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General Health & Fitness
Nutrition and Supplements
does Iodine influence hormone receptor activity?
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<blockquote data-quote="tropicaldaze1950" data-source="post: 235482" data-attributes="member: 13651"><p>Tried Lugol's 2% on and off over the past few years and I don't tolerate it. I was doing 1 drop but after a few days, my body temperature dropped, felt weak and tired. I bought a small bottle of Magnascent last year and it was just there in my stash as I continued to experiment with T3 & T4, never seeing the improvements I experienced 28 years ago when a psychiatrist prescribed Cytomel. </p><p></p><p>Now trying the Magnascent; 1 drop/350 mcg in a few ounces of water before breakfast. 2nd day, today. I'm trying to alleviate significant cognitive blunting, as well as depression. What I felt, yesterday, a couple hours after taking it, was like my brain waking up; a sense of calm and joy. Lasted 2 or 3 hours. Tried a second dose in the afternoon but didn't experience the same response. I don't want to go overboard, which is my standard operating procedure, since the science part of me knows 'low and slow' is the better way to proceed. </p><p></p><p>I've read the commentaries of Dr. Brownstein, Dr.Abraham and Dr. Flechas, as well as comments from the late Dr. Albert Szent Gyorgi(Nobel Prize for Vitamin C) stating that when he was in medical school, potassium iodide(KI) was routinely taken in large amounts when one didn't feel well. Dr. Orrian Truss, a physician in Alabama,used large doses of Lugol's to treat a variety of infections and the same with Dr. D.C. Jarvis in Vermont in the early part of the 20th century.</p><p></p><p>Anecdotally,a guy I've chatted with on Ray Peat Forum told me a friend had developed insomnia, tried all the standard supplement recommendations and somewhere read that 50 mg of Lugol's, along with selenium and magnesium, might restore normal sleep. He tried it and it worked. Same for the guy I was chatting with. I'm uncomfortable(and fearful) with downing 50 mg of Magnascent. The antidote, I read, for a reaction to too much iodine, is 10 g of vitamin C. But, hey; we do enjoy the challenge of pushing the boundaries in search of optimal health and function. Totally worth it.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="tropicaldaze1950, post: 235482, member: 13651"] Tried Lugol's 2% on and off over the past few years and I don't tolerate it. I was doing 1 drop but after a few days, my body temperature dropped, felt weak and tired. I bought a small bottle of Magnascent last year and it was just there in my stash as I continued to experiment with T3 & T4, never seeing the improvements I experienced 28 years ago when a psychiatrist prescribed Cytomel. Now trying the Magnascent; 1 drop/350 mcg in a few ounces of water before breakfast. 2nd day, today. I'm trying to alleviate significant cognitive blunting, as well as depression. What I felt, yesterday, a couple hours after taking it, was like my brain waking up; a sense of calm and joy. Lasted 2 or 3 hours. Tried a second dose in the afternoon but didn't experience the same response. I don't want to go overboard, which is my standard operating procedure, since the science part of me knows 'low and slow' is the better way to proceed. I've read the commentaries of Dr. Brownstein, Dr.Abraham and Dr. Flechas, as well as comments from the late Dr. Albert Szent Gyorgi(Nobel Prize for Vitamin C) stating that when he was in medical school, potassium iodide(KI) was routinely taken in large amounts when one didn't feel well. Dr. Orrian Truss, a physician in Alabama,used large doses of Lugol's to treat a variety of infections and the same with Dr. D.C. Jarvis in Vermont in the early part of the 20th century. Anecdotally,a guy I've chatted with on Ray Peat Forum told me a friend had developed insomnia, tried all the standard supplement recommendations and somewhere read that 50 mg of Lugol's, along with selenium and magnesium, might restore normal sleep. He tried it and it worked. Same for the guy I was chatting with. I'm uncomfortable(and fearful) with downing 50 mg of Magnascent. The antidote, I read, for a reaction to too much iodine, is 10 g of vitamin C. But, hey; we do enjoy the challenge of pushing the boundaries in search of optimal health and function. Totally worth it. [/QUOTE]
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does Iodine influence hormone receptor activity?
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