Multiple sclerosis, Dysautonomia, you name it…ALL made worse from hypothyroidism or being on a T4 med
Before my thyroid disease of hypothyroidism was discovered, I had horrific and debilitating consequences from exercise or any activity. You can read about it all here or even more detail in the Introduction of the patients-to-patients Stop the Thyroid Madness book.
When my so-called “borderline hypothyroid” was discovered by age 30, I thought whoo-hooo, I’ll finally get rid of this strange nightmare whenever I tried to do ANYTHING. I was put on Synthroid and my anticipation for a better life was profound.
But my hope was dashed. Not only did my body continue to overreact to activity, it got worse over time. Horribly worse. Nearly twenty years after I had started on a T4-only medication, and was told by one doctor after another that my problem was not my thyroid, I was going to apply for social security disability.
But they were all dead wrong. Sure, turns out I have a form of Dysautonomia, a malfunction and overreaction of my autonomic nervous system, causing my body to far overreact to stress. But remaining hypothyroid, as we all do on the sucky t4-only medications, had made it far worse. And I proved it. When I switched to Armour desiccated thyroid in 2002 and raised it according to what patients have learned, a miracle occurred. My severe autonomic reactions made an almost complete turnaround.
And my experience of change or improvement when it comes to other diseases or conditions has been shared by others.
Last week, I received an email from a man whose brother has MS–Multiple Sclerosis. And though Armour has not taken his MS away, it allowed him to move from this wheelchair to a walker! That is impressive.
So I am left wondering: what other conditions or diseases, which are unique in themselves, are worsened being undiagnosed thanks to the lousy TSH lab test or the inadequate treatment of Synthroid, Levoxyl, levothyroxine, Eltroxin and all other T4-only medications? It’s awful to think about it.
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When I was ten years old, my mother had electric shock treatment.
Michelle, 40-or-50-something, came over to my house today to go over some paperwork. I hadn’t taken my Armour yet, and I said “Excuse me, I need to pop my thyroid meds under my tongue.”