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Thyroid and Mood

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Some of the classic symptoms of low thyroid, or hypothyroidism, are depression, fatigue, constipation, hair loss, weight gain, dry skin, and joint pain. However, the conventional model of medicine does not begin to treat the thyroid until severe symptoms of hypothyroidism have set in, or until the lab number reaches a certain level. Unfortunately, symptoms arise early in that process, especially with mood symptoms and energy levels, and will remain until the thyroid is addressed. Subclinical hypothyroid symptoms can be addressed to help with mood and energy levels well before most general practitioners would address the thyroid as the cause. Thyroid imbalance also has a strong relationship with adrenal hormone imbalance, and a large number of thyroid cases have an autoimmune cause which may also contribute to depression via inflammation.

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Did You Know?

  • The thyroid requires critical levels of iodine, selenium, iron, and tyrosine in order to produce the active thyroid hormones.

  • Mold exposure and gluten are two of the highest contributors to thyroid autoimmunity, but autoimmunity may also be triggered by heavy metal exposure, food allergens, and adrenal hormone deficiencies.

  • Thyroid imbalances may be due to nutritional deficiencies, abnormal thyroid hormone conversion, pituitary abnormalities, destruction of the thyroid gland by autoimmunity, or surgery.  You can also have a healthy thyroid, but have hypothyroid symptoms if certain anti-thyroid foods are highly represented in your diet, such as Brassica Vegetables (cabbage, kale, broccoli, brussel sprouts), Cassava, or Soy.

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