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Thyroid, Pregnenolone, Progesterone, DHEA, etc
Thyroid, DHEA, Pregnenolone, Progesterone, etc
Optimal vs Normal Thyroid Levels for All Lab Tests & Ages
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<blockquote data-quote="DragonBits" data-source="post: 108163" data-attributes="member: 18023"><p>If your TSH does go up, and my up I mean from 2 >3, and your thyroid responds by increasing T4 from 1>1.5 and your T3 goes up from 2.7 >3.8, both T4 and T3 is considered optimal while TSH is not.</p><p></p><p>But at the end of this, isn't this a good thing and how it's supposed to work? As long as T4, t2 are optimal, do we need to worry about the rest?</p><p></p><p></p><p>Another thing, when they say TSH is high, they generally mean much higher than 4.5, though they seldom give a level as to what an article means by "high or low:" anything (not just TSH), it's left up to the readers imagination what they mean.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="DragonBits, post: 108163, member: 18023"] If your TSH does go up, and my up I mean from 2 >3, and your thyroid responds by increasing T4 from 1>1.5 and your T3 goes up from 2.7 >3.8, both T4 and T3 is considered optimal while TSH is not. But at the end of this, isn't this a good thing and how it's supposed to work? As long as T4, t2 are optimal, do we need to worry about the rest? Another thing, when they say TSH is high, they generally mean much higher than 4.5, though they seldom give a level as to what an article means by "high or low:" anything (not just TSH), it's left up to the readers imagination what they mean. [/QUOTE]
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Thyroid, Pregnenolone, Progesterone, DHEA, etc
Thyroid, DHEA, Pregnenolone, Progesterone, etc
Optimal vs Normal Thyroid Levels for All Lab Tests & Ages
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