Extend Podcast with Darshan Shah, MD

161. McCall McPherson: Why Your Thyroid Is Being Undertested And Undertreated

47 min
May 5, 202629 days ago
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Summary

Dr. Darshan Shah interviews McCall McPherson, founder of Modern Thyroid Clinic, about why thyroid dysfunction is widely undertested and undertreated in conventional medicine. The episode explores how TSH alone is an unreliable marker, why free T3 is the critical hormone most doctors ignore, and how proper thyroid management can reverse symptoms and reduce disease risk.

Insights
  • TSH disconnects from actual thyroid hormone output 35% of the time, yet remains the primary diagnostic tool in 96% of cases where free T3 is never checked
  • Subclinical hypothyroidism carries 68% increased heart attack risk and 3x dementia risk, contradicting the medical consensus that it doesn't require treatment
  • Most hypothyroidism (89-90%) is autoimmune Hashimoto's, which can be influenced through inflammation reduction and lifestyle changes rather than just hormone replacement
  • T4-only medications (levothyroxine) fail to convert to usable T3 in many patients, causing them to appear 'normal' on labs while remaining symptomatic
  • Functional medicine ranges for optimal thyroid levels are significantly narrower than standard medical ranges, based on hundreds of thousands of patient data points
Trends
Shift from TSH-centric thyroid diagnosis toward comprehensive panels including free T3, free T4, and reverse T3 in functional medicine practicesGrowing recognition that subclinical hypothyroidism is a significant cardiovascular and neurological risk factor requiring treatment interventionIncreased use of T3-containing medications (desiccated thyroid, cytomel) as alternatives to T4-only therapy in specialized thyroid practicesTelemedicine expansion enabling access to specialized thyroid care across state lines, addressing geographic gaps in functional thyroid medicineEmerging research into stem cell therapy for thyroid tissue regeneration in post-thyroidectomy patientsPatient-driven demand for comprehensive thyroid testing and interpretation guides, forcing practitioners to evolve beyond standard protocolsRecognition that thyroid dysfunction is a root cause of chronic disease burden, including cardiovascular disease, fatty liver, and dementiaIntegration of lifestyle and micronutrient optimization as primary interventions for Hashimoto's antibody reduction and thyroid function preservation
Topics
TSH limitations and thyroid hormone testing protocolsFree T3 as primary biomarker for thyroid function assessmentReverse T3 and T4-to-T3 conversion pathwaysHashimoto's autoimmune thyroid disease and antibody reductionSubclinical hypothyroidism diagnosis and treatmentLevothyroxine vs. desiccated thyroid vs. T3-containing medicationsThyroid dysfunction in women across lifespan (puberty, postpartum, menopause)Liver function and T4-to-T3 conversionThyroid symptom constellation (fatigue, brain fog, weight gain, hair loss)Optimal vs. normal thyroid lab rangesInflammation and micronutrient depletion in thyroid dysfunctionThyroid medication dosing and symptom-based titrationStem cell therapy for thyroid tissue regenerationTelemedicine delivery of specialized thyroid careThyroid dysfunction as cardiovascular and neurological risk factor
Companies
Modern Thyroid Clinic
Founded by McCall McPherson; telemedicine thyroid practice operating in 48 states with 15,000+ patients
Timeline
Supplement company offering Mitochondrial support product (Mitochondrial Pure) endorsed by Dr. Shah
IMA Health
Cellular health supplement company offering 92-ingredient formula for telomere protection and cellular repair
Stem Regen
Company producing stem cell elicitation products; partnering with Modern Thyroid Clinic on thyroid tissue regeneratio...
Mayo Clinic
Dr. Shah's training institution where he received board certification as a surgeon
People
McCall McPherson
Thyroid specialist and founder of Modern Thyroid Clinic; discusses undertreated thyroid dysfunction and optimal testi...
Dr. Darshan Shah
Podcast host and longevity expert; youngest doctor in country at age 21, trained at Mayo Clinic with 30 years surgica...
Quotes
"Normal isn't the same as optimal. And for millions of people, the majority of them women, undetected or undertreated thyroid dysfunction is the silent reason every other protocol stops working."
Dr. Darshan ShahIntroduction
"If it walks like a duck, it quacks like a duck, it's probably a duck. So it usually ends up being a thyroid issue if you look for it in the correct, progressive, deeper ways and you don't just simply rely on a TSH."
McCall McPhersonMid-episode
"TSH becomes virtually unreliable to dictate what their hormones are doing and how their body is using that medication the moment someone is on a T4-based medication."
McCall McPhersonMid-episode
"Medicine is meant to fix problems. It is not meant to promote health vitality. Those are two very different things."
Dr. Darshan ShahMid-episode
"I've been in remission for my Hashimoto's for over 12 years. I don't have a goiter anymore. That's not always possible for everyone, but in some people that can actually reduce."
McCall McPhersonMid-episode
Full Transcript
Welcome to Extend with me, Dr. Darshan Shah, a podcast dedicated to cutting-edge science, research, tools, and protocols designed to help you extend your health span. Having become one of the youngest doctors in the country at the age of 21 and trained in board-certified at the Mayo Clinic, I've accumulated three decades of practice as a board-certified surgeon and longevity expert. Over that time, I've discovered that a mere 20% of health knowledge yields 80% of the results when it comes to your health span. We're living in a new era where we are creating a new healthcare system no longer focused on disease management but achieving optimal health and vitality. Join me as I interview world-renowned experts offering you a step-by-step guide to proactively avoid disease and most importantly, extend your health span. You've been tracking your macros, you've dialed in your sleep, you've optimized every supplement in your stack, but you're still feeling exhausted. You're still gaining weight. You're still getting brain fog by 2 p.m. And every time you bring it up to your doctor, they just run a little lab test protocol and they tell you that you're fine. But here's what they're not telling you. Normal isn't the same as optimal. And for millions of people, the majority of them women, undetected or undertreated thyroid dysfunction is the silent reason every other protocol stops working. In this episode, I'm going to dive deep into this topic with McCall McPherson. He's the founder of modern thyroid clinic, modern weight loss in thyroid nation. McCall came to this work the hard way as a thyroid patient who spent years being told her labs were fine while she could barely get off the couch. She trained under a functional medicine practitioner who changed everything for her and she spent the years since then building one of the fastest growing thyroid practices in the country because the need is that prevalent and urgent. We're going to break down the full thyroid panel that actually tells you what's going on, what optimal lab ranges look like versus the two wide ranges most doctors use and why your TSH alone is nearly useless if you're on thyroid medication. We're also going to talk about the free T3 number. This is a biomarker that most doctors are not checking, but it reveals more than any other thyroid test. So if you've ever suspected something was off, but you couldn't get answers, this episode might be for you. Here's McCall McPherson. Hi, McCall. It's so great for you to join me on Extend today. Thanks for doing this all the way from Austin. Thanks for having me. I know. I'm excited to be here. Thanks for having me. Yeah, this is fantastic. So, you know, we've only done a couple of episodes on the thyroid. So I'm really excited about this because, man, it's such an underappreciated hormonal, like a big topic around hormones that we never really talk about enough. I mean, I think estrogen and testosterone get 99% of the attention, but the testosterone pathway is definitely, you know, something that's been covered for a long time. But the thyroid pathway we rarely ever talk about. So why is that? I feel like it's the orphan child and it impacts so much about testosterone production, hormone production. Like we talk about the next level up, but we so often neglect the foundational piece. I think medicine in general hasn't really been invested in the evolution of thyroid in a bit. You know, we haven't really updated our recommendations and protocols and algorithms. So I'm hopeful that that's going to happen soon, maybe, you know, in part by a lot of conversations like these. Yeah. Yeah. And so, you know, when I was a surgeon, I remember we used to do a lot of surgeries for thyroids. A lot of goiters would be removed. A lot of thyroid tumors. And it was almost like people had thyroid disease for decades and didn't even know it. And then when it became a huge surgical problem is when people finally started paying attention. So you know, I think about the symptoms of thyroid disease and people get really confused about, I mean, like I look at these medical histories and the doctors are looking for everything else except for looking at their thyroid. And so, you know, I hope. Thank you for that. Yeah. And then by the time they figure out it's a thyroid, there's like a huge problem that needs surgical intervention sometimes. And so, you know, for the people listening to this podcast, Nicole, how would you tell them it's time to pay attention to your thyroid? What should they be looking at? Yeah. So, you know, you're looking for a constellation of symptoms, not one in isolation, but fatigue, brain fog, weight gain, hair loss, nails breaking, hair breaking, dry skin, low libido, cold intolerance. Maybe you go to your doctor or your clinician and they say, oh, your blood sugar is increasing, your cholesterol is increasing, right? You can't lose weight with effort. And, you know, medicine views, symptoms of hypothyroidism is kind of nonspecific. They're like, look, it could be anything just because you have them doesn't mean it's a thyroid issue. And I kind of disagree. Look like maybe one, two, three of those things. But when you start to get five, six plus of those symptoms, I always say, look, if it walks like a duck, it quacks like a duck, it's probably a duck. So it usually ends up being a thyroid issue if you look for it in the correct, progressive, deeper ways and you don't just simply rely on a TSH. Yeah. I think that's so true. And, you know, do you have like on your website like a thyroid questionnaire or something that people can actually get some of those symptoms and like maybe check them off and understand like, should they be asking the doctor about thyroid? I'm going to write that down as soon as we get off of this and I'm going to add it to my website by the end of the week. I do have like a thyroid lab guide to tell them how to interpret their labs and what labs they need, but I need a thyroid questionnaire. Thanks. Yeah. You really need that because I think that people have these symptoms that go to their doctor and like you said, they're poo pooed and there's no, there's no way for them to really like tell the doctor like, look, like I got nine out of the 10 symptoms here. You really need to look at this. I think that would be really helpful. And so you mentioned a lot of them there. Do men and women have similar symptoms? You know, I feel like they do, but men, do you tell me if I'm right, men do not pay attention to how they feel. You know what I mean? So they will go, go, go until they're wide stragged them into the doctor basically. And so it presents differently. It takes a lot for them to go to see a clinician. Yeah. And there's some overlap too between the symptoms of low testosterone and thyroid as well. And so I feel like there's a lot of confusion there. And obviously men love going down the testosterone road because of all the other side benefits of having more testosterone. For sure. But you know, where there's smoke, there's fire. If you have low T, you should probably get your thyroid checked too because hypothyroidism. Like with my women, we have 15,000 plus patients. I would venture to say 90 plus percent of them also have low testosterone. So the two go hand in hand so much of the time. It's one of the first hormones that I see drop. It's actually the first hormone that I see drop. So I feel like every man that has low T should check their thyroid and same for women. Okay. That's really good advice. So is there like an age related decline in thyroid hormone like there is with estrogen just as shown as well? Good question. So there are a few times in women's lives where we tend to have more thyroid problems. Number one is puberty. Think about hormone changes. Our hormones in our thyroid are so integrated. Postpartum. So pregnancy, postpartum. Postpartum is the most common time to get Hashimoto's, the autoimmune aspect of hypothyroidism. And it can even be transient. So you might have antibodies for a little while, not even know it, but be left with permanent hypothyroidism. And lastly, it's menopause. Like women postmenopausally have a huge bump in incidence of Hashimoto's and hypothyroidism. Astrogen, I mean, you know this, but it's almost like an antioxidant. It protects us from inflammation, from autoimmune disease. So as that declines, our risk increases. So always certainly women should be paying attention during those times and in between as well because this is a pervasive, pervasive issue. That makes a lot of sense actually. The estrogen is actually protecting your thyroid gland by modulating the immune system. When you don't have enough estrogen or zero estrogen, that's a prime time for Hashimoto's to develop. Totally. Yeah. And Hashimoto's for the listeners, that's basically an autoimmune attack on your thyroid gland. Can you give us a little bit more color around like what is Hashimoto's and why does it develop? Yeah. So, you know, I'll give you kind of both standard of care, which is a little different than my perspective. Your medicine is headed this way. Autoimmune diseases are when your body becomes confused and it thinks a part of your body is a foreign invader. So it goes to attack it. And with Hashimoto's specifically, that attack is mounted on your thyroid gland, your thyroid gland that secretes hormones that are so important for almost, you know, every aspect of our physiology. And as that attack happens, it sort of erodes away our hormonal secreting tissue in our thyroid gland. And it leaves us with scurry inflammatory tissue that just doesn't secrete hormones efficiently. And that's what causes, you know, 89-ish percent of cases, hypothyroidism as far as research goes. You know, autoimmunity can be caused by a lot of different things, but it can also be influenced. Medicine just sort of looks at it and is like, it's the reverse lottery. There's nothing you can do about it. Good luck. If you don't even ever need to look at your antibodies, the things we measure to diagnose you with Hashimoto's and see how bad it is, we just simply need to treat your hypothyroidism, right? With levothyroxine with thyroid medications, but truly you can influence Hashimoto's. You can reduce those antibodies by working on things like inflammation. If we know women are at risk because estrogen, the anti-inflammatory hormone reduces, then we know that Hashimoto's is influenced by inflammation. So lifestyle, cleaning up your diet, monitoring your stress, some targeted supplementation with nutrients like selenium have been shown to reduce Hashimoto's antibodies. And fun fact, I used to have severe Hashimoto's. My antibodies used to be over 600. I had a massive goiter. I've been in remission for my Hashimoto's for over 12 years. I don't have a goiter anymore. That's not always possible for everyone, but in some people that can actually reduce. So it is possible. And what that reduction in antibodies does, again, you measure them with your blood, regular old labs, it can preserve more of your thyroid. If your antibodies were off the charts in 2000 and now they're 20, well, you're going to lose less of your thyroid gland as quickly. And two, if you have one autoimmune disease, you're at an increased risk of developing another of over 30%. So the lower we get those antibodies, we can almost use it as a risk reduction for other additional autoimmune diseases. So it's worthwhile to find ways to influence that. It can be incredibly powerful. Oh, man, Nicole, that's such like an incredible example of how we need to rethink medicine completely because you're right. When people get Hashimoto's like, okay, well, here's some thyroid medication to take because your thyroid is not working great. All you're doing is you're just treating the end result of the disease and you're not even looking at the disease itself, which is an autoimmune condition that is due to just an over activation of your immune system and inflammation in general. So instead of just giving someone thyroid and letting the Hashimoto's keep progressing and eating up their thyroid and just making the whole thing worse and covering it up with a thyroid disease, instead, sure, maybe you need some thyroid hormone at this moment in time, but let's look at reversing the Hashimoto's. What can we do around nutritional supplementation, reducing inflammation, changing your lifestyle so your Hashimoto's goes away? Like you said, there's a 30% crossover with other autoimmune diseases. So as you're reducing your inflammation and Hashimoto's, you're reducing some of these other diseases that might pop up that are autoimmune in nature and maybe diseases that inflammation can also lead to like cardiovascular disease and even Alzheimer's in the future. So it's so important to look at why you have a problem in the first place and work on that simultaneously, right? And if everything in medicine was done that way, we'd be a much healthier society. We'd be in a very different situation. I think sometimes people forget, I think they're realizing now that medicine is meant to fix problems. It is not meant to our medical system. It is not meant to promote health vitality. Those are two very different things. So we're trying to bridge that gap, you and I, and so many other clinicians too, which I hopefully will change that trajectory. Yeah, I fully, fully agree with you. So I'm 52 right now, but I'm still pushing all of my limits. I'm running long distances. I travel across many time zones to support my work. And I just want to live my life to the fullest. Staying active as I age isn't just about willpower. It's about supporting my mitochondria, the powerhouses of my cells with the energy that they need to recharge my muscles and recharge my brain. Might Up Pure is a supplement that I take. It's backed by solid research showing that it can boost cellular energy, increase muscle strength and support overall healthy aging. Personally, I take Might Up Pure every single day. It's helped me continue my active lifestyle, whether it's a high intensity workout or keeping up with my kids. So if you are looking to support your body and want to feel younger from the inside out, my friends at Timeline are offering you a 10% discount on your first order. Go to timeline.com slash dr. Shaw to get started. That's timeline.com forward slash dr. S H A H your future self will thank you. Okay, so now let's dive in. You have a guide to looking at your thyroid labs. I'm a big believer being the CEO of your own health because you and I both know when you go to the doctor's office, no matter what doctor or practitioner might be, they're overstressed, they're overworked. There's minimal time to check. Lots of blood work. There's not a lot of time to really even dive deep into it. And so a lot of times, if you even complain about your thyroid, you get one marker, the TSH and that's it. And that's what's typically done. And even up to today, that's what's typically done. So tell us why you think differently. Yeah. So, you know, TSH is used as a screening tool. It's used to take the place of actual thyroid hormones when we look at numbers. So T at thyroid stimulating hormones stimulates our thyroid. It's a hormone from our brain and it's telling our thyroid to work harder if we don't have enough thyroid hormones, meaning it would be increased your TSH or to work less hard if you have plenty of thyroid hormones and that would be a lower TSH. Okay. So medicine still is built on the assumption that TSH accurately reflects output hormones. So it reflects your hormones that your thyroid is secreting, your free T4, which is like an inactive hormone. Think about it like crude oil. We don't really put crude oil in our car to make it run, but we need it to make gasoline, right? And then that crude oil largely just is supposed to convert to gasoline or free T3, what we do need to put in our car to make it run. And the problem is that research shows there's a disconnect between TSH and output hormones about 35% of the time. I see that happen all day, every day. So I think research is grossly underestimating the percentage, the rate of that disconnection and TSH is actually not reflecting your output hormones. And there's an easy solution to this. We can actually just check our thyroid output hormones just like we check our TSH. Because of blood test, it's cheap, but it is covered by insurance. I run 100% of our patients at modern thyroid clinics blood labs through their insurance. So I always check TSH, free T4, free T3, and reverse T3, as well as Hashimoto's antibodies, TPO and thyroglobulin. The other thing that I do want to highlight is TSH is also used to determine if someone needs more or less medication. And pretty much everyone, 89% to 91% of people are on the same type of medication, all based on levothyroxine, all based on crude oil hormone. So again, crude oil doesn't help us at all. We've got to convert it to gasoline. A lot of people are walking around in the world not able to ever convert their crude oil medication to the gasoline to help them feel better, to improve their metabolism, their energy, their cognition. So in that case, what happens is they're taking a bunch of crude oil in the form of a pill and it's stockpiling in their garage, let's say. That stockpiled amount of crude oil absolutely powerfully sends a message back to your brain and says, lower this person's TSH. And what's really crazy that people aren't realizing yet is the worse you are at using that medication, that crude oil, the better your TSH is going to look to a regular clinician who's only checking that, even if they're checking TSH and T4, your crude oil hormone. So that is automatically manipulated. And the moment someone is on a T4-based medication, levothyroxine, synthroid, unithroid, t-rescent, all of those, their TSH becomes virtually unreliable to dictate what their hormones are doing and how their body is using that medication. So we really need to update that a little bit. We need to change it and evolve it. That's such an important tidbit, especially for clinicians, but even patients that are listening, the TSH is the signal from your brain that tells your thyroid, I need to make more crude oil, which you refer to as like T4, right? However, when you have a lot of T4, then your brain gets this negative inhibitory pathway to make less TSH. And so everything looks hunky-dory. But the reality is, if you're not making the crude oil into the gasoline, everything looks hunky-dory on your labs, but it's not doing anything. And in fact, it could be making the problem worse is what you're saying. Absolutely. And research shows that your gasoline hormone, your free T3, in America is only checked less than 4% of the time. So we're missing that 96% of the time. And people are walking around suffering being told, no, your thyroid labs look normal. This isn't a thyroid problem. Your medicine's fine. We don't need to adjust it. Or hey, you don't have a thyroid issue at all when 96% of the time, we're not checking the most valuable piece of information to effectively really understand what's happening. God, so free T3 is the hormone that we really need to be looking at to see whether or not we have enough of the actual gasoline that we need to power all the processes that thyroid hormone powers in our body. Correct. Total T3, free T3. Right, exactly. What is reverse T3? Yeah, good question. So I want you to think about your T3, your gasoline hormone, like your hand. And reverse T3 is like your other hand. It's a very similar shape, but it's a mirror image of one another. And what that allows reverse T3 to do is bind and land in the same landing spot as free T3, but it doesn't activate that landing spot. So think about it like T3 will bind, it will activate your energy, your mood, your libido, your metabolism. Well, instead of free T3 binding, reverse T3 can bind in that same spot and just sit there and it keeps free T3 from being able to activate that receptor. Okay? The tricky part about reverse T3 is, is the source of it is T4. It's your crude oil hormone. So it's another layer of complexity, especially for people walking around on a high dose of levothyroxine, synthroid, unithroid, tyrosine. Why? Because we're giving them a whole bunch of T4. If they can't convert it, they have a crude oil, a garage full of crude oil, right? That reservoir serves to source elevations in reverse T3. So again, if no one is checking your reverse T3 and your T3 looks pretty good, but your reverse T3 is elevated, it's 25, 29, even 20, it's blocking a lot of your, your gasoline hormone from absorbing. And so you might feel, gosh, my numbers look good, but I feel so tired and I just can't make it through the day. All the while you have elevations in reverse T3, which again can be checked by any regular old lab. Got it. So that, so that another, using your gasoline analogy, it's like putting a water, yeah, probably watering your tank is not allowing the real gasoline to come into your tank. There's water in your tank and that's still a big problem, obviously. So I love this analogy. Let's see how long I can stick with it on this call. I know. How did I end up with automotive analogies? You know, I don't even know. It's not, not good. I love it. Okay. So where does T4, your crude oil, get converted to T3 in your body? And when it gets converted to T3, is T3 the first molecule and then it converts to free T3 or is, is there another step in the pathway? I guess I'm asking you. Yeah. You know, it will convert in various parts. A large portion will convert in our liver. It will circulate through other areas as well, but one of the first places people go if someone has poor conversion as they start to work on liver function. And obviously this is sort of a chicken and egg scenario because if you have mild hypothyroidism, you have liver issues. And if you have liver issues, you have thyroid issues. And that, that conversion that we're talking about from T4 to T3 takes a lot of things to happen. It takes a lot of your body, one, having enough micronutrients, not being really stressed, sleeping enough, pregnancy can interrupt it, inflammation can interrupt it. So I want you to think about it as our body doesn't activate those hormones on purpose. So it will sequester that T4, not turn it into T3 or dump it to reverse T3 so that we lay down, we rest, we recover. Okay. So think about the situations where your body would want you to do that. It is when you're sick. It is when you're pregnant. It is when you're inflamed. It is when you're calorically restricted over exercising. So sadly, that's kind of also standard American lifestyle, right? We kind of live in a world of stress and inflammation and micronutrient depletion. And so our body holds on to that T4, doesn't activate it. And that's why, you know, in turn, a lot of people are walking around persistently symptomatic despite being on thyroid nuts. Yeah. Yeah. So, you know, it's since reverse, I'm sorry, since free T3 is the critical hormone here, why isn't that the only thing we're measuring? Why does it start off just measuring T, you know, you get a thyroid panel on someone to give you a TSH, sometimes you get a T4 and a T3 total. Why don't, why doesn't everyone just look at what's the free T3? I mean, I'd like your opinion on this, but I mean, as far as my training goes, I was not trained in the value of free T3 at all. Our clinical director of modern thyroid clinic who's a board certified endocrinologist echoes the same. You know, it's literally TSH. If you want to check an additional number, you can check, you know, free T4. And then when people get more information than that, sadly, I think it's, you know, patients requesting a full thyroid panel and there's a pre-filled box that you can check as a clinician to check a full thyroid panel that isn't really actually a valuable thyroid panel. And so, again, it's not being checked 96% of the time. Yeah. And I think my opinion on it is that, you know, obviously it's a little bit complicated. You do a tremendously good job of breaking it down for us on this podcast, but I think even most clinicians, they don't have the time and they don't have the attention span because they're seeing, you know, 50 patients a day to look at any more than just one number. And then if that number is normal and the symptoms are maybe not as severe or you have like a guy that's not really complaining, it just stops there, right? And so the way I look at TSH is it's a marker that changes after the disease has been there for a long time, right? And so it's kind of like now we have to finally start doing something when it starts to change. And I think a lot of labs are like that in modern medicine, you know, we check the hemoglobin A1c and we don't even do anything about it until it's over 5.7 when you're pre-diabetic. Why don't we check fasting insulin level, right? It's the same thing. That's the first thing that's going to change. That's the most important thing that changes. But it's just not part of the standard blood work at a standard office. And so I think it's the same kind of problem that we have in medicine. And so you probably do what I do, which is every thyroid planal has a TSH and a free T3 and a reverse T3 and a total T4. And so that way we can get a full indication of what's going on in that entire pathway. Because if you can see the pathway in front of you and you have all the numbers, you can have a much better clinical gestalt about what's actually happening and why the person is having symptoms. Yeah. I mean, without it, I describe it as throwing dartboards at a dartboard blindfolded hoping to hit a bullseye. Like it's just, it's not going to happen. Yeah. And also it's like throwing like a giant, like hitting the dartboard with a shotgun when you give someone just pyroxen, right? Like you're just covering up the problem. You're never figuring out where the problem actually is. And so, yeah, it can become a big problem. So, okay. So there's different medications too. Like you've talked about some of them, the one that are normally prescribed, right? And then there's also other forms of thyroid medication out there. Can you give us like a primer on thyroid medications? Absolutely. So obviously the vast majority of people, like 89 to 91% of people, as I mentioned, are on a T4 based medication alone. So synthroid lipid, the Roxyneunithroid, T-Rosin, all the meds we talked about. Crude oil, okay? Think crude oil, not gasoline. In medicine, I'm trained. The clinicians that work at modern thyroid clinic are trained in our board certified endocrinologist is trained to only use this class of medication, okay? That other forms of thyroid medication that contain T3 or gasoline hormone are dangerous, right? The research says something very, very different than that when you actually dig into it. So we're not trained how to use that. We're trained simply to not use them and to be afraid of them. But the other class of medications that is life-changing, exceedingly safe in my clinical practice but also backed up in research are meds that contain T3 and there's two different classes of them. One is called natural desiccated thyroid. These are meds like armor, renthyroid, and p-thyroid. They come from pig thyroid gland and they're actually about 70 to 80% T4, crude oil, and 25 to 30% active thyroid hormone or T3, gasoline, right? So that's one. The other form is pure T3. So just like we have pure T4, the alternative to or the complimenting medications to that are pure T3. Those are drugs like cytomel and lyothyronine. And each one of these are used kind of in different cases. There isn't really a one-size-fits-all approach. Like for example, people who are on a lot of levothoraxine or synthroid, if they have low T3, the easiest thing to do is simply tack on some cytomel or lyothyronine as opposed to changing their entire medicine over to a natural desiccated thyroid like renthyroid or armor. So everything is unique and should be designed for the specific patient, but that's a little nuance for the meds. Got it. In the natural or desiccated thyroid hormone, is that kind of where you start now with your patients or you still try to, how do you in your practice start someone that's having thyroid issues? Yeah. So modern thyroid clinic is kind of like the last-ditch resort place, to be honest. Like people don't come to see us until they've exhausted every other option. So most of them come to us on some form of medication, the vast majority of the time. It is a T4 based medication like synthroid levothoraxine. And because of that, our goal is always, what is the fastest way we can get this person to their highest form of health and what can we do to make sure they never get worse before they get better? And the solution for that most always is adding T3 to a levothoraxine based medication. If someone comes to us on nomads, then we have a lot of options, right? We're starting kind of from ground zero. I love natural desiccated thyroid medications. Medicine teaches us that they're unstable, they're unsafe, they're actually very safe and incredibly stable if they're used in the hands of someone that knows how to effectively use them. We can predict within 0.2 variables on labs where someone labs, where their labs will land the next time we see them using desiccated thyroid. So we know it's stable. We can tell early on if there's an issue with medication. So we're open to everything and really it is like the thing that thyroid people need is not a one size fits all approach. They need a unique plan and protocol that accounts for each of their variables in their biochemistry. And so that's kind of what we do. I love that. That's great advice even for the practitioners that listen to this podcast to really consider. And then when you have people on treatment, what are the levels that you're kind of aiming for? Is it symptom relief? Is it blood test levels? How do you kind of like dial in their treatment? Good question. So always we want symptomatic relief. We want people to hit the highest level of vitality they possibly can. So that's foundational for us. But what we've done as far as labs go is for the last 10 years, we started with functional medicine ranges where we trim a little off the top, a little off the bottom of each lab range. And we've done more narrow. But based on our own data points, at this point hundreds of thousands of pieces of data, maybe even we've hit a million at this point, every 12 to 18 months for the last 10 years, I've narrowed those margins down based on where people feel good, where they have symptoms, where they don't have symptoms anymore, and where they have persistent thyroid symptoms. So we've narrowed them down so many times that we're left with these incredibly tight optimal ranges. And we find if we get people into them, they actually do get their lives back. They feel better. That's part of our Thyroid Lab Guide. It's on likegifts.modernthyroidclinic.com. I'll totally share it with you to put in your show notes. But and I freely share our ranges so that people can understand where they should be to feel good and thrive. That's incredible work that you're doing. That's awesome. And I definitely want to look at that and see, make sure my own personal thoughts around the ranges are kind of in line with what you've discovered after hundreds of thousands of data points. How long can someone expect to start feeling better once they get on appropriate treatment? So most people feel a difference in days. Like by the time the first treatment cycle, from the time we first changed their medications till we see them back, there is sort of a sequence of symptoms that improves before others. Like brain fog is usually completely gone. Energy has increased, but it's not where it will be in the long run. Part of the goal, you know, this with thyroid is we want to make an impact and make people feel better. We also want to be very sure we don't over medicate them. So we can't just put them on a bunch of thyroid medications right out of the gate. We have to kind of incrementally do it. But once you are on medications that fuel your body in the way that you need to be fueled, people start to feel better days, weeks usually. Great. And are most people on thyroid medication for the rest of their lives forever? Have you seen some people actually reverse their need for thyroid medication? Good question. So 89 to 90% of people with hypothyroidism had Hashimoto's. So again, their body destroyed part of their thyroid gland. It eroded that away. Did you see 80 to 90% of people have Hashimoto's that have hypothyroidism? Yeah. Wow. I didn't realize the number was that big. So most Hashimoto's, if not almost all, sorry, most hypothyroidism, if not all, is due to autoimmune Hashimoto's. That's what research says. I think that that number is less. I really do believe that it's not 89 to 90%, but that's what the data says. So we'll go with that. And a huge percentage in our practice is as well. Our data is a little skewed because our people are motivated to get better. So they improve lifestyle long before they come to see us. So our data might not align with the scientific literature. But yeah, most people have Hashimoto's and that's why they have hypothyroidism. So they've inherently lost thyroid tissue that functions. And because of that, they are not going to regrow that tissue if they perfect their lifestyle. So I gave a couple of analogies. One is me. I've been in remission for 12 years. I absolutely would not be a functioning member of society or a member of my home if I didn't have thyroid medication. But it's like if you cut off your pinky, but you have a perfect lifestyle. Hey, you're probably not going to get an infection. You're probably going to heal better, have less of a scar, but you're not going to regrow that pinky. And that's what I want people to know about thyroid too. But I am a little suspicious that potentially with stem cells, it might be possible. Hering stem cells with hyperbaric. I'd be curious. We are starting a study in the second quarter of this year, fingers crossed, with Stem Regen, who I'm sure you're familiar with. They make a product that elicits our own natural production of stem cells. And we're actually going to measure people post thyroidectomy to see if they can regrow tissue at six and 12 months, maybe even up to 18 months. Incredible. I can't wait for that study. I agree with you. I think that there is a lot of potential around stem cell therapy just in general, but it's not quite there yet and sort of have resources like Stem Regen where you're pushing a natural production of stem cells and tie it with minimally invasive technology like hyperbaric oxygen and could be a game changer for people. So that's exciting. We'll have to have you back on the podcast to talk about that research once it's done. I love it. Yeah. Let's do it. Hi, Dr. Shah here. I want to take a minute to talk to you about cellular health. So in my clinics, I've actually seen 30-year-old people with cells that look like they're pushing retirement. And I've also seen 60-year-olds with cells that look like they're 40 years old. So what's the difference? It's really about how fast their telomeres are breaking down. Your cells, you see, are like phones and they have limited cell phone battery. Poor sleep, stress, processed foods, all of these things can drain that battery way faster than it should. So this is the reason why I partnered with IMA. IMA powers that cellular battery. It's not just another multivitamin. It's a comprehensive 92-ingredient formula designed specifically for cellular health and longevity. I'm talking 900 milligrams of vitamin C. That's like 20 oranges worth of DNA protection. The clinical dose of CoQ10 that you need to power your cellular engine. You also get zinc, selenium, vitamin E, alfalfa, and poc acid. All of these work synergistically for cellular repair and protecting your telomeres. So instead of taking a handful of pills every day and all these supplements, IMA actually gives you everything that you need in one scientifically formulated system. And this isn't just a theory anymore. IMA had partnered with Oxford University, the International Space Station, San Francisco Research Institute, and they've done studies and they've gotten this NSF certified to truly power your health. Most people are aging twice as fast as they should, unfortunately. You don't have to be one of them. Try IMA. I actually have a discount secured for you if you go to drshaw.com slash IMA or go to imahealth.com slash discount slash drshaw and you can get 20% off with my discount code Drshaw. You can also find the link below. Can I ask you a little bit about, you know, hype? We talk a lot about hypothyroidism and the causes. And I just want to make sure we have a complete picture. If someone is hypothyroid, obviously we want to check autoantibodies against the thyroid gland, right? But say those come back normal. What else should we be checking? What are some of the other causes of hypothyroidism? Yeah. So what I see in my practice is in the same manner that we lose hormone production, in the same manner that our entire physiology slowly decreases as we age, I see that parallel with thyroid function. And so truly, truly what I think is unaccounted for in research that I see far more frequently in my practice than is acknowledged in the literature is a slow breakdown of thyroid function over time. And for that reason, between Hashimoto's, between the risks of menopausal, you know, incidents of Hashian hypothyroidism, as well as slow breakdown due to aging, in my opinion, is almost not a matter of if, but when women will end up with a thyroid problem. So in my opinion, that is an even bigger cause than we recognize. Yeah. Yeah. I agree. I think the age-related decline of thyroid function is something that's ignored. And, you know, like a lot of times people will be subclinically hypothyroid, meaning that they're not typical diagnostic criteria for hypothyroidism, but they still feel terrible and their anti-thyroid antibodies come back normal, meaning they don't have Hashimoto's, and then they're just left to their own devices and it's like, we don't know what to do. But the reality is, is that there is an age-related decline. And if people aren't feeling good, we should still do something about it. And I would love for you to talk about like this whole concept of subclinical hypothyroidism. Yeah. So subclinical hypothyroidism is defined by an elevated TSH. So an increased TSH or thyroid is getting stimulated more with a normal T4 or crude oil hormone. And what medicine has been doing, I mean, since 2004, but a lot since 2018, 2019, and continues to do, is trying to further and further stratify patients to make them ineligible for treatment, meaning they're trying to separate us into these little groups and say, well, this group doesn't need medication. This group doesn't need medication. And one of, in my opinion, the biggest flaws in medicine of my generation, especially for thyroid, is in 2018, a study came out that really changed the trajectory of thyroid care that looked at subclinical hypothyroidism. And it said, all right, until people's TSH is over 10, they don't feel any better. It doesn't change anything when we treat them with levothyroxine. So we need to not treat that. And that really has cascaded into a lot more studies with the assumption that that study is valid. And the problem with that study is inherent that they assumed levothyroxine worked. So the whole premise is, well, we're giving people this medication that works, and it's not really changing anything until they're so severely sick. So let's just not treat them. When in fact, what we should have considered is, wait, maybe the mainstay of treatment, maybe the medication that 89% of people are on by itself isn't working, and we should reevaluate our treatment protocols. That's not what happened. So we've accepted subclinical hypothyroidism. People should not be treated. And in fact, in my opinion, it is a huge root cause of the chronic disease burden in our country. If you have subclinical hypothyroidism, you are at a 68% increased risk of a heart attack. You are at 37% increased risk for cardiovascular death, 36% for a fatty liver, and 1.8 times more at risk for dementia and three times higher than risk for dementia than youth thyroid patients. So to me, that doesn't sound very subclinical. That sounds a lot like overt hypothyroidism that we should probably be treating. Yes. Oh, my gosh. I'm so glad you gave us some of that data because it just really alerts us to the importance of treating the thyroid gland. That's a massive risk reduction in treating subclinical hypothyroidism. Yeah. And even when we look at data comparing T4 to T3, we're taught in medicine that T3 promotes heart attack, stroke, when in fact higher normal levels of T3 reduce all-cause mortality, heart attack, stroke, unemployment, early retirement, and higher levels of T3 predicts socioeconomic status, and inversely, higher levels of T4 increase cardiovascular risk, heart attack, stroke, all of the things I just mentioned, which is the opposite of what you and I were taught in medicine. I'm certain of it. Yeah, absolutely the opposite. It's so good to know this. I'm curious about you and your passion around thyroid hormones, and it sounds like you have your own personal struggle with this in the past. Can you tell the audience a little bit about your struggles? And were you already a practitioner when you had this thyroid issue, or was it the opposite? No, I was already a practitioner. I was already a PA practicing medicine. I was already years into my thyroid journey. I was 27 on synthroid and was spending 16 hours a day in bed. I'm not exaggerating. Every moment I wasn't at work. I was in bed trying to recover enough from the day, rest enough for the next day. Weekends were entirely spent in bed as well. Of course, I went to my doctor and was like, hey, having all these symptoms of hypothyroidism, please help me. I think my medication needs to be adjusted. Was told, you're fine. It's not your medicine. Your TSH looks good. In fact, let's reduce your medication. And by the way, I'm going to put you on Lipitor because your cholesterol is elevated from my low T3. Eventually, I found my way into the hands of a physician that specialized in complex thyroid issues progressively completely got my life back and obviously became a passion of mine. And from that, modern thyroid clinic was born. I'm so grateful it was because now we get to change tens of thousands of people's lives directly and I think millions of people's lives just by educating and empowering them. What is modern thyroid clinic? Is it a location? Is it telemedicine? Can you tell us a little bit more about it? Yeah. So we started as a brick and mortar practice in Austin, Texas, just regular old, regular old medical practice. And in about 2022, our wait list got to almost 9,000 people. They were flying in from all over the country, all over the world. And so at that point, we made a change and we started pursuing telemedicine. And now it's taken a long time, a lot of work, a lot of money, a lot of infrastructure. But we are in 48 states now. We'll be in 51 later this year. And our goal is that every person in our country has access to true good thyroid care that allows them to get their lives back and truly thrive. Well, that's fantastic. It's such a needed service. And so I'm sure a lot of people out there have primary care doctors that are trying to treat their thyroid. They're still struggling with high cholesterol, hair loss, weight gain, all the symptoms that should be better once you're on the right thyroid medication. And I just think that having an additional level of evaluation and a practitioner like you to talk to through your now telemedicine clinic could be a game changer for people out there listening and still struggling. So thank you for providing that service. Thank you. Thanks for having me today. Thank you for your work. I'm such a big fan. I've had you on my podcast recently too. And yeah. Yeah, this is great. I mean, I think this is all so needed. And could you give us the URL for that guide again and tell us how other people can hear more from you? For sure. So go to gift.modernthyroidclinic.com. You can find more about our practice at modernthyroidclinic.com. And I'm always on social, on TikTok, at McCall McPherson, on Instagram, at McCall McPherson PA. And I have my own podcast, Modern Thyroid and Wellness, where Dr. Shah was a guest probably a month or two ago. So you can find our conversation from him there as well. Yeah. This was really awesome. And I really thank you so much for being on the podcast and spreading such incredible information. And can't wait to have you on again. I'm sure there's a lot more to talk about. Thanks for having me. You're welcome. Thank you so much for listening to the podcast today. Please remember to subscribe if you liked this episode and give us a good review and share a link with your friends. It really helps to support all of our efforts. I also want to remind you that the information shared on this podcast is for educational purposes only. And is not intended to replace professional medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Please consult with your healthcare provider or physician before making any decisions or taking any action based on what you hear today. Especially if you have any underlying health conditions or on any medications. Your doctor knows your personal health situation the best and it's always important to seek their guidance. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you.