 Speaker 1 It is somewhat controversial because we have some people that truly, truly believe absolutely that we have too much iodine now. And it's been my experience when I tested people that more people than not were actually deficient in iodine because they went over to the Celtic salts and they stopped using iodized salt and things like that. So what what are your thoughts about all this from your perspective? 00:27:51:01 - 00:28:11:17 Speaker 2 So I refer back to the work of Dr. David Brownstein, who's kind of the guru and in iodine and kind of boosting iodine use in especially in thyroid conditions. So if you listen to his stories of practitioner Michigan and he was seeing all of these hypothyroid cases come into his office and he even says he's like, listen, it's fine. 00:28:11:17 - 00:28:32:22 Speaker 2 I mean, I have no problem giving thyroid hormone replacement and the proper ones, the T, the T for anti three combine. But he said, I want to know why, like why was this occurring so often? And he started testing and treating with iodine and people were getting better. They were lowering their dose. They were coming off their medication. 00:28:32:22 - 00:29:00:02 Speaker 2 Author thyroid medication. When you look at basic biology, everything goes along. Your body also needs iodine. So if we think about that and we think about the thyroid needing iodine for proper function as well as conversion of T for 2t3, we know that reverse t31 of the causes of elevated reverse C three is an iodine deficiency. It just doesn't even make sense to withhold iodine. 00:29:00:15 - 00:29:18:17 Speaker 2 Now there are those stern cases and I always talk about, you know, you always have a few that ruin it for, for the whole. There are certain cases where some functional docs were using very, very high doses of iodine right off the bat and they were sending people into this hypothyroid state. Some of them had a thyroid storm. 00:29:18:17 - 00:29:26:00 Speaker 2 And, you know, just like we see even with hormones, right. You have one bad report and then it's like, stop everything. 00:29:26:04 - 00:29:27:00 Speaker 1 Let's just pull. 00:29:27:00 - 00:29:45:04 Speaker 2 Hormones from everyone. Let's pull iodine from everywhere. And it doesn't even make sense. It's like, wait a minute, let's look at the individual scenarios. And yeah, maybe that was just too much for that person. And they didn't do well with it. But we have these hundred people over here that are thriving and they're lowering their dose of thyroid medication. 00:29:45:05 - 00:30:03:09 Speaker 2 Their energy's better and they're losing weight and their hair's growing back and their breasts are no longer fibrosis decay and on and on and on. With all of these fantastic reports from using iodine, I have a hard time withholding it. I would like to be in I am in this camp over here and says let's use it in. 00:30:03:09 - 00:30:10:14 Speaker 2 Small amounts will gradually increase. We're not going to go crazy. Well, let's just have it in your system every single day and you will notice an improvement. 00:30:11:01 - 00:30:13:10 Speaker 1 Right? And how much do you have people on in. 00:30:14:00 - 00:30:33:21 Speaker 2 12.5 to 25 milligrams. I know. Brownstein kind of goes up to he sometimes goes up to 50, sometimes 100, and depends on what case he's doing. He had one case where he had a woman with breast cancer that and she was so bromide toxic. So that's the other thing with iodine is that it will compete with the toxic halide. 00:30:33:21 - 00:31:03:07 Speaker 2 So you have bromide, you have chlorine, you have fluoride in our water, in our toothpaste before our treatment you got as a kid, all of those are very, very toxic to the thyroid. So iodine comes in and it kind of pushes those out. So what he was seeing with this one particular patient was that she did have breast cancer and she was so bromide toxic that her breast literally started pushing out bromide and she had yellow stains on her nightgown and she brought the nightgown into him and he tested it was bromide. 00:31:03:15 - 00:31:24:24 Speaker 2 So her body was literally pushing out all of these toxic slides. And and it was because of the iodine detoxing her body from those halide. So that's another benefit, especially if you're, you know, if you're soaking in a hot tub, if you're using fluoride toothpaste, which you should probably stop. But yeah, it's, it's fantastic for detoxing and for the immune system as well. 00:31:25:14 - 00:31:37:03 Speaker 1 Exactly. And how do you test right. I levels you know, I used to do some urine testing back in the day. How do you test for iodine? Do you do a challenge with them first or you just do iodine testing? 00:31:37:14 - 00:32:00:23 Speaker 2 You know, the jaw. I still haven't landed on really good data as to what is the best test for iodine. Yeah, I mean, the jury is really out on that totally. I was interviewing Barton Scott and I was interviewing him on my podcast and I asked him when he does the hair tissue mineral analysis and do you guys include iodine? 00:32:01:06 - 00:32:24:15 Speaker 2 And he said something that has stuck with me to this day. He said, Well, every single cell in the body needs iodine, so why don't you just take it? Why you need to test for it? That's really good. So I will test I will do a blood test for iodine if the person isn't on it. But if you retest, once you start taking it, it's going to be fine. 00:32:24:15 - 00:32:42:09 Speaker 2 I right. So it's nice to see like, are you in the bottom of the barrel? I when I tested myself, my level was a sex line. It was really fly. I was nonexistent. So again, it's like, well, why don't we just take it and kind of go by symptoms and not necessarily need a test for it? That's my two. 00:32:42:09 - 00:33:01:05 Speaker 1 Cents. Got it. 11. And in terms of thyroid replacement, we're still we're talking about using our thyroid. We're talking about, you know, using synthroid in combination with T3. And also what about compounded thyroid? I used to do a lot of compounding of the thyroid replacement as well. 00:33:02:03 - 00:33:23:13 Speaker 2 It all depends on the pharmacy. So what I have found is if you aren't working with a compounding pharmacy that you know, love and trust and you know what they're putting out, you know, what I find is that my patients all go hypo when they go on compounded. And I can't figure out if it's the fillers they're putting in. 00:33:23:13 - 00:33:50:14 Speaker 2 I know they don't use a lot of fillers, which is why we do compounded. I don't know if it's there, if it's the base that they're using, I, I can't figure that out at all, but I like to try to stay away from compounded unless someone is very, very sensitive to all fillers if they're reacting to even when we're changing the manufacturer like we can we can swap out the manufacturer of T3 because the generic T3 has less fillers than the brand Z three ironically. 00:33:50:21 - 00:34:03:22 Speaker 2 So with the generic, we can change manufacturers Greenstone, Sun, Pharmaceutical, Sigma, fa and maybe you do better with a different manufacturer than you do with the other one. I like to play with that first before we move on to compound it. 00:34:04:11 - 00:34:11:09 Speaker 1 So you would do a combination of central levothyroxine and T3 with that in combination or do something else in combination. 00:34:11:19 - 00:34:37:06 Speaker 2 You can go all the way up to Teressa, which has a fierce insole which has no fillers whatsoever. That's at4. And then we can combine that with wireless irony. And that's the beauty of thyroid treatment. That's why it's so it's so nuanced. But we have so many different options when you get outside of that, that synthroid box, conventional medicine, I think, is we can pair up armor with some T3 to change that ratio. 00:34:37:16 - 00:34:57:21 Speaker 2 We can, we can do anything to fit your body. You can we can push the T3 ratio higher than t four. I have one patient right now. She's not tolerating even 50 micrograms of T4. So we're going to take her down to 12.5 and we're going to move this here set. We have the T3 in at 20 micrograms twice a day. 00:34:58:09 - 00:35:22:11 Speaker 2 She might be T3 only, I'm T3 only if you give me the smallest amount of T4, I will be £10 heavier and depressed by the end of the week. So I do not convert at all. So this woman might be T3, but we have to try different things and monitor and monitor the symptoms and monitor the labs till we find what is your optimal combination. 00:35:22:11 - 00:35:47:17 Speaker 1 So kind of just some this what I love about the conversation is we're talking about looking at it from a real holistic functional medicine perspective. We're looking at lifestyle, we're looking at sleep, we're looking at all these pieces. But there's a foundational piece that I hear you say that has to do with hormones, has to do with adrenals and has to do with thyroid and really testing the thyroid in a different way so women feel heard instead of pushed aside to. 00:35:47:17 - 00:35:49:11 Speaker 1 There's nothing wrong with you. Right. 00:35:49:24 - 00:35:51:09 Speaker 2 Exactly. 00:35:51:09 - 00:35:57:24 Speaker 1 So if people want to learn more about you, they want to find out how to work with you, any of these kinds of things. Can you tell us how they can do that? 00:35:58:10 - 00:36:16:18 Speaker 2 Absolutely. So just listen to me go on and on and on and educate about thyroid. You can listen to the Thyroid Fix or podcast on Apple Podcasts platforms, and then you can go to my website and Doctor Amy Horner, medical M If you are interested, you can send an application, you can do an application call. We want to make sure that you're a good fit for us. 00:36:16:18 - 00:36:28:14 Speaker 2 We're a good fit for you. We'll go through your health history and go through the different options and programs that we have and see which one works best for you. And then, of course, I'm on all major social media platforms, so you can find me there under Dr. Norman. 00:36:29:03 - 00:36:36:09 Speaker 1 Awesome. Well, thank you so very much. I think this is a very powerful conversation that women really need to hear. So thank you. I appreciate it. 00:36:36:17 - 00:36:39:18 Speaker 2 Thanks, Marcelle. My pleasure.