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Home Forums Forum Arthritis: thyroid deficiency & hormonal imbalance

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  • #3655
    Cari
    Keymaster

      “A very healthy 71 year-old man was under his house repairing the foundation, when a support slipped and let the house fall far enough to break some facial bones. During his recovery, he developed arthritis in his hands. It is fairly common for arthritis to appear shortly after an accident, a shock, or surgery, and Han Selye’s famous work with rats shows that when stress exhausts the adrenal glands (so they are unable to produce normal amounts of cortisone and related steroid hormones), arthritis and other “degenerative” diseases are likely to develop.

      But when this man went to his doctor to “get something for his arthritis,” he was annoyed that the doctor insisted on giving him a complete physical exam, and wouldn’t give him a shot of cortisone. The examination showed low thyroid function, and the doctor prescribed a supplement of thyroid extract, explaining that arthritis is one of the many symptoms of hypothyroidism. The patient agreed to take the thyroid, but for several days he grumbled about the doctor ‘fixing something that wasn’t wrong’ with him, and ignoring his arthritis. But in less than two weeks, the arthritis had entirely disappeared. He lived to be 89, without a recurrence of arthritis. (He died iatrogenically, while in good health.)“ -Ray Peat

      #4527
      Cari
      Keymaster

        “Caffeine has remarkable parallels to thyroid and progesterone, and the use of coffee or tea can help to maintain their production, or compensate for their deficiency.” -Ray Peat

        #4576
        Cari
        Keymaster

          “Copper is a specific oxidant for vitamin C. It is associated with many inflammatory diseases, and should probably be better investigated in degenerative diseases, including arthritis and glaucoma.”

          – Nutrition For Women

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