Guest guest Posted January 13, 2008 Report Share Posted January 13, 2008 I want to hear more about this. How many of these drugs contain things like flouride and chlorine? And since those things depress thyroid function, which can lead to adrenal fatigue....how many people have been *given *adrenal fatigue by *cookie cutter medicine? *8(* * > I've seen some talk about antidepressants and AF. Is this solely > a concern with Prozac, which contains fluoride, or is it a concern > with all antidepressants, because of some effect on the pituitary or > hypothalamus (or other things)? I'm on bupropion and low-dose > lorazepam, which don't contain fluorine, although they do contain a > chlorine atom or two. I've been on AD's for 10 years, the only > fluorine-containing one being Celexa. Now that I'm weaning off IC, > should I be wary of increasing AD dosage? > > . > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 14, 2008 Report Share Posted January 14, 2008 I think as much as you are aware of what your drugs are made of you have avoided the worst of them. AD's can have a good place in people with AF and low thyroid but they seldom work that well for peolel that have depression form Low T3. Correcting T3 levels is about the only thing that does fix this depression. SO I would say just simply be choosy which AD's you accept and be VERY watchful of doctors that would give oyu this in place of finding the cause of your deopression which may jst be low hormones. -- Artistic Grooming- Hurricane WV http://www.stopthethyroidmadness.com/ http://health.groups.yahoo.com/group/NaturalThyroidHormonesADRENALS/ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 14, 2008 Report Share Posted January 14, 2008 Jim Witte wrote: > It's amazing how many psychotropic things have > fluorine in them. I wonder if it has a functional property, or is > just *there* because of some step in the synthesis and the fact that > F-C bonds are apparently quite stable from what I've read - which is > why they're used everywhere.. > > If the fluorine bond is very stable, then it would be interesting to know if that bond breaks in the body. If the bond and thus the med does NOT break into its molecular components in the body, then I'd think the fluorine is a non-issue. sol Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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