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# 804186 Helped Hundreds Of My Patients
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Helped Hundreds Of My Patients
Success Stories  
     
 
I am so thankful to have met and studied under Dr. Wilson. He has single-handedly changed my perspec ...
I did the T3 treatment and herbs for years and I think my health has improved to the point where I n ...
 
     
Question & Answers  
     
 
Catamenial Epilepsy
Ancestory causing low body temperature
Fatty Liver related to low thyroid?
 
     
Upcoming Conference: Sep 29 - Oct 03, 2008
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Stowe, Vermont (offers WTS Certification)
Success Stories    
 
 
 
I am so thankful to have met and studied under Dr. Wilson. He has single-handedly changed my perspective on the healing of thyroid disorders, and helped many more hundreds of my patients to achieve optimal wellness.

To Dr. Wilson:
Thank you for your guidance in understanding the complexities of low thyroid disturbances. I might be mired in the "conventional" thinking that (old) textbooks promote if I hadn't attended your lecture. Heaven help the patients whose doctors don't recognize this all too common, yet undiagnosed problem! I am amazed that this low thyroid activity is so rampant! It must be affecting 90+% of women! (The men who present with this problem seem to be in even worse shape than the women!) This has got to be the underlying pathology of our "Western" heart disease, and cancer. If we could get a good portion of the doctors on board..., WOW!...what a world it would be! Keep going Dr. Wilson, and come back to speak to us in British Columbia/Pacific Northwest soon.

Your Biggest Fan In British Columbia,
Dr. Scott Tyler  
 
     
 
 
I did the T3 treatment and herbs for years and I think my health has improved to the point where I no longer need to concentrate on this aspect. I continue to recommend your site to anyone who might need it! Thank you very much for all the help.
Rebecca  
 


Question & Answers    
 
 
 
My daughter was diagnosed with epilepsy when she was thirteen and started her period. Since then we have tried all kinds of treatments including supplements and herbs. Her symptoms seem to start about three or four days before her period and during her period. I read something recently that it is called Catamenial epilepsy and is directly related to a hormone imbalance in the body. If we could regulate the hormones, we should be able to prevent the seizures. Can you please give me some advice in this area? We have tried everything without success.  
 
     
 

Hormonal milestones such as puberty, childbirth, and menopause can bring trigger problems with low body temperatures. The fact that your daughter's seizures came on when her period began makes it more likely they're related. Though I have never seen or heard of anyone whose seizures were temperature related, I have seen that low body temperatures can have a bearing on almost any bodily function.

If your daughter has a body temperature that averages below 98.6 when measured by mouth every 3 hours 3 times a day starting 3 hours after waking, then it would be interesting to see how she feels if her temperature were normalized.

Best Wishes,
Denis Wilson, MD  
 
     
 
 
I saw in a recent comment to someone in the newsletter... "Does the person have a genetic predisposition to having a low body temperature? Do low temperatures tend to run in their family? Are they part Irish or part American Indian? Did their ancestors survive famine? Patients with a tendency toward low temperatures might be well served with a little T3 for life, as a preventative."

I am the only one that has been diagnosed with extreme hypothryoidism(since a toddler) but I know my mom also has low body temperature and she is not hypothyroid. I have recently started taking ThyroCare, and LOVE this supplement more than any thyroid med I have been on(still taking Levoxyl and Cytomel). It lowered my TSH from over 10 to .193 in only 3 weeks and has made a huge impact mentally in only a few days when I recently upped my dosage to 2 a day. It has not however changed my body temperature at all so I am wondering now if perhaps Irish ancestry will always make me run on the lower side. Could genetics keep my body temp low even when I take the ThryoCare??

Jennifer  
 
     
 

Dear Jennifer,

The ancestry seems to make people more prone toward getting low temperatures in the first place, or relapsing after supplements and/or T3 is discontinued, but it doesn't seem to hold them back from regaining normal temperatures with supplements and/or T3.

Some people on Levoxyl and Cytomel are not able to get their temperatures up to normal with supplements alone. Sometimes they need to have their thyroid medicine reworked, at least for a time. Some may need to wean off the Levoxyl and Cytomel for a time and be cycled through the WT3 protocol for a while.

Hope that helps,
Denis Wilson, MD  
 
     
 
 
I have been diagnosed with hypothyroidism and am on medication for this. However, I also have a low body temperature and low blood pressure and have recently been told that I have a fatty liver. I very rarely drink, do not have diabetes and have not taken HRT. Could this be a result of my thyroid?

Liz  
 
     
 

Dear Liz,

If you are being treated for hypothyroidism and your temperature is still low and you are not feeling well then you might very well improve if your thyroid condition was managed in such a way as to normalize your body temperature. A low body temperature can contribute to blood sugar abnormalities and high triglyceride levels (risk factors for fatty liver).

Warmly,
Denis Wilson, MD  
 


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