July 2011 - End of Financial Year done, heaps going on in the business and my personal life and I was feeling stressed, exhausted and totally over just about everything! My goreous husband (my knight in shining armour) booked us in for 5 days of R&R on Daydream Island. It was wonderful to get away for 5 days of sunshine, fresh air, no phones, no emails. Interesting choice of destination though (funny how these things happen sometimes).
Daydream Island is owned by a guy by the name of Vaughan Bullivant. I'll try to make a long, but interesting story short - but as a young man, Vaughan had been a professional water skiier and performed in Ski shows in Surfers Paradise and the USA. While working in the US, he had a massive crash which almost cost him his life. He made a miraculous recovery and with this 2nd chance that was given him he went on to study Naturopathy and later started his own line of vitamins and supplements. Several years later he sold the business "Nature's Own" for $135million (NICE). In a nutshell, many years later he now owns Daydream Island in Australia's Whitsundays, but his passion for health and natural therapies is still strong. Daydream Island now boasts one of the worlds Top 3 day spa's, and is super impressive to go visit. I decided to take advantage of it while we there and paid a visit to the Naturopath there.
After listening patiently to my list of health complaints, a bit of history and the research I had done, she helped me prioritise my key areas of concern and talk about how each facet was related to each other. From there we nutted out "THE PLAN"! Here it is...
WEEKS 1 & 2: Detox - the gut is where a lot of the "toxic waste dump" problems stem from, but fortunately e're not talking about one of those nasty 5 day detoxes where you live on rabbit food and water - no, no, no - we're talking a 1 tablet, 3 times a day for 14 days. This is an antiparasitic, antimicrobial and antifungal formulation to clear out gut inflammation and regain a healthy digestive system.
WOW! The results are impressive (& exciting)! By Day 3, 3kg had disappeared and I was looking and feeling less bloated. Day 5, 5kg gone and the belt does up another 2 notches and Day 7, 7kg - OMG, feeling fantastic - it's all happening.
During those first 7 days I didn't change my eating habits too dramatically, they weren't too bad to start with, just a few sensible tweaks and taking a bit more notice of what I eat. It's pretty much part Acid/Alkaline diet and part Gluten Free diet.
WEEK 3: Potion #2 which the Naturopath prescribed to re-build and heal the gut, plus a potent Tri-Flora tablet to maintain all the good work. I'm drinking at least 1.5 Ltrs of water a day with a slice of lemon or lime and the Scotch & Dry is gone...my drink of choice is now water or my very own DEMI COSMO - Vodka, Cranberry Juice & Lime over ice (shaken not stirred).
Time to get MOOVING & GROOVING! Back on the pole for me - it's been too long. Let's see how the wrist holds up.
WEEK 4: It's time to re-visit the Cortisol issue. Saliva tests to see what's doing, maybe another magic potion to correct this as well as some stress relieving Yoga/Meditation, Vitamin C, Pole Dancing and lots of sunshine and fresh air. Looking forward to seeing what happens.
For me, Stress plays a MAJOR role in my cortisol imbalance, so Stress Management will be my main focus over the weeks and months ahead. I'm notorious for taking on ALL the stress and need to learn to share it with others. I think this will be the key to success during this part of the journey back to healthier, happier me.
Will keep you posted!
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About Pol-arise...
What started as one small local pole dance school on the Central Coast of NSW has, in only 6 years gone on to become a multi award winning business and one of the fastest growing networks of Pole Dance Fitness groups in Australia.
Sunday, August 7, 2011
One Life - it's time to LIVE IT (Pt 2)... The Cortisol Connection
Let me start by saying, I am definitely not an expert in this field. I am simply sharing some of what I have discovered in relation to my own health. The only way you can know with reasonable certainty if in fact you have a Cortisol imbalance is to get a series of four saliva cortisol tests spread throughout the day. Most Naturopaths will be able to do this, so if you believe you may have a Cortisol problem it's worth looking into.
Cortisol is more commonly known as a stress hormone and is produced by the human body’s adrenal glands. It’s reputed that elevated cortisol levels from stressful lifestyles contribute to weight gain, particularly in the abdominal area. Common symptoms of both high and low cortisol levels include anxiety, insomnia, irritability, memory problems, confusion, depression, sugar cravings and body temperature regulation problems such as chills, hot flashes, and night sweats.
Let me share an article I found which explains more...
HOW CORTISOL LEVELS AFFECT THYROID FUNCTION AND AGING
Interview with David Zava, Ph.D.
David Zava, Ph.D. is a biochemist, breast cancer researcher, a much-published author of professional research papers, and the laboratory director of ZRT Laboratory. He is also the co-author of What Your Doctor May Not Tell You About Breast Cancer, and a sought-after speaker on the topic of hormones and saliva hormone testing.
JLML: Cortisol is needed for nearly all dynamic processes in the body, from blood pressure regulation and kidney function, to glucose levels and fat building, muscle building, protein synthesis and immune function. You’ve been specifically studying the effects of cortisol on thyroid function.
DTZ: Yes, one of cortisol’s more important functions is to act in concert or synergy with thyroid hormone at the receptor-gene level. Cortisol makes thyroid work more efficiently. A physiologic amount of cortisol—not too high and not too low—is very important for normal thyroid function, which is why a lot of people who have an imbalance in adrenal cortisol levels usually have thyroid-like symptoms but normal thyroid hormone levels.
JLML: Would you explain this thyroid-cortisol relationship in more detail?
DTZ: One way to understand the synergy of cortisol and thyroid is to think of trying to turn on a big round valve with one hand, as opposed to two hands where you can really grip it and turn it on. Both thyroid and cortisol have to be there in the cells, bound to their respective receptors at normal levels, to efficiently turn the valve on and get gene expression. So, when cortisol levels are low, caused by adrenal exhaustion, thyroid is less efficient at doing its job of increasing energy and metabolic activity.
Every cell in the body has receptors for both cortisol and thyroid and nearly every cellular process requires optimal functioning of thyroid.
JLML: And what happens when cortisol levels get too high?
DTZ: Too much cortisol, again caused by the adrenal glands’ response to excessive stressors, causes the tissues to no longer respond to the thyroid hormone signal. It creates a condition of thyroid resistance, meaning that thyroid hormone levels can be normal, but tissues fail to respond as efficiently to the thyroid signal. This resistance to the thyroid hormone signal caused by high cortisol is not just restricted to thyroid hormone but applies to all other hormones such as insulin, progesterone, estrogens, testosterone, and even cortisol itself. When cortisol gets too high, you start getting resistance from the hormone receptors, and it requires more hormones to create the same effect. That’s why chronic stress, which elevates cortisol levels, makes you feel so rotten—none of the hormones are allowed to work at optimal levels.
Insulin resistance is a classic example. It takes more insulin to drive glucose into the cells when cortisol is high. High cortisol and high insulin, resulting in insulin resistance, are going to cause you to gain weight around the waist because your body will store fat there rather than burn it.
JLML: This would certainly be a significant effect when it comes to creating balanced hormone levels.
DTZ: When cortisol is high the brain also is less sensitive to estrogens. That’s why you can have a postmenopausal woman with reasonable amounts of estrogen, but when you put her under a stressor and her cortisol rises, she’ll get hot flashes, which are a symptom of estrogen deficiency. She really doesn’t have an estrogen deficiency, the brain sensors have just been altered. If you then drive the estrogen levels up with supplementation to treat the hot flashes, she’ll start getting symptoms of estrogen dominance like weight gain in the hips, water retention, and moodiness. And the hot flashes usually don’t go away.
This is why you often can’t effectively treat someone with hormonal imbalance symptoms such as hot flashes by simply adding what seems to be the missing hormone, be it thyroid, progesterone, estrogen or testosterone. If your cortisol is chronically high you’ll have overall resistance to your hormones.
JLML: What percentage of the saliva tests for cortisol are high?
DTZ: I’d say it’s as high as ten to twenty percent, but you have to remember that the population that’s sending in saliva hormone tests tends to have health problems. It also depends on the time of year and what’s happening in the world. I saw a lot of high cortisol in the saliva samples that came in after 9/11. Around the winter holidays, cortisol skyrockets, and then after the holidays it takes a nosedive. The adrenals were keeping pace with the holiday stressors and then they collapse because they’re exhausted. That’s a very common pattern. It’s no different with other stressors like exams or war. Most of us can remember how we made it through the stress of exams only to get sick shortly thereafter. Adequate levels of cortisol are necessary to acutely activate the immune system when we are exposed to viruses and when the adrenals are just too tired to make any more cortisol we are vulnerable to viral infections.
Stress is what both high and low cortisol have in common. Stress hits the adrenals and in response they either collapse in fatigue and do not produce enough stress hormones, resulting in a functional thyroid deficiency, or they can go in the other direction where they’re pouring out cortisol and it’s causing overall hormone resistance, including thyroid resistance. Either way, low or high cortisol, and thyroid hormones become inefficient.
JLML: Let’s talk about the good and bad aspects of cortisol.
DTZ: Most people with cortisol problems, high or low, are in the gray zone, meaning that they are outside of a normal physiological range necessary for optimal health. Cortisol helps maintain blood glucose levels by activating gluconeogenesis, the breakdown of tissue protein to amino acids and then to glucose. That’s a good thing, but not in excess. Too much cortisol, caused by stressors, over a prolonged period of time, results in excessive breakdown of all structural tissues of the body including muscle, bone, skin and brain, causing accelerated aging.
In bones, high cortisol activates nearly every biochemical pathway involved in bone resorption. Cortisol specifically inhibits osteoblast activity, or bone building; it suppresses the production of androgens [male hormones] in the gonads [androgens build bone]; it activates osteoclasts which causes bone to be resorbed faster; it decreases mineral absorption in the gut, so you won’t be absorbing the calcium and magnesium you need to build bone; and it increases renal [kidney] tubule spilling of calcium. Calcium supplementation and alendronate-type drugs used to inhibit bone resorption, such as Fosamax, will always fight a losing battle to high cortisol. I frequently see women reporting continued bone loss, despite use of pharmaceutical bone resorption inhibitors, when salivary cortisol levels are very high.
With saliva testing we see that when people have very high cortisol and low androgens they tend to have bone loss even when their progesterone and estrogen are normal. I see the most bone loss in women who have had a total hysterectomy.
JLML: What is the relationship between cortisol and melatonin, yet another hormone?
DTZ: Cortisol is released from the adrenal glands in a rhythmic pattern throughout the day. It’s high in the morning, which energizes you. If you don’t have enough cortisol in the morning you have a hard time getting out of bed. It’s at its lowest levels at two a.m. when melatonin is high. Melatonin and cortisol are inversely related, so when cortisol is down and melatonin is up you’re regenerating your body.
When your cortisol stays high you also won’t produce enough growth hormone or thyroid-stimulating hormone, which are important anabolic [tissue building] hormones. This is why a good sleep is so important. People with high salivary night cortisol levels are usually complaining of sleep problems.
JLML: What are normal saliva cortisol levels for a perimenopausal woman?
DTZ: At ZRT Laboratory a normal morning saliva hormone level for cortisol for a perimenopausal woman is 3 to 8 ng/mL, and by 10 at night it’s 0.5 to 1.5 ng/mL, which is a big drop. Very early in the morning when you’re in a deep sleep it goes even lower, so if you’re not sleeping properly and resting, your cortisol rhythms will be thrown out of balance. This is where progesterone plays an important role because it’s the only natural hormone that actually competes with cortisol for the glucocorticoid receptors. It can counter the stimulating effects of cortisol at night when you need to be sleeping.
JLML: You’re offering this new technology of blood spot testing which is available to the lay consumer—what is it and what can you test with it?
DTZ: It involves a nearly painless finger prick to get a very small amount of blood that is dried on filter paper and mailed back to us with a completed questionnaire. Right now we can test IGF-1, an index of growth hormone activity, a thyroid panel including TSH, free T3, free T4, and thyroid peroxidase (TPO), FSH and LH. In the next month or so we will launch a male panel, which includes PSA, testosterone, and SHBG.
Originally published in the John R. Lee, M.D. Medical Letter
If you're experiencing the symptoms that Dr. Zava discusses above, you may want to consider having your cortisol levels checked. There are also a number of books available on the subject.
Cortisol is more commonly known as a stress hormone and is produced by the human body’s adrenal glands. It’s reputed that elevated cortisol levels from stressful lifestyles contribute to weight gain, particularly in the abdominal area. Common symptoms of both high and low cortisol levels include anxiety, insomnia, irritability, memory problems, confusion, depression, sugar cravings and body temperature regulation problems such as chills, hot flashes, and night sweats.
Let me share an article I found which explains more...
HOW CORTISOL LEVELS AFFECT THYROID FUNCTION AND AGING
Interview with David Zava, Ph.D.
David Zava, Ph.D. is a biochemist, breast cancer researcher, a much-published author of professional research papers, and the laboratory director of ZRT Laboratory. He is also the co-author of What Your Doctor May Not Tell You About Breast Cancer, and a sought-after speaker on the topic of hormones and saliva hormone testing.
JLML: Cortisol is needed for nearly all dynamic processes in the body, from blood pressure regulation and kidney function, to glucose levels and fat building, muscle building, protein synthesis and immune function. You’ve been specifically studying the effects of cortisol on thyroid function.
DTZ: Yes, one of cortisol’s more important functions is to act in concert or synergy with thyroid hormone at the receptor-gene level. Cortisol makes thyroid work more efficiently. A physiologic amount of cortisol—not too high and not too low—is very important for normal thyroid function, which is why a lot of people who have an imbalance in adrenal cortisol levels usually have thyroid-like symptoms but normal thyroid hormone levels.
JLML: Would you explain this thyroid-cortisol relationship in more detail?
DTZ: One way to understand the synergy of cortisol and thyroid is to think of trying to turn on a big round valve with one hand, as opposed to two hands where you can really grip it and turn it on. Both thyroid and cortisol have to be there in the cells, bound to their respective receptors at normal levels, to efficiently turn the valve on and get gene expression. So, when cortisol levels are low, caused by adrenal exhaustion, thyroid is less efficient at doing its job of increasing energy and metabolic activity.
Every cell in the body has receptors for both cortisol and thyroid and nearly every cellular process requires optimal functioning of thyroid.
JLML: And what happens when cortisol levels get too high?
DTZ: Too much cortisol, again caused by the adrenal glands’ response to excessive stressors, causes the tissues to no longer respond to the thyroid hormone signal. It creates a condition of thyroid resistance, meaning that thyroid hormone levels can be normal, but tissues fail to respond as efficiently to the thyroid signal. This resistance to the thyroid hormone signal caused by high cortisol is not just restricted to thyroid hormone but applies to all other hormones such as insulin, progesterone, estrogens, testosterone, and even cortisol itself. When cortisol gets too high, you start getting resistance from the hormone receptors, and it requires more hormones to create the same effect. That’s why chronic stress, which elevates cortisol levels, makes you feel so rotten—none of the hormones are allowed to work at optimal levels.
Insulin resistance is a classic example. It takes more insulin to drive glucose into the cells when cortisol is high. High cortisol and high insulin, resulting in insulin resistance, are going to cause you to gain weight around the waist because your body will store fat there rather than burn it.
JLML: This would certainly be a significant effect when it comes to creating balanced hormone levels.
DTZ: When cortisol is high the brain also is less sensitive to estrogens. That’s why you can have a postmenopausal woman with reasonable amounts of estrogen, but when you put her under a stressor and her cortisol rises, she’ll get hot flashes, which are a symptom of estrogen deficiency. She really doesn’t have an estrogen deficiency, the brain sensors have just been altered. If you then drive the estrogen levels up with supplementation to treat the hot flashes, she’ll start getting symptoms of estrogen dominance like weight gain in the hips, water retention, and moodiness. And the hot flashes usually don’t go away.
This is why you often can’t effectively treat someone with hormonal imbalance symptoms such as hot flashes by simply adding what seems to be the missing hormone, be it thyroid, progesterone, estrogen or testosterone. If your cortisol is chronically high you’ll have overall resistance to your hormones.
JLML: What percentage of the saliva tests for cortisol are high?
DTZ: I’d say it’s as high as ten to twenty percent, but you have to remember that the population that’s sending in saliva hormone tests tends to have health problems. It also depends on the time of year and what’s happening in the world. I saw a lot of high cortisol in the saliva samples that came in after 9/11. Around the winter holidays, cortisol skyrockets, and then after the holidays it takes a nosedive. The adrenals were keeping pace with the holiday stressors and then they collapse because they’re exhausted. That’s a very common pattern. It’s no different with other stressors like exams or war. Most of us can remember how we made it through the stress of exams only to get sick shortly thereafter. Adequate levels of cortisol are necessary to acutely activate the immune system when we are exposed to viruses and when the adrenals are just too tired to make any more cortisol we are vulnerable to viral infections.
Stress is what both high and low cortisol have in common. Stress hits the adrenals and in response they either collapse in fatigue and do not produce enough stress hormones, resulting in a functional thyroid deficiency, or they can go in the other direction where they’re pouring out cortisol and it’s causing overall hormone resistance, including thyroid resistance. Either way, low or high cortisol, and thyroid hormones become inefficient.
JLML: Let’s talk about the good and bad aspects of cortisol.
DTZ: Most people with cortisol problems, high or low, are in the gray zone, meaning that they are outside of a normal physiological range necessary for optimal health. Cortisol helps maintain blood glucose levels by activating gluconeogenesis, the breakdown of tissue protein to amino acids and then to glucose. That’s a good thing, but not in excess. Too much cortisol, caused by stressors, over a prolonged period of time, results in excessive breakdown of all structural tissues of the body including muscle, bone, skin and brain, causing accelerated aging.
In bones, high cortisol activates nearly every biochemical pathway involved in bone resorption. Cortisol specifically inhibits osteoblast activity, or bone building; it suppresses the production of androgens [male hormones] in the gonads [androgens build bone]; it activates osteoclasts which causes bone to be resorbed faster; it decreases mineral absorption in the gut, so you won’t be absorbing the calcium and magnesium you need to build bone; and it increases renal [kidney] tubule spilling of calcium. Calcium supplementation and alendronate-type drugs used to inhibit bone resorption, such as Fosamax, will always fight a losing battle to high cortisol. I frequently see women reporting continued bone loss, despite use of pharmaceutical bone resorption inhibitors, when salivary cortisol levels are very high.
With saliva testing we see that when people have very high cortisol and low androgens they tend to have bone loss even when their progesterone and estrogen are normal. I see the most bone loss in women who have had a total hysterectomy.
JLML: What is the relationship between cortisol and melatonin, yet another hormone?
DTZ: Cortisol is released from the adrenal glands in a rhythmic pattern throughout the day. It’s high in the morning, which energizes you. If you don’t have enough cortisol in the morning you have a hard time getting out of bed. It’s at its lowest levels at two a.m. when melatonin is high. Melatonin and cortisol are inversely related, so when cortisol is down and melatonin is up you’re regenerating your body.
When your cortisol stays high you also won’t produce enough growth hormone or thyroid-stimulating hormone, which are important anabolic [tissue building] hormones. This is why a good sleep is so important. People with high salivary night cortisol levels are usually complaining of sleep problems.
JLML: What are normal saliva cortisol levels for a perimenopausal woman?
DTZ: At ZRT Laboratory a normal morning saliva hormone level for cortisol for a perimenopausal woman is 3 to 8 ng/mL, and by 10 at night it’s 0.5 to 1.5 ng/mL, which is a big drop. Very early in the morning when you’re in a deep sleep it goes even lower, so if you’re not sleeping properly and resting, your cortisol rhythms will be thrown out of balance. This is where progesterone plays an important role because it’s the only natural hormone that actually competes with cortisol for the glucocorticoid receptors. It can counter the stimulating effects of cortisol at night when you need to be sleeping.
JLML: You’re offering this new technology of blood spot testing which is available to the lay consumer—what is it and what can you test with it?
DTZ: It involves a nearly painless finger prick to get a very small amount of blood that is dried on filter paper and mailed back to us with a completed questionnaire. Right now we can test IGF-1, an index of growth hormone activity, a thyroid panel including TSH, free T3, free T4, and thyroid peroxidase (TPO), FSH and LH. In the next month or so we will launch a male panel, which includes PSA, testosterone, and SHBG.
Originally published in the John R. Lee, M.D. Medical Letter
If you're experiencing the symptoms that Dr. Zava discusses above, you may want to consider having your cortisol levels checked. There are also a number of books available on the subject.
Labels:
cortisol imbalance,
fitness,
health,
stress
One Life - it's time to LIVE IT (Pt 1)...Where'd my Mojo Go?
For ages (several years in fact) I've been bitching about not having the same energy I used to have. Add to that picking up EVERY virus that's going around (x 10), and taking even more anti biotics that just don't seem to do too much (I've taken more anti biotics in the last 2 years than I have over my entire life), Not to mention being excessively moody, not sleeping and you begin to understand why I started to investigate what was happening to me! My body felt like a toxic waste dump. The body might be 48, but I just wasn't ready to accept "old age" as a way of life.
I look at ladies my age and older who look absolutely amazing. People like Madonna (53), Sex and the City's Kim Catrall (55), not to mention Elle McPherson (aka The Body) is 48 and only 2 days younger than me. Not only do they look AMAZING, but they have energy, drive and a glow that I seem to have misplaced somewhere. Now I appreciate that money can buy the best of everything - the best personal trainers, the best plastic surgeons etc, but jeez...I WANT WHAT THEY HAVE, and Goddamnit, I'm gonna find it!!!!!
So...where to start?
As I said, I've been bitching about my health for ages. I've been to the doctor more times than I can count, only to be told to take a "good Multi Vitamin" - oh and maybe you've got a Thyroid problem. Go get a Thyroid test (for the 3rd time). Did this! Same test, same result - Negative! Back to the multi-vitamin theory.
Thank God for my good mate Sharon in Melbourne, who also happens to be a Naturopath. On a quick visit to her she INSISTED on doing a thumb prick test and looking at what was really happening with my body. She noted that I was dehydrated (yep I'm guilty of not drinking enough water) and then she asked me a question...when was the last time I had a blood test? Answer - about 19 years ago when I was pregnant with my last child. Her reply: Hmmm, maybe you should get your iron levels tested. DERRRR! Why didn't I think of that - and more importantly why didn't the Doctor? That one question prompted me to start re-thinking.
Soon after this "earth shattering DERRR" moment, I fell over an article in a women's health magazine about CORTISOL and how it can affect your thyroid. Mmmmm - interesting! The doctor's been saying I have a Goiter (enlarged adams apple) and that's what happens when you have a Thyroid problem. Maybe there's something to this Cortisol thing.
A few months later I was visiting a new massage therapist for a shoulder problem. He gave me an absolute going-over (but it worked a treat) - but I noticed something really weird. He'd used a range of different massage tchniques including Shiatzu, Trigger Point and Lymphatic Drainage and on the way home I looked in the rear view mirror to see if there was any bruising around my neck, and OMG my Goiter has GOOOONE! What the???? I got home and asked Graham (husband) to look at my neck/throat. He was blown away. This incident prompted me to ask Mr Google some different questions about Lymphatic Drainage and Thyroid, with some interesting results. That word CORTISOL had popped up again.
Read more about Cortisol in Part 2 of this story - The Cortisol Connection.
I look at ladies my age and older who look absolutely amazing. People like Madonna (53), Sex and the City's Kim Catrall (55), not to mention Elle McPherson (aka The Body) is 48 and only 2 days younger than me. Not only do they look AMAZING, but they have energy, drive and a glow that I seem to have misplaced somewhere. Now I appreciate that money can buy the best of everything - the best personal trainers, the best plastic surgeons etc, but jeez...I WANT WHAT THEY HAVE, and Goddamnit, I'm gonna find it!!!!!
So...where to start?
As I said, I've been bitching about my health for ages. I've been to the doctor more times than I can count, only to be told to take a "good Multi Vitamin" - oh and maybe you've got a Thyroid problem. Go get a Thyroid test (for the 3rd time). Did this! Same test, same result - Negative! Back to the multi-vitamin theory.
Thank God for my good mate Sharon in Melbourne, who also happens to be a Naturopath. On a quick visit to her she INSISTED on doing a thumb prick test and looking at what was really happening with my body. She noted that I was dehydrated (yep I'm guilty of not drinking enough water) and then she asked me a question...when was the last time I had a blood test? Answer - about 19 years ago when I was pregnant with my last child. Her reply: Hmmm, maybe you should get your iron levels tested. DERRRR! Why didn't I think of that - and more importantly why didn't the Doctor? That one question prompted me to start re-thinking.
Soon after this "earth shattering DERRR" moment, I fell over an article in a women's health magazine about CORTISOL and how it can affect your thyroid. Mmmmm - interesting! The doctor's been saying I have a Goiter (enlarged adams apple) and that's what happens when you have a Thyroid problem. Maybe there's something to this Cortisol thing.
A few months later I was visiting a new massage therapist for a shoulder problem. He gave me an absolute going-over (but it worked a treat) - but I noticed something really weird. He'd used a range of different massage tchniques including Shiatzu, Trigger Point and Lymphatic Drainage and on the way home I looked in the rear view mirror to see if there was any bruising around my neck, and OMG my Goiter has GOOOONE! What the???? I got home and asked Graham (husband) to look at my neck/throat. He was blown away. This incident prompted me to ask Mr Google some different questions about Lymphatic Drainage and Thyroid, with some interesting results. That word CORTISOL had popped up again.
Read more about Cortisol in Part 2 of this story - The Cortisol Connection.
Labels:
cortisol imbalance,
fitness,
health,
stress
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