Guest guest Posted April 5, 2010 Report Share Posted April 5, 2010 I just wanted to throw this out to you. The protein/food issue sounds like low stomach acid to me. S To: RT3_T3 Sent: Mon, April 5, 2010 1:57:30 PMSubject: Re: High dose of T3 required for high RT3 dominance? Hi Val,What stress could be causing high cortisol?What I'm finding is that if i lower my HC, I get more tired if I eat food, and this also can lead to me feeling hypo. High protein foods are worse, such as fish, cheese and nuts, and I can't eat them now as they cause to to go hypo, which I guessed was due to more RT3 being formed. If I take a little more HC, it seems to shut down the adrenals a bit more and make me less sensitive to the food.I'm also losing a lot of weight which implied to me - low HC, but I ramped it up and even more weight dropped off!!I don't have any saliva labs to post, I've been treating adrenals now for 3 years and was almost off them in January, but seemed to keep getting this problem with high protein food making feel feel tired and grotty.I'll slow down on the T3 now and stick to the schedule, I had a thyroid dump a couple of years ago and it wasn't nice.Rod--- In RT3_T3yahoogroups (DOT) com, <artisticgroomer@ ...> wrote:>> Rod you have soem very confused issues here. First eatign does nto > generate more cortisol. Then if oyu have HIGH cortils the LAST thing you > need is taking more of it. High cortisol is generally treated wiht much > gentler means adn then slwoly raising T3 to remove the stress causing > it. It can take up to 12 weeks adn for a few folks a bit longer to clear > out excess RT3 so I would nto expect to feel UNHYPO this early inthe > game and takign moreT3 will only set you up for a HUGE dump when those > receptors DO get around to clearing. Do you have saliva cortisol labs > oyu can post?> > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 5, 2010 Report Share Posted April 5, 2010 SOunds to me like oyu may have a serious glucose problem. Have you tested fasting glucose recently? That or food sensitivities is what I woudl suspect because high opr low cortils shoudl not cause you to feel that way from eating proitein. -- http://nthadrenalsweb.org/ http://health.groups.yahoo.com/group/NaturalThyroidHormonesADRENALS/ http://faqhelp.webs.com/ http://health.groups.yahoo.com/group/RT3_T3/ http://www.thyroid-rt3.com/ http://groups.yahoo.com/group/HypoPets/ http://www.stopthethyroidmadness.com/ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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