Recent Posts

Archives

Topics

Recent Comments

Fibromyalgia? Maybe You Should Check Vitamin D Levels

By Dr. Paul Varnas | April 3, 2009

Testing for vitamin D in the serum is a very inexpensive test. If you have been labeled with fibromyagia it may be worth having someone check your vitamin D. Research appearing in the July 19, 2006 issue of Clinical Rheumatology, linked anxiety and depression experienced by fibromyalgia patients to vitamin D levels. The subjects of the study were 75 patients with fibromyalgia who filled out a Fibromyalgia Impact Questionnaire and Hospital Anxiety and Depression Score. Blood samples were taken to measure vitamin D levels. Twenty-three of the patients had normal levels of vitamin D. Ten of the patients were deficient in vitamin D and 42 had insufficient levels. Patients who were deficient in vitamin D placed higher on the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Score than those with normal or insufficient levels of vitamin D. The researchers concluded that low vitamin D levels were associated with fibromyalgia and that the anxiety and depression associated with the disease may be linked to low vitamin D levels.
According to the Mayo Clinic Proceedings (December 9, 2003), vitamin D deficiency is one possible cause of persistent and vague musculoskeltal pain. A study of 150 children and adults suffering from vague musculoskeletal pain performed at the University of Minnesota found that 93% of the subjects were vitamin D deficient. Of the subjects involved with the study, all of the African, African-American, Hispanic and Native Americans were vitamin D deficient, as well as all of the subjects under the age of 30. The worst vitamin D deficiencies were found in women of child-bearing age.
According to the Nov. 12, 2003 edition of the Pain Management issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association, the cost of treating pain unsuccessfully is $61.2 billion per year. This study shows that there may be, at least in some patients, a very simple answer for this common problem.
Vitamin D deficiency is associated with a risk for osteoporosis, diabetes, high blood pressure, cancer, and auto-immune diseases such as multiple sclerosis. Inadequate vitamin D is also harmful for developing fetuses and is the cause rickets of in children.
In separate study, conducted in Saudi Arabia, a vitamin D deficiency was found in a group of chronic back patients. All the patients were given cholecalciferol for three months, which improved the chronic pain. The subjects were given doses that are considered toxic (5,000 to 10,000 IU, which is between two and three times the toxic dose).  After receiving the cholecalciferol , all the patients had normal levels.
For more information on this and other health topics, go to www.wholehealthweb.com.

Topics: General | 2 Comments »

Allergies and Science

By Dr. Paul Varnas | March 27, 2009

It is a good idea to reconcile scientific research with natural health approaches. It is sometimes a difficult task. All of the medical journals sell ads to drug companies and it should be obvious that economics help to determine what appears in the journals. But occasional natural health gems appear; they are usually small studies that can still be branded as “inconclusive”. The overall attitude of the journals seems to be, “My, isn’t this amusing. We will have to look into it someday.” But as long as drugs like Ritalin make $3 billion per year and are advertised in the journal, you will not see the journal take a stand and suggest that kids with ADD need B vitamins, omega-3 oils, exercise and to stop eating junk food. They will, however, print the occasional amusing little study. One such study, appearing in the journal, Annals of Allergy, May 1994 evaluated 26 children with ADHD. The children were put on an allergy elimination diet. Along with eliminating artificial colors and preservatives, some foods were eliminated. These included common allergens like wheat, dairy products, egg, corn, yeast, soy, citrus, chocolate and peanuts. Of the 26 subjects, 19 responded well to the diet. It is a small study, but it should offer hope to people with ADD.
Studies supporting the use of natural health care for allergies exist. Scientists in Finland have found that the type of fats consumed in the diet may be connected to the tendency toward allergy, according to research published in the journal Allergy (2001;56:425-428). The British Medical Journal (January 19, 2002; 324:144) has research that shows the herb, butterbur may be useful for allergic symptoms. There is even a journal article about homeopathy and allergies. In a small study, published in the August 19, 2000 issue of the British Medical Journal, 24 patients were given a homeopathic remedy daily and 27 patients received a placebo. Although it was a small group, the study was double-blind, placebo-controlled and randomized.
The information found in medical journals is interesting, but it does not give the practitioner information that is good enough to effectively treat airborne allergies. The doctor who is a real scientist, and who wants to make his or her patients better will make note of the journal research, but also look at what patients respond to and take into account seemingly unrelated research. For instance, we know that eating sugar and producing insulin exacerbates inflammation. The symptoms of hay fever are largely due to inflammatory chemicals produced by the body, so it stands to reason that refined sugar is something that should be avoided by patients with hay fever. The same thing goes for trans fats. Yet this advice is seldom given in traditional medical offices; they are waiting for the perfect study to prove this (perhaps prompting Nasonex to pull its ads).
A real scientist will take the journal articles into account, but also take clinical and anecdotal information into account. He or she will look at known chemistry and physiology. Although the journals scorn anecdotal information, some of the most clinically useful stuff comes to us anecdotally. And why not use anecdotal information if you are dealing with a very low risk therapy like nutrition that potentially can produce good results—especially if a doctor who you respect is using it and getting results (anecdotally)?
Hormones produced by the adrenal glands fight inflammation. Indeed, adrenal support is a mainstay for natural health practitioners to treat allergies. You don’t see a lot of articles in medical journals about nutrient support for adrenals. There is some information about herbs and vitamin C in the journals. Bioflavonoids, like quercitin are often very useful for hay fever patients. Many herbs are also useful. But it is hard to put together an effective therapy using just the journal articles.
So when treating a patient with hay fever products for adrenal support, and herbal products designed to reduce histamine, are very effective especially when given with a diet that is free of refined sugar, hydrogenated oil and chemical additives. Other useful products are bioflavonoids and fish oil. A few thousand IU of vitamin A per day for a couple of weeks works wonders if the patient’s eyes itch. You can really fly without a net and use chiropractic adjustments or acupuncture. We are still waiting for the definitive double-blind placebo-controlled study to prove that this works, but in the mean time patients who are getting better don’t seem to mind about the status of the research.
If you want help educating your patients about natural health care, send them to http://www.wholehealthweb.com they can even download the free ebook, “50 Ways to Lose Your Blubber”

Topics: General | No Comments »

What You Know About Hormones Can Help You to Lose Weight

By Dr. Paul Varnas | March 18, 2009

For more weight loss information go to  www.wholehealthweb.com and download the free ebook, Fifty Ways to Lose Your Blubber

Many people believe that fat cells simply hold fat and do not have any real function. That is not the case; fat cells produce a hormone-like substance that acts on the central nervous system. They signal the brain about your energy balance—in other words, they let the brain know if you are well-fed. Leptin is a hormone produced by adipose cells, and because it has the potential of reversing obesity, at least in mice, it has been intensely studied.

Not surprisingly, leptin has been shown to have many other properties and actions beyond inducing satiety. Scientists at the Howard Hughes Medical Institute and The Rockefeller University in collaboration with investigators at Yale University have found that leptin affects both the architecture and function of neural circuits in the brain. The body’s response to leptin is very complex.

Leptin appears to decrease insulin secretion from the pancreatic beta cell. Leptin has roles in weight maintenance, increasing insulin sensitivity, decreasing triglycerides and increasing energy expenditure. Leptin acts on the hypothalamus to decrease food intake.

Leptin levels are involved in obesity. They increase as body fat increases. The brain has receptors to monitor the body’s leptin levels. Leptin is responsible for your brain’s response to food deprivation.

On a practical level, leptin has a very important role in weight gain and weight loss. If you have a lot of adipose (fat) tissue, your leptin levels tend to be high. You can actually become insensitive to leptin, much the same way that a type II diabetic becomes insensitive to insulin. Rapid weight loss rapidly lowers leptin levels, which may be the reason that many people regain weight after dieting.

Another hormone that is important in weight loss is insulin. Everyone knows that insulin moves sugar from the blood into the cells. What is equally important is that insulin stores all calories, including fat. You can’t break down fat when the body is under the influence of insulin.

Another hormone, glucagon, is produced between meals. It has the opposite effect of insulin. Just as insulin stores calories immediately following a meal, glucagon burns calories between meals. When you are losing weight, you want to encourage glucagon and discourage insulin.

Cortisol, a hormone produced under stress, also contributes to weight gain. Stress is the most commonly reported trigger of binge eating, and high cortisol levels are positively related to both central body fat and food intake after laboratory stress. There is a link between cortisol an insulin resistance.

When forming a strategy for weight loss, take these hormones into consideration. It will make your task much easier.

Topics: General | No Comments »

FDA Alters Data

By Dr. Paul Varnas | November 15, 2008

The Union of Concerned Scientists surveyed 5,918 scientists at the FDA to examine the state of science there. The survey featured one essay question that allowed the scientists to provide a written narrative. Of the 997 FDA scientists that responded to the essay question, 20% stated that they had been asked, “…for nonscientific reasons, to inappropriately exclude or alter technical information or their conclusions in an FDA scientific document.” More than 40% feared retaliation if they expressed safety concerns in public.

There was a great deal of concern about political appointees influencing FDA actions; 61% of the scientists knew of instances when an FDA or HHS political appointee had inappropriately entered into FDA determinations or actions. Commercial interests also influence the FDA’s actions, 60% of the respondents knew of cases where “commercial interests have inappropriately induced or attempted to induce the reversal, withdrawal, or modification of FDA determinations or actions.”

The abuses of science at the FDA have very real consequences. A few instances of this abuse are posted on the website for the Union of Concerned Scientists. In February 2004, the FDA prevented Dr. Andrew Mosholder, one of its top experts from testifying at a public hearing addressing the potential risk of increased suicide rates in children taking antidepressants. The FDA forced Dr. Mosholder to remove information about the risks of antidepressants from records he was submitting to Congress—and to conceal the deletions, according to the House Energy and Commerce Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations.

In April 2001 an FDA panel recommended to approve the antibiotic Ketek. The study of the drug was later found to be fraudulent. Doctors were receiving $400 for each patient that they enrolled into the study. Signatures and patient information were forged; 90% of the subjects at one location did not receive the drug. Even after the Annals of Internal Medicine wrote about serious liver problems caused by the drug, the FDA continued to cite the study. The FDA stated that “based on the pre-marketing clinical data it appeared that the risk of liver injury with Ketek was similar to that of other marketed antibiotics.”

The Office of Drug Safety (ODS) found 110 cases of liver problems between the release of the drug in 2004 and 2006—including liver failure and four deaths. ODS found that Ketek caused liver failure four times more frequently than other antibiotics and recommended that the FDA withdraw the drug from the market. In spite of these problems, the FDA allowed pediatric trials of Ketek to take place. The drug was given to children as young as six months old. The FDA ignored congressional requests for files, a briefing, and interviews with agents investigating this matter.

Dr. David Graham, associate science director of the Office of Drug Safety at the FDA alleges that FDA officials tried to suppress and delay the results of his work that came to the conclusion that Vioxx increased the risk of heart attack and stroke. According to Dr. Graham, the FDA was “virtually incapable of protecting America”. He also states that, “…the review and clearance process had been turned into a battleground, full of contention and intimidation because our managers, the people who fill out our performance evaluations, had created a system where it was taking a great risk to stand firm in our scientific beliefs.” His study indicates that between 88,000 and 139,000 people have had heart attacks or strokes and about 55,000 people have died because of Vioxx.

The FDA has a history of distorting scientific information, intimidation of employees and covering up its activities. How are we able to rely on any information that comes from an agency this corrupt?

Information obtained from www.ucsusa.org

Topics: General | No Comments »

The Amish and Vaccines

By Dr. Paul Varnas | October 27, 2008

We all seem to pay attention to information sources that reinforce our beliefs. Conservatives watch Fox News and Liberals read the New York Times. It is pretty much the same way with the autism and vaccine controversy. I have heard from a couple of people “They did the study—the Amish don’t get autism.” We seem to take this kind of intellectual laziness for granted. It is in our politics, it is in our educational system and our news media are full of it. People who tend to believe in the medical establishment commonly say that there is no proven link to autism and vaccines. They feel as strongly—and with as little proof as the first group.

I looked for the fabled Amish study and could not find it. What I did find was a series of articles by a reporter, Dan Olmsted. Mr. Olmsted reasoned that if vaccines were causing autism, we should be able to look at an unvaccinated population and find little or no autism. He wrote a series of articles on autism and the Amish and came to the conclusion that the Amish did indeed vaccinate, but they did less vaccination than the general population and have less autism. He also felt that when autism was present, there was either a vaccine involved or some exposure to mercury.

In one article he wrote about children being cared for by Homefirst Health Services in Chicago. Many of the families using the clinic home school and tend not to vaccinate. To quote Dr. Mayer Eisenstein, “We have a fairly large practice. We have about 30,000 or 35,000 children that we’ve taken care of over the years, and I don’t think we have a single case of autism in children delivered by us who never received vaccines.” Dr. Eisenstein makes the point that these observations do not rise to the level of an actual study, even speculating the families with autistic children may have moved or stopped going to the clinic. It is unlikely, but possible. An interesting side note, Dr. Eisenstein says that the clinic does not get many cases of severe asthma either.

Of course pro-vaccine people sharply criticize Dan Olmstead for his work. Some even say that his work is “dangerous” because it has people questioning vaccines. Articles have been written stating the he did not look very hard when looking for autism among the Amish in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania. “The idea that the Amish do not vaccinate their children is untrue,” says Dr. Kevin Strauss, MD, a pediatrician at a large clinic in Lancaster, Pennsylvania. “We run a weekly vaccination clinic and it’s very busy.” Dr. Strauss also notes that the Amish don’t vaccinate as much as the general population. He also says, “Autism isn’t a diagnosis – it’s a description of behavior. We see autistic behaviors along with seizure disorders or mental retardation or a genetic disorder, where the autism is part of a more complicated clinical spectrum.”

Olmstead’s critics say that Olmstead has not proven there is a connection between vaccinations and autism. The gorilla in the room is the fact that these critics haven’t proven that there isn’t. The research denouncing the idea that mercury in vaccines could be causing a problem says things like, “Gee, we gave the kids vaccines and tested the blood, stool and urine for mercury and didn’t find any.” or, “Gee, the Danes use a lower level of mercury in their vaccines and they have as much autism as we do.” or, “Gee, we checked kids with autism and those without and the mercury levels were about the same.” All of the medical journals sell ads to drug companies. Is there a better way to corrupt your findings than money? The studies that supposedly prove that the vaccines are not the problem are not exactly a “slam dunk”. Autism basically didn’t exist until the 1940s—it started after we started vaccinating children. That doesn’t necessarily mean that the vaccines are to blame; our environment has also gotten worse since the 1940s. But if there were real scientists in the medical community, they would compare the health of a population that does not get vaccinated to one that does. In the mean time, maybe it isn’t unreasonable to put the burden of proof on those who think that vaccines are a good thing, because they really haven’t proven that there is no connection between vaccines and autism. Let’s face it, a case of autism is a lot more inconvenient than a case of chicken pox.

We have provided you with a wonderful resource, www.thebetterhealthnews.com. There you will find free newsletters, patient education material, marketing information, health articles and more—all for free.

Topics: General | 3 Comments »

Nutrition and ADHD

By Dr. Paul Varnas | September 11, 2008

Various nutritional approaches may help ADHD. Nutrition remains controversial because scientific studies, by their very nature, look at a single constituent. The paradigm in medicine is to try to find a “cure”, one thing that fixes the symptom. There is an inherent flaw in this way of thinking because it assumes that any health problem has one cause. If the problem, as some research suggests, is due to a lack of serotonin, then many factors can come into play. You need protein and the amino acid tryptophan to make serotonin. You also need folic acid, vitamin B6, vitamin C and other nutrients to make serotonin. Exercise helps us to produce serotonin. Essential fatty acids are necessary for the integrity of the nerve cell membranes. Many factors are involved. If someone with ADHD is not producing enough serotonin due to a lack of tryptophan, giving them folic acid in a study may not produce results. If the person is folic acid deficient, then giving B6 may not help and so on.
Serotonin is only one neurotransmitter—what if GABA is involved? Obviously, other nutrients will come into play. Sugar and the chemical reactions of the Krebs Cycle begin to matter. What if a heavy metal or a chemical toxin is interfering with those reactions?
When you think of ADHD that way, the inherent idiocy of debating whether or not B6 (or any other nutrient) should be used to treat ADHD becomes obvious. B6 fixes a B6 deficiency, not ADHD. If a patient with ADHD has a deficiency, then the nutrient will help.

There is a free MP3 file for patient education on natural health care and ADD/ADHD available at

www.thebetterhealthnews.com.

Also, do you desire to grow your practice? You can get excellent free marketing advice in a webinar available to you at www.practicewebinar.com

Topics: General | No Comments »

Low Testosterone

By Dr. Paul Varnas | September 3, 2008

In men, testosterone levels decline around the age of 30 and by age 80 may be down to 20% of someone in their 20s. Men with low testosterone tend to have less stamina, reduced muscle mass and reduced libido. They can also have cognitive problems as well as depression and anxiety. The thing you really notice in men with low testosterone levels is a lack of initiative—they fit the stay-at-home, couch potato stereotype. They may say things like, “I used to like to work on the car (go on a hike, go dancing, work around the yard, etc.), but I really don’t feel like doing that anymore.”
Low testosterone can lead to more serious health problems. It is linked to obesity (and increased abdominal fat), diabetes and heart disease. In the journal, Circulation (2007;116:2694-2701), a study examined the prospective relationship between endogenous testosterone concentrations and mortality due to all causes, cardiovascular disease, and cancer in a nested case-control study based on 11,606 men aged 40 to 79 years. The researchers concluded that endogenous testosterone concentrations are inversely related to mortality due to cardiovascular disease and all causes. Low testosterone may be a predictive marker for those at high risk of cardiovascular disease. Other research (Circulation 1999;100:1690-1696) showed that short-term intracoronary administration of testosterone, at physiological concentrations, induces coronary artery dilatation and increases coronary blood flow in men with established coronary artery disease.
Women can have low testosterone as well. Levels decline between the ages of 20 and 40. An article appearing in the journal, Clinical Geriatric Medicine (2003;19:605-616) reviews the changes a woman goes through when testosterone levels decrease. When a woman receives estrogen for hormone replacement therapy after menopause, there is an increase in sex hormone-binding globulin. The sex hormone-binding globulin binds to testosterone, further decreasing levels. Low testosterone is linked to a decrease in libido, as well as a decrease in muscle mass, fatigue, irritability, sleep disturbances, poor memory and cognition, headaches, and even depression. Testosterone may play a role in preventing Alzheimer’s disease, according to a recent animal study, according to Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (February 1, 2000;97:1202-1205). Nerve cells collected from rats and mice tend to produce a harmless form of beta-amyloid protein in the presence of testosterone. Under the influence of testosterone, much less beta-amyloid peptide is produced, and more of this secretory beta-amyloid precursor protein, which is considered by most people to be beneficial for the health of the nerve cells. Testosterone may actually reduce production of the protein that makes up plaques in the brains of Alzheimer’s disease patients.

You can inexpensively have testosterone levels tested, go to www.professionalco-op.com; there are hundreds of drawing stations nationwide.

Need help marketing and growing your practice? A free webinar will show your how. Go to

www.practicewebinar.com

Topics: General | 3 Comments »

Thrive During a Recession

By Dr. Paul Varnas | August 15, 2008

It seems like one of the hot topics for seminars and magazine articles these days is the recession and how to make your practice “recession-proof”. A lot of the articles center around cutting costs, but what is really needed is a strategy that will grow your practice. Chiropractors have an advantage over other professions during tough times because the care they offer is inexpensive and effective.
People do not stop getting sick just because the economy is bad. Budgets are tight, but let’s face it, chiropractic (when practiced properly) is a tremendous health care value. If your practice is down and funds are tight, you need to find a way to cheaply and effectively market. There are people out there who need care, they just need to be able to find you.

Aggressively market to get new patients

One mistake many pratices make when times are hard is to cut back on marketing. Marketing is an investment in the future growth of your practice. You can, however, improve the effectiveness of your marketing and reduce the costs by being creative. Here are some ideas:

• Partner with other related businesses to share marketing expenses and to help each other grow. For example, get the local health club to display your newsletter; in return, you place their literature in your office. Or you can share a mailing with other non-competing businesses—a dentist, a health food store, a beauty shop, etc.
• Join a business referral organization, make a plan on how to market your practice within the group and make a sincere effort to attend the meetings.
• Create powerful, direct marketing messages on post cards, classified ads and utilize local bulletin boards. Always use direct marketing, stop using identity marketing. When you try to put every possible bit of information about you and your practice into an ad, that is identity marketing. It is expensive and not very effective. Direct marketing grabs the reader’s attention and lets them know what is in it for them. For great direct marketing templates and examples, visit: http://www.wholehealthamerica.com; you can also download a free e-book on marketing at http://www.thebetterhealthnews.com.
• Make sure you have a good website that has a lot of information for visitors.
• Publish your own newsletter which highlights the benefits of your services. People throw away advertising, but keep newsletters. You can leave a copy of your newsletter in your waiting area and at local businesses.
• Hold group classes, like a stress-reduction workshop, or an injury-prevention workshop.

Marketing does not have to be expensive, just effective. Many of the best ways to market are cheap or even free. It is important for you to let potential patients know what benefits they can expect from your services. Also, it is hard for people to take that first step to see a new doctor. Good marketing creates interest and awareness. That’s it. Your marketing really only needs to incite action. For example, get them to go to your website (which should have a lot of interesting and relevant information) for a free report or a CD. Make sure you capture their contact information right on the site. This way you can build a list of potential new patients and keep in contact with them regularly.

Want more help and advice?

There are some FREE resources available to help you with these strategies. You can download a free guide entitled, Recession-Proof Your Practice at www.wholehealthamerica.com. Ben Clark, president of Big Ben Media and I have put together an intensive weekend workshop to show chiropractors exactly how to make their offices more profitable. You can go to www.practiceseminars.com for more information and to register for the event.

Topics: General | 3 Comments »

Money is not a four-letter word

By Dr. Paul Varnas | August 13, 2008

Money, to many natural health practitioners, is a four-letter word. This is not because they are learning disabled or that they cannot spell, but because they feel that it cheapens a noble calling. It is an unfortunate attitude and one that is not only harmful to the practitioner, but to the public in general.

If you cannot make a good living, how will your message get to the people who need it most? The Bible says that the worker is worthy of his hire. It is important that people who practice natural health have practices that thrive. The more of us that are out there educating and healing people, the better it will be for the public.

Health care costs in the United States now exceed $2 trillion annually—a figure that represents 15% of the American GDP. If it were its own economy, it would be the fourth largest in the world. In other words, Americans spend more on health care than the entire economies of all but three of the nations in the world. And, as you well know, with all of this expenditure, Americans are not particularly healthy.

We go to seminars that focus on how to fix problem cases. Many of us are excited by finding the esoteric treatment that helps the problem case. There is satisfaction in that, but sometimes it doesn’t pay as well as it should.

The smart practitioner knows that most of the problems suffered by most patients are very easy to fix. Chemical exposure and poor lifestyle choices are the cause of most of the health problems that walk through your door. You can easily make a very good living with a system that addresses these very common health problems. A good system will save you time in the office, so you can focus on those interesting, difficult cases.

Many chiropractors (and other health practitioners) want to see more patients in order to grow their practices and make a good living. There is an inherent flaw with this idea—there is a ceiling on how much you can earn. Running from room to room, and working very hard, will not create financial rewards that match the amount of effort and stress involved. Many find themselves at the mercy of insurance companies—dealing with shrinking coverage and shrinking incomes.

Some practitioners don’t utilize nutrition in their offices because it is not covered by insurance. This is exactly the wrong idea. More than 40% of Americans already take supplements—and they pay cash for them. They are taking them without guidance, and in many instances are taking inferior products. You can help these people—and increase your income more than you can imagine. You may not suddenly be able to have an all-cash, all-referral practice, but nutrition will help you to develop cash patients who refer. It is almost like having a business within a business. You can actually go to www.thebetterhealthnews.com and get free MP3 files that will help you to develop a nutritional practice. You can also get a free marketing e-book. While you are at it, go to www.practiceseminars.com to learn how to completely transform your practice into a profitable, stress-free entity that is fun to work in.

Topics: General | No Comments »

Thyroid Part 3

By Dr. Paul Varnas | August 12, 2008

The last installment contained suggestions from Dr. Harry Eidenier on how to interpret lab values to find hidden hypothyroidism. Using the Barnes basal body temperature alone is not a satisfactory way to diagnose hypothyroidism. These lab values and treatments only apply if symptoms are present (see last post).

Treatment (as recommended by Dr. Harry Eidenier):

1. TSH greater than 2.0, but less than 10.0: Give the patient (adult, 180 lbs) 2-3 capsules of GTA at breakfast and lunch (make sure that you are regularly monitoring the thyroid with blood tests if you use GTA). GTA is porcine thyroid glandular with the T4 removed (but not the T3). It will change serum values, so watch them. Also give 2-3 capsules of Optimal EFAs with each meal. Give 1-2 capsules. Nucleozyme 3 times each day. Give 20 drops of Liquid Iodine Forte in water (pure water—without chlorine or fluorine) 2 times each day. This is primary thyroid hypofunction.
2. T4 is above the midline and/or T3 is below the midline: This is a problem with conversion. Give the patient (adult) 2-4 capsules of Meda-Stim with breakfast and lunch (along with the above regimen).
3. T4 is below the midline of the range: Give 1-2 capsules of L-Tyrosine twice each day (in addition to the supplementation given in #1).
4. TSH less than 2.0 (with symptoms and low temperature): This is thyroid hypofunction secondary to anterior pituitary hypofunction. Give 1-2 tablets of Thyrostim 3 times each day. Give 2-3 capsules of Optimal EFAs 3 times each day. If T4 is below the midline on this panel, add 20 drops of Liquid Iodine Forte in water (pure water—without chlorine or fluorine) 2 times each day and 1-2 capsules of L-Tyrosine twice each day.
5. TSH less than 2.0 (with symptoms and low temperature) and T3 is below the midline of the lab range, or low in relation to T4: Give 1-2 tablets of Thyrostim 3 times each day. Give 2-3 capsules of Optimal EFAs 3 times each day and 2-4 capsules of Meda-Stim at breakfast and lunch.

One interesting side note is for patients who have been on Synthroid and are still having symptoms; they are usually having trouble converting T4 to T3. The doctor monitoring the levels will usually say that everything is fine. If you give this patient Meda-Stim, they will feel infinitely better because Meda-Stim (another Biotics product) helps with the conversion from T4 to T3 (the more active form of the hormone).

When you find and treat someone’s hypothyroidism, you really improve the quality of that patient’s life. These people often become grateful and enthusiastic patients.

Of course there is much more to treating thyroid than what is here. There are autoimmune problems and hyperthyroidism. Hypothyroidism is much more common and you can get great results with a number of complaints including:

• Obesity and trouble losing weight
• Fatigue
• Depression
• High Cholesterol
• PMS
• Ovarian cysts
• Uterine fibroids
• Dry skin
• Some headaches (usually one that starts in the morning and fades as the day goes on)
• You can prevent heart disease, miscarriages and improve the IQ of the newborn.

Nutrient recommendations in future blogs will not be so brand-specific. An exception was made because much of this material was written by Dr. Harry Eidenier. It did not seem proper to change his recommendations to generic nutrients.

We have provided you with a wonderful resource, www.thebetterhealthnews.com . There you will find free newsletters, patient education material, marketing information, health articles and more—all for free.

Topics: General | No Comments »


« Previous Entries Next Entries »