Thyroid
360 sourcesThyroid function is arguably the most central concept in Ray Peat's framework. He viewed the thyroid as the master regulator of metabolic rate and cellular energy production. Peat argued that hypothyroidism is vastly underdiagnosed because standard TSH testing misses many cases of inadequate thyroid function at the cellular level. He emphasized that the active hormone T3 (triiodothyronine), not just T4 (thyroxine), is critical for health, and that many factors in modern life — polyunsaturated fats, estrogen, endotoxin, and stress — suppress thyroid function.
Peat advocated for the use of desiccated thyroid (Armour) or combinations of T4 and T3, rather than T4-only medications like Synthroid. He noted that adequate thyroid function is evident in warm hands and feet, a body temperature near 98.6°F (37°C), a pulse rate of 75-85, and overall vitality. He considered low body temperature, cold extremities, and morning fatigue as signs of functional hypothyroidism regardless of lab values.
Key Positions
- TSH alone is an inadequate measure of thyroid function; body temperature, pulse rate, and symptoms matter more
- T3 is the active thyroid hormone; T4 must be converted to T3, a process often impaired by stress, estrogen, and PUFA
- Polyunsaturated fats directly inhibit thyroid function at multiple levels — secretion, transport, and cellular response
- Estrogen and cortisol oppose thyroid function; progesterone and pregnenolone support it
- Desiccated thyroid (containing both T4 and T3) is preferable to synthetic T4-only medications
- Adequate thyroid function protects against cancer, heart disease, depression, obesity, and degenerative diseases
- Coconut oil, sugar, adequate protein, and light support thyroid function
Sources
360 items-
Food-junk and some mystery ailments: Fatigue, Alzheimer's, Colitis, Immunodeficiency.
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Forum Onibasu
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Functional Performance Systems Blog - Rob Turner
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Gelatin, stress, longevity
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Glucose and sucrose for diabetes
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Glycemia, starch, and sugar in context
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Growth hormone: Hormone of Stress, Aging, and Death?
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Heart and hormones
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Herb Doctors: Cancer Treatment TRANSCRIPTION (partial)
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Herb Doctors: Hot flashes, Night Sweats, the Relationship to Stress, Aging, PMS, Sugar Metabolism TRANSCRIPTION
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Herb Doctors: Serotonin, Endotoxins, Stress TRANSCRIPTION
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Herb Doctors: Weight Gain TRANSCRIPTION
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Hot flashes, energy, and aging
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I Choose Ice Cream - Geneviève
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Immunodeficiency, dioxins, stress, and the hormones.
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Intelligence and metabolism
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Meat physiology, stress, and degenerative physiology
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Milk in context: allergies, ecology, and some myths
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Mitochondria and mortality