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Thyroid, Pregnenolone, Progesterone, DHEA, etc
Thyroid, DHEA, Pregnenolone, Progesterone, etc
Progesterone’s effect on prolactin
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<blockquote data-quote="JA Battle" data-source="post: 205591" data-attributes="member: 40068"><p>Estradiol increases thyroid binding globulin. Therefore progesterone increases free thyroid hormones through its opposition of estrogen. As we know, many overlapping positive feedback loops go into creating this. </p><p></p><p>things that short circuit the positive feedback loops are estrogens, cortisol, and prolactin. I’m not saying these need be crushed to low levels. But as we see in healthy young subjects, high androgens, low estrogens, and adrenals that have not yet been exhausted. </p><p></p><p>The thing is various nutrients are needed in the enzymatic processes that make it all happen. IMO nutrient imbalance is likely a huge culprit in many of us being here. But that is deeper topic that we know even less about. I say imbalance because a deficiency in one mineral can cause a toxicity in another. And their metabolism is intertwined. And from Food, albeit the only safe way to restore balance, it takes time to shift the ratios. This is hard to prescribe a solution because there is even less of a timely feedback than there is with supplementing hormones. And testing schemes to diagnose is not anywhere near definitive.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="JA Battle, post: 205591, member: 40068"] Estradiol increases thyroid binding globulin. Therefore progesterone increases free thyroid hormones through its opposition of estrogen. As we know, many overlapping positive feedback loops go into creating this. things that short circuit the positive feedback loops are estrogens, cortisol, and prolactin. I’m not saying these need be crushed to low levels. But as we see in healthy young subjects, high androgens, low estrogens, and adrenals that have not yet been exhausted. The thing is various nutrients are needed in the enzymatic processes that make it all happen. IMO nutrient imbalance is likely a huge culprit in many of us being here. But that is deeper topic that we know even less about. I say imbalance because a deficiency in one mineral can cause a toxicity in another. And their metabolism is intertwined. And from Food, albeit the only safe way to restore balance, it takes time to shift the ratios. This is hard to prescribe a solution because there is even less of a timely feedback than there is with supplementing hormones. And testing schemes to diagnose is not anywhere near definitive. [/QUOTE]
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Thyroid, Pregnenolone, Progesterone, DHEA, etc
Thyroid, DHEA, Pregnenolone, Progesterone, etc
Progesterone’s effect on prolactin
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