How do I know if I have Wilson's Temperature Syndrome?
What's considered a low temperature?
How is the body temperature measured, and why?
What kind of symptoms can a low temperature cause?
What if Wilson's Temperature Syndrome is left untreated?
What can be done to fix it (proper T3 therapy)?
How can a low temperature cause so many symptoms?
What causes a low body temperature?
What people are most susceptible to getting WTS?
Is WTS more common in men or women?
Why is WTS undiagnosable with thyroid blood tests?
What does the T3 therapy involve?
Why don't more doctors know about this?
Might WTS explain why the thyroid treatment I'm taking now isn't working?
Myth1 - Once on thyroid, thyroid for life
Myth2 - Thyroid medicine will damage the thyroid gland if the thyroid tests are normal
Myth3 - T4 is the most important thyroid hormone
Myth4 - Thyroid medicine is poisonous if tests are normal

 

What Causes A Low Temperature?
Under conditions of severe physical or emotional stress,

  • The body can slow down as a coping mechanism
  • The temperature can go down to conserve energy

That's normal.  But sometimes,

  • The temperature can remain persistently low even after the stress has passed.

That's not good.  Let's take a look at how this occurs. 

Might WTS Explain Why The Thyroid Treatment I'm Taking Now Isn't Working?
Yes.
You can take thyroid medicine and have normal blood tests and still have a low body temperature and classic symptoms. Body temperature is what correlates the best with the symptoms. Therefore, thyroid system evaluation or management that does not take body temperature patterns into account is misdirected and often ineffective. Chapter 12 of the Doctor's Manual is devoted to explaining the treatment and management of patients who are not doing well on T4-containing medicine. As it turns out, patients who have hypothyroidism (low thyroid gland function) may also be suffering from Wilson's Temperature Syndrome. And if the WTS is left untreated those patients will continue to experience troublesome symptoms.

 

Myth1 Once a person needs thyroid medicine to improve symptoms of decreased thyroid system function, or low thyroid blood tests for that matter, s/he will always need thyroid medicine for the rest of her/his life.

FALSE. Even glandular insufficiencies of the thyroid system can be temporary, making it possible for people to be weaned off thyroid medicine sometimes, with their glandular function coming back up to normal. And people without glandular insufficiencies are particularly easy to wean off T3 therapy successfully after their symptoms have resolved.

 


Myth2
If a person is given thyroid medicine when the thyroid blood tests are normal, or when the thyroid gland is normal, it will damage the thyroid gland.

FALSE. Whereas thyroid medicine can rest a person's thyroid system for a time no studies have ever shown that it can damage a previously healthy gland, preventing it from functioning normally again after the medicine is discontinued. Actually, resting the thyroid system in the right way can often reset it, much like birth control pills can suppress a woman's own female hormone system for a time to restore a normal menstrual cycle. For example, the thyroid gland function of patients who come in with their thyroid glands suppressed with thyroid medicine for the past 20 years routinely have their own thyroid gland function come back up again when they're weaned off.

 


Myth3
Thyroxine or T4 is the most important thyroid hormone, and everything depends on its blood test levels being within a certain range.

FALSE. Actually, there was once a boy who was born without any thyroid function, and he was started on T3 instead of T4. He grew and developed normally and passed easily into adulthood without ever having a molecule of T4 in his body.

 


Myth4
Thyroid medicine (T4 or T3) is absolutely necessary and something "you'll probably need for life" one minute if your blood tests are low. Then, the medicine automatically becomes very bad for you the next if your tests are normal.

Wait a minute. Thyroid hormones (T4, T3) have been floating around in our bodies since birth, and they are absolutely necessary for good health. There is nothing inherently bad about the molecules; they can't and haven't directly damaged the tissue of your heart, brain, or other tissues. There is no evidence that suggests that thyroid hormones, when used properly, can damage the body in any way. But of course, thyroid hormones are medicine, and as with all medicines, should be used only under the thoughtful supervision of a doctor. Taking thyroid medicine is not completely without risk, as nothing is.

 

Symptoms
Fatigue
Headaches & Migraines
PMS
Easy Weight Gain
Depression
Irritability
Fluid Retention
Anxiety & Panic Attacks
Hair Loss
Poor Memory
Poor Concentration
Low Sex Drive
Unhealthy Nails
Dry Skin & Hair
Cold Intolerance /
Heat Intolerance
Low Motivation
Low Ambition
Insomnia
Allergies
Acne
Carpal Tunnel Syndrome
Asthma
Hives
And many others...