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Thyroid, Blood Sugar, and Metabolic Syndrome

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This article is part of a special report on Thyroid Disorders. To see the other articles in this series, click here.

According to the American Association of Clinical Endocrinologists, 27 million Americans suffer from thyroid dysfunction – half of whom go undiagnosed. Subclinical hypothyroidism, a condition in which TSH is elevated but free T4 is normal, may affect an additional 24 million Americans. Taken together, more than 50 million Americans are affected by some form of thyroid disorder.

Metabolic syndrome (MetS), also affects 50 million Americans, and insulin resistance, one of the components of metabolic syndrome, affects up to 105 million Americans. That’s 35% of the population.

Metabolic syndrome has become so common that it’s predicted to eventually bankrupt our healthcare system. Both metabolic syndrome and insulin resistance are risk factors for heart disease and diabetes, two of the leading causes of death in the developed world. It’s also closely related with diabesity.

With such a high prevalence of both thyroid dysfunction and metabolic syndrome, you might suspect there’s a connection between the two. And you’d be right.

Studies show an increased frequency of thyroid disorders in diabetics, and a higher prevalence of obesity and metabolic syndrome in people with thyroid disorders.

That’s because healthy thyroid function depends on keeping your blood sugar in a normal range, and keeping your blood sugar in a normal range depends on healthy thyroid function.

Thyroid, Blood Sugar, and Metabolic Syndrome

Metabolic syndrome is defined as a group of metabolic risk factors appearing together, including:

Metabolic syndrome is caused by chronic hyperglycemia (high blood sugar). Chronic hyperglycemia is caused by eating too many carbohydrates. Therefore, metabolic syndrome could more simply be called “excess carbohydrate disease”. In fact, some researchers have gone as far as defining metabolic syndrome as “those physiologic markers that respond to reduction in dietary carbohydrate.”

When you eat too many carbs, the pancreas secretes insulin to move excess glucose from the blood into the cells where glucose is used to produce energy. But over time, the cells lose the ability to respond to insulin. It’s as if insulin is knocking on the door, but the cells can’t hear it. The pancreas responds by pumping out even more insulin (knocking louder) in an effort to get glucose into the cells, and this eventually causes insulin resistance.

Studies have shown that the repeated insulin surges common in insulin resistance increase the destruction of the thyroid gland in people with autoimmune thyroid disease. As the thyroid gland is destroyed, thyroid hormone production falls.

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How Low Blood Sugar Affects the Thyroid

But just as high blood sugar can weaken thyroid function, chronically low blood sugar can also cause problems.

Your body is genetically programmed to recognize low blood sugar as a threat to survival. Severe or prolonged hypoglycemia can cause seizures, coma, and death. When your blood sugar levels drop below normal, your adrenal glands respond by secreting a hormone called cortisol. Cortisol then tells the liver to produce more glucose, bringing blood sugar levels back to normal.

The problem is that cortisol (along with epinephrine) is also a sympathetic nervous system hormone involved in the “flight or fight” response.

This response includes an increase in heart rate and lung action and an increase in blood flow to skeletal muscles to help us defend against or flee from danger. Cortisol’s role is to increase the amount of glucose available to the brain, enhance tissue repair, and curb functions – like digestion, growth and reproduction – that are nonessential or even detrimental in a fight or flight situation.

Unfortunately for hypoglycemics, repeated cortisol release caused by episodes of low blood sugar suppresses pituitary function. And as I showed in a previous article, without proper pituitary function, your thyroid can’t function properly.

Together, hyperglycemia and hypoglycemia are referred to as dysglycemia. Dysglycemia weakens and inflames the gut, lungs and brain, imbalances hormone levels, exhausts the adrenal glands, disrupts detoxification pathways, and impairs overall metabolism. Each of these effects significantly weakens thyroid function. As long as you have dysglycemia, whatever you do to fix your thyroid isn’t going to work.

How Low Thyroid Function Affects Blood Sugar

We’ve seen now how both high and low blood sugar cause thyroid dysfunction. On the other hand, low thyroid function can cause dysglycemia and metabolic syndrome through a variety of mechanisms:

  • it slows the rate of glucose uptake by cells;
  • it decreases rate of glucose absorption in the gut;
  • it slows response of insulin to elevated blood sugar; and,
  • it slows the clearance of insulin from the blood.

These mechanisms present clinically as hypoglycemia. When you’re hypothyroid, your cells aren’t very sensitive to glucose. So although you may have normal levels of glucose in your blood, you’ll have the symptoms of hypoglycemia (fatigue, headache, hunger, irritability, etc.). And since your cells aren’t getting the glucose they need, your adrenals will release cortisol to increase the amount of glucose available to them. This causes a chronic stress response, as I described above, that suppresses thyroid function.

How to Keep Your Blood Sugar in a Healthy Range

It’s important to understand that whether you have high or low blood sugar, you probably have some degree of insulin resistance. I described how high blood sugar causes insulin resistance above. But insulin resistance can also cause low blood sugar. This condition, called reactive hypoglycemia, occurs when the body secretes excess insulin in response to a high carbohydrate meal – causing blood sugar levels to drop below normal.

In either case, the solution is to make sure your blood sugar stays within a healthy range. There are two targets to consider. The first is fasting blood glucose, which is a measure of your blood sugar first thing in the morning before eating or drinking anything. I define the normal range for fasting blood glucose as 75 – 95 mg/dL. Although 100 is often considered the cutoff for normal, studies have shown that fasting blood sugar levels in the mid-90s were predictive of future diabetes a decade later. And although 80 mg/dL is often defined as the cutoff on the low end, plenty of healthy people have fasting blood sugar in the mid-to-high 70s (especially if they follow a low-carb diet).

The second, and much more important, target is post-prandial blood glucose. This is a measure of your blood sugar 1-2 hours after a meal. Several studies have shown that post-prandial blood glucose is the most accurate predictor of future diabetic complications and is the first marker (before fasting blood glucose and Hb1Ac) to indicate dysglycemia.

Normal post-prandial blood sugar one to two hours after a meal is 120 mg/dL. Most normal people are under 100 mg/dL two hours after a meal.

Now that we know the targets, let’s look at how to meet them. If you’re hypoglycemic, your challenge is to keep your blood sugar above 75 throughout the day. The best way to do this is to eat a low-to-moderate carbohydrate diet (to prevent the blood sugar fluctuations I described above), and to eat frequent, small meals every 2-3 hours (to ensure a continuous supply of energy to the body.

If you’re hyperglycemic, your challenge is to keep your blood sugar below 120 two hours after a meal. The only way you’re going to be able to do this is to restrict carbohydrates. But how low-carb do you need to go? The answer is different for everyone. You figure your own carbohydrate tolerance by buying a blood glucose meter and testing your blood sugar after various meals. If you’ve eaten too many carbs, your blood sugar will remain above 120 mg/dL two hours after your meal.

I highly recommend you pick up a blood glucose meter if you have a thyroid and/or blood sugar problem. It’s the simplest and most cost-effective way to figure out how much carbohydrate is safe for you to eat. There are tons of meters out there, but one that gets a lot of good recommendations is the ReliOn Ultima. It’s pretty cheap, and the test strips are also cheap, which is where the major expense lies.

Finally, if you have poor thyroid function it’s important that you take steps to normalize it. As I’ve described in this article, the cycle works in both directions. Dysglycemia can depress thyroid function, but thyroid disorders can cause dysglycemia and predispose you to insulin resistance and metabolic syndrome.

Maintaining healthy blood sugar is not only critical for thyroid health, it’s essential for overall health. Sadly, half of Americans has or is at risk of having diabetes, with one-third diabetics unaware that they have it. 

There are many causes of high blood sugar. One of the most significant but least-known is nutrient deficiency. Several vitamins and minerals are required for proper blood sugar regulation, and the majority of Americans don’t get enough of several of these micronutrients

This is where smart supplementation can play a role—and it’s why I created the Adapt Naturals Core Plus bundle. It’s a daily stack of 5 products designed to restore optimal nutrient levels so your body can function as it was intended to, and you can feel and perform your best. 

From metabolism-boosting vitamins and minerals like vitamin B12, folate, magnesium, and vitamin D, to phytonutrients like bioflavonoids, carotenoids, and beta-glucans, Core Plus has you covered.

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265 Comments

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  1. Hi Chris,
    I have been told I am not diabetic but I’ve been to the doctor numerous times complaining of blurry vision, shaking headache, ringing in ears after I eat and wake up in the middle of the night at 2 am shaking, sweating, ears ringing, headache and after not eating for 8 hours! I started checking my glucose levels after buying a home monitoring test and my levels are anywhere between 130 and 155 during this time! My levels are 110 after I wake up in the morning fasting for 12 hours! My a1c test came back at 5.5 and they say that is perfect! I was just recently diagnosed with small fiber neuropathy in my feet also handsalso have hagimotos disease (levothyroxine .75mcg) and gained about 100 lbs over the last 2 years which I cannot take off! My glucose levels seem normal after eating but I shake, my ears ring and get sweaty and a headache after I eat. What can you tell me about this? Thanks

  2. Hi Chris,
    My mother is 58yrs 0ld.Diabetic for last 2 yrs. taking 15units of novomix in mng & 20 units at night. her Hba1c is 9.2.hv hypothyrodism. TSH level 20. Was taking 100microgms of Elthrosin. now she is taking 125microgram as TSH is 20. my question is can she improve her Hba1c after her treatment for hypothyrodism

  3. Only once in a while do I have a problem with hypoglycemia. As long as I eat regularly, I do ok. But 2 weeks ago I had an IVF egg transfer. Within a few days I was having multiple hypoglycemic attacks. They were fast and furious and they were daily. Trust me, I was eating good, but it never seemed to be enough. This past Tuesday I miscarried. I continue to have attacks but they are getting better. I can’t help but this this was a contributing factor to the miscarriage. What can I do to get this hypoglycemic stuff under control especially for my next cycle.

  4. Here is a case of possible metabolic syndrome.
    Fasting glucose of 120,Hb Aic of 6.6 and TSH of 5.08.Triglycerides of 209mg/dl
    The person in question is not overweight,Exercises three times a week for 45-60 minutes ,eats healthy other than a high intake of rice diet just once daily.Seldom eats red meat and does not smoke or drink alcohol. Has dry skin on his legs but no other signs of Hypothyroidism.The question is not whether he is a diabetic or has high Lipids( Positive family history in his mother).The question is whether replacement therapy with Synthroid or Levothyroxin is indicated.The blood sugar levels obviously need to be controlled better with regular medication rather than dietary supplements from Medix.What are your thoughts?Please advise.

  5. Chris,

    I have auto-immune thyroiditis.

    I have tried all types of thyroid medication(Levoxyl, natural) and am now taking Cynomel(from Mexico).
    My temperature is still low, usually around 96.5 degrees and I still have hypo symptoms. The thyroid hormone builds up in the blood, causing FT3 to look elevated. Thyroid hormone is not getting into
    the cells. Regarding adrenals: saliva testing over a year ago showed elevated cortisol, midnight –
    4:00AM ,but low cortisol around 9:00AM. I have had a lot of stress since then. I am sure my adrenals
    are much worse( can not test adrenals in Uruguay, South America).

    I have very elevated sex hormone binding globulin: over 200(I am a woman, 61). I have very low growth
    hormone: IgF-1: 34.

    My fasting blood sugar is : 92. I do not eat many carbs at all.

    I have an awful lot of inflammation(all over). i have tried many products, such as fish oils, curcumin,
    silver-even cortisone. Everything I try works the wrong way and makes the inflammation worse.
    Could this be due to autoimmune? It seems like there is something in my system that is blocking
    supplements/some medications, from working properly.

    This information may be important for you to know: I also contract cellulitis-type bacterial infections often. They always become systemic. A tiny scratch in cuticle, or in nose or in front of my neck, is the cause of the infection.

    • Hi Jo, I don’t think Chris is responding to his old posts.. I wrote also..
      I have a lot of the same symptoms.. Seems whenever I eat something I get inflammation. Come to realize it’s my liver. I only know this because it I take things to detoxify my supplements work. In the past if I used thyroid supps, progesterone creams, gaba for sleep. nothing worked or I had awful unusual side effects..including muscle and joint paint which is the inflammation and toxins.. If you have a congested liver not only will it refuse to get your meds of supplements in the right place but it makes this stuff more toxic to your body.. Here is what worked last night for me and I was pain free.

      I take Enzemdica’s ViroStop.. an enzyme for inflammation and toxins and other junk floating around.. always take on an empty stomach.. For hormones.. same idea.. if you have a congested liver any hormone supplement including your own bodies hormones are just not going to get where they need to go so they turn toxic.. I take Calcium D glucarte and DIM.. This will detoxify all the bad hormones and get your own hormones where they need to go.. I cannot get technical so please google these.. But for your inflammation issue those enzymes will surely work for you.. I tried everything including those things you mentioned for inflammation and the only thing that works is the enzymes geared towards ridding the body of toxins.. You must take them an hour before or two hours after food or they will end up digesting your food instead of the toxins creating the inflammation.

      Good luck and hope this helps you.

  6. Hi William, yes if I were to do a lot I do think I would crash. This is the adrenal exhaustion and it seems like my adrenal just makes enough cortisol to get me through a normal day. But not enough to exhert myself. I think (just my opinion from my own experience) what you are experiencing is the hypoglycemic in a much worse way than me. I don’t get headaches or swollen glands just the fast heart rate a little hot, not a flash.. then if I don’t eat I would just get a hangover feeling the next day. For you, when you exhert yourself you use up what little cortisol your body is making for you.. Cortisol controls blood sugar. so in the middle of the night when it is at it’s lowest there is just nothing to control your drop.. this is my guess and what I think is happening to me. But I seem to get this when I eat sugar.. as in fruit during the day after say 12 noon. I grew up a sugar holic and It’s just not fair I cannot even now enjoy a piece of fruit. When I eat sugar during the day I feel great and energetic. So I’m trying to find a way I can eat it and fix this sleep issue.

    good luck with your issue.. Oh I also try tyrosine once and it didn’t do me well either. I read that if your thyroid is off tyrosine isn’t going to work since it needs the thyroid to process it.. (something like that). So that’s a good sign your thyroid or adrenals are insufficient.. good luck…

  7. Jess, thanks for sharing your story. I have a question.

    Are any of your symptoms triggered by exercise intolerance? I have the night time problems a lot like you describe, with sometimes severe body temp drop and bad shaking, swollen glands and headaches. Usually having something with a bit of natural sugar and potassium and calcium helps (learned the long way). Blending celery with my smoothies have made a pretty big difference when nothing else seems to ease it.

    Just when it first got bad it was always the night after a big hike or bike ride, back before i knew i had a problem. I used to do those things regularly, then when these problems started, I had to stop abruptly.

    I still can’t get my doctor(s) to look past the symptoms and translating them to anxiety when I stress it’s food, activity, and body cycle triggered exclusively, so I’ve been up a creek for years just trying to eat healthy. When it first started back then I tried L-tyrosine but it caused me problems.

    I feel like I’ve been hit by a bus so often it’s ridiculous. But the 2am-4:30am hours can be brutal. Not sure that Chris responds to these anymore so If you ever want to compare notes or have any advice it’d be greatly appreciated.

    Will

    • Hi William, yes if I were to do a lot I do think I would crash. This is the adrenal exhaustion and it seems like my adrenal just makes enough cortisol to get me through a normal day. But not enough to exhert myself. I think (just my opinion from my own experience) what you are experiencing is the hypoglycemic in a much worse way than me. I don’t get headaches or swollen glands just the fast heart rate a little hot, not a flash.. then if I don’t eat I would just get a hangover feeling the next day. For you, when you exhert yourself you use up what little cortisol your body is making for you.. Cortisol controls blood sugar. so in the middle of the night when it is at it’s lowest there is just nothing to control your drop.. this is my guess and what I think is happening to me. But I seem to get this when I eat sugar.. as in fruit during the day after say 12 noon. I grew up a sugar holic and It’s just not fair I cannot even now enjoy a piece of fruit. When I eat sugar during the day I feel great and energetic. So I’m trying to find a way I can eat it and fix this sleep issue.

      good luck with your issue.. Oh I also try tyrosine once and it didn’t do me well either. I read that if your thyroid is off tyrosine isn’t going to work since it needs the thyroid to process it.. (something like that). So that’s a good sign your thyroid or adrenals are insufficient.. good luck…

  8. Just saw this reply by another person….

    “The problem is that cortisol also stimulates the sympathetic nervous system, causing a group of effects known as the “flight or fight” response. This response prepares us to defend against or flee from danger. It includes an increase in heart rate and lung action, increased blood flow to skeletal muscles and inhibition of organs and tissues not immediately involved in fighting or fleeing (such as endocrine and digestive organs.)”
    Really? According to Endocrine texts it’s Ephidrine (Adrenaline) that does that? Having LOW Cortisol can cause huge Adrenaline spikes. And Adrenaline uses up Glucose so can cause precipitous drops in Blood Sugar levels.
    Of course HIGH Cortisol is bad too. And low thyroid is a big stressor on th body & can cause you to overproduce Cortisol. High Cortisol can also cause Hyperglycemia.
    Adrenals should be treated before Thyroid. It can be dangerous to do it the other way round.\

    This IS ME.. I have low adrenal and when I try and treat my adrenals with any form of adrenal glandular it makes my night time (2am) hypoglycemia much worse. I have tried different ways of taking the glandulars before bed..etc.. but nothing works.. Everything I read in the alternative arena about the thyroid/adrenal issues..they all say to treat adrenals first and the thyroid will then recover.. but I’m finding it is actually better to treat the thyroid since a thyroid glandular won’t spike my insulin or doesn’t seem to at this point anyway.. What are your thoughts on treating the thyroid first as opposed to treating the adrenals.. I”ve even tried all of the adaptogens and they just made me lethargic.. I did avoid the epinephrine spikes which was good but had no energy to work..

    Thanks again.

  9. Good article.. I suffer from it all.. I can deal with the hypo during the day easy, it’s at 2am when I wake up with a pounding heartbeat and night sweats and in an hour I will get hypo if I don’t eat. This only happens if during the day I have any sugar including fruit after say noon. I do not spike my insulin at all during the day for the most part. I eat healthy as can be.. gluten free, low fat due to gallbladder issues..I’m thin as a rail..I do have almost every symptom of hypothyroid and although it runs in the family I”m sure mine is due to this long term cortisol insulin release at night.. So you mentioned this statement “Unfortunately for hypoglycemics, repeated cortisol release caused by episodes of low blood sugar suppresses pituitary function. And as I showed in a previous article, without proper pituitary function, your thyroid can’t function properly.” And I always dig deeper since I treat myself.. so wouldn’t it be best to ‘treat’ the pituitary? I am currently taking thyroid glandular and wonder if I should have just started with the pituitary glandular.. wouldn’t it be wise to treat the source.. of course treating the symptoms will give me the relief I need (one can hope anyway).. Do you not think this would be a good idea?

    Thanks for the article:

  10. Hi Chris,
    I was diagnosed as having subclinical hypothyroidism a few months ago. I was given 25mcg of levothyroxine and sent on my way. I am still exhibiting symptoms of hypothyroidism, but now that my TSH is in the normal range my endocrinologist and GP say to “just ignore the symptoms.” My question is regarding the following excerpt from your article:
    These mechanisms present clinically as hypoglycemia. When you’re hypothyroid, your cells aren’t very sensitive to glucose. So although you may have normal levels of glucose in your blood, you’ll have the symptoms of hypoglycemia (fatigue, headache, hunger, irritability, etc.). And since your cells aren’t getting the glucose they need, your adrenals will release cortisol to increase the amount of glucose available to them. This causes a chronic stress response, as I described above, that suppresses thyroid function.

    I am starving all of the time, shaky, weak, and irritable, but I eat all of the time and drink tons of water. My meals and snacks are all balanced. Regarding your excerpt, if my glucose test show normal, but my cells aren’t getting the glucose they need, what in the world do I do? I am so beyond confused and my doctors could really care less as long as my TSH is “normal.” Please help.

  11. Excellent post making clear the connection between dysglycemia and thyroid function. Thank you.

  12. I have been having problems with my thyroid for several years now via ultrasound. Blood work comes back normal all the time. I am seeing a hormone specialist now that does not prescribe RX meds she does everything natural. I had a saliva test done last year and my hormones were all low but she didnt test my thyroid at the time. She has me on progesterone and testosterone cream (bio-identical).
    My issue is I gained 50 lbs in 5 months, and my blood sugar is low all the time. It is especially bad when I am getting ready to start my cycle or ovulating. It doesnt matter what I do I cant keep my blood sugar up. My hormone specialist is wanting me to try some Thyrofem and some Adapten All. I am very scared to try anything like that because I dont want my blood sugar dropping even more. Other symptoms I have is a lot of constipation, moodiness, anxiety. I am feeling more and more pressure in my throat. Not sure if anyone has had blood sugar issues with their thyroid and how they resolved it. Thank you for your time. If I could just regulate my sugar I could deal with the rest. It literally hit me out of no where, the blood sugar issue. I can’t even exercise because my sugar drops on me. Very frustrating. Any help would be greatly appreciated.

    • Forgot to mention I was diagnosed with hashimoto’s. My sugars are usually in the 70s and 80s and I feel horrible. I eat a diet full of protein, and balance it out like my endocrinologist told me. I have about 16 nodules on thyroid, one keeps growing but they don’t want to do anything about it. Anything to stabilize my blood sugar would be good for me. Endocrinologist tried me on diabetes medicine but A1C is always excellent. It made things very bad for me and will never take meds like that again!

  13. Hi Chris,
    My eight year daughter is diagnosed with Type-1 Diabetes 2 months back and dependent of 4 insulin injections daily. now she is also diagnosed recently with Thyroid (TSH=8.57).
    Kindly suggest : Is any relation between thses two and any solution for these disease.

  14. Hi,
    The first page found that made actual sense to me. I went to the doctor with souring heart pressure. After blood tests showed nothing is wrong, just the high blood pressure. and fainting. Only eating pure sugar I found would help me temporarily.
    So got high blood pressure medicine.
    Got the blood pressure down, but not really down and my body was vibrating on its own. All muscles. I think I was on the brink of death and the doctor said he didn’t know. Frustrating. So I started to look at the blood tests myself as electric engineer. I saw my TSH was 3.5 so no problem according to my doctor. My T4 was 0.9, so also within the “specs”. When I understood the TSH should higher the T4, and after putting it in “amplifier terms” and some diagrams, I decided that I needed to change out the “amplifiers” Pituitary and Thyroid. I found some syntroid (synthetic T4) and just took a bit to find out if it would help. Now that was it. I am sure I would have been dead by now if I had listened to my doctor.

  15. Hi Chris!

    I’m trying out the blood glucose monitoring system you describe above and I’m curious about why you have people test only at lunch? Wouldn’t a high carbohydrate breakfast have some impact on my lunch reading?

    Thanks 🙂

    Crystallin

  16. I am 48 and have always had blood sugar issues. As a child, I always felt like I had low blood sugar. When I had children, I had gestational diabetes with one and was boderline with the other one. I monitor my blood sugar everyday with a meter and eat very low carb. My fasting blood sugar is usually in the 95-100 range. I think it would be lower if I didn’t have to eat a snack before bed. When my blood sugar drops into the low 90’s or high 80’s during the night, I often wake up and have to eat something. Is there a way to avoid feeling like I have hypoglycemia at night when my blood sugar isn’t even that low?

  17. Thank you for your information. I am a newly diagnosed reactive hypoglycemic. I am a little confused based on how I feel each day, which is different. My blood sugar generally is about 76 after eating breakfast and its very hard to get it higher. Sometimes i get it to 89 but thats it. I dont feel good at all. Yesterday it was low after breakfast so i ate a banana and a half of cup of oatmeal and it went to 200 within 16 minutes…What do you suggest I do and is it dangerous being so low>

    • Gail
      I have the same issues. I always eat Graham crackers and milk before bed, or peanut butter crackers. Keeps me pretty stable. I am always in the 70s and 80s and it makes me feel like crap. Even though that is in the normal range, it makes you feel horrible. It is very frustrating to deal with.

  18. I am a diabetic. I struggle daily with my diet and sugar levels. The doctor keeps upping the medication and it helps for a short period but then my fasting blood sugar goes back up. It hovers around 180-200. I feel terrible some days, others not as bad. I can tell when my sugar is up because I am very, very tired and sleepy. It doesn’t seem to matter what I eat I am always sleepy after I eat. I can eat just eggs and have a glass of tea and get sleepy after I eat. The doctors have checked my thyroid and it always looks normal. But it seems to me there is something going on with me besides my diabetes. Several years ago I lost about 120 pounds but have not been able to keep it off. Any suggestions?

  19. Great information. My thyroid was surgically removed when I was 23 because of 14 years of hyperthyroidism. I am 46. Since I have learned of gluten issues 2 years ago, my dose of synthroid has decreased by 1/3 to 0.200 mg/day. I struggle with weight and I always have. I had finally started losing weight, but then the dosage was cut in response to low TSH numbers. Can you direct me to the right articles/info about what those of us without a thyroid gland should do, or where our thyroid numbers need to be, if different from those who still have an active gland? Even better, do you have anyone in Maryland you would suggest that I see? Thanks/.

  20. Feeling frustrated.. I jog everyday 6 to 8 miles,work all day on my feet,have had back issues,now I have hypothyriodism, which my t3 and t4 are low, anemia,b12,low Alkaline Phosphate,highRDW,lowMonocytes,low Globulin,high Albumin/Globulin ratio,virtually make no hormones,High cholesterol,and LDL,hair has not grown in 5 years,dry skin,cold,night sweats even when my body feels cold and I could be here all day. I was put on antidepressants and arthritis meds for anxiety as they say but i dont. I have told my doctor i feel surges of hyper and hypo everyday. I know i dont eat well and can go all day without food since i am never hungry but seems like when i eat something happens inside my body whether be tremors or shakes or very tired i cant find out. After workout i tend to sweat more when i am done than jogging even my heart rate doesnt go up until i am done. Then i feel surges like i need to get the rest of the energy out because it makes my tremors go away. Any idea of which i should look into. Thanks Elise