Depression and Thyroid
Hormones
by Gabe
Mirkin, M.D.
zone3
If you are tired or depressed much of the time, your doctor should
order blood tests for the two thyroid hormones called T3 and T4 and for
the brain hormones called TSH and prolactin. If your TSH is high and your
prolactin is normal, you are probably hypothyroid and need to take thyroid
hormone to give you more energy and prevent heart and blood vessel
damage.
Doctors treat people with low thyroid function with thyroid pills
called T4 (Levothroid, one brand name is Synthroid). Many doctors think
that a person needs only T4 because the thyroid gland makes T4 and then it
is converted to T3 in other tissues. However, some people become depressed
when they take just T4 and their depression can be cured when they take
both thyroid hormones, T3 and T4.
When a depressed patient comes to me and is taking thyroid hormone, T4,
I immediately order a blood test called TSH to check if he or she is
getting the correct dose. If the TSH is normal, I reduce the dose of T4 by
50% and add a very low dose of T3 (brand name, Cytomel) because it safer
to prescribe too low a dose, rather than too high a dose. Overdoses cause
shakiness, irritability, irregular heart beats, clots, and osteoporosis.
The patient returns in one month for a blood test, TSH, to see if the
total thyroid dose is correct. If the TSH is too high, the thyroid dose is
too low and I raise the T3 (Cytomel) dose by 5 to 10 m5 each month until
the TSH is normal. Then once a year I check TSH blood levels to make sure
that the person's requirements for thyroid hormone are being met.
For example, the usual replacement dose for low thyroid function is 100
micrograms per day. If a depressed patient has a normal TSH, I reduce the
T4 dose to 50 mcg/day and add 5 mcg of T3 per day. One month later, if the
TSH blood is still too high I raise the T3 dose to 10 or 20 mcg and
continue to increase the T3 level each month until the TSH is normal.
Exciting research shows that the thyroid hormone called T3 can help
treat depression. Psychotherapy often fails to control depression. Sigmund
Freud, the father of psychotherapy, proposed theories about depression,
that many psychiatrists do not accept because his writings were his
opinions and not presented as scientific data supported by controlled
experiments. The dominant theory today is that depression is caused by low
brain levels of the neurotransmitters, serotonin and norepinephrine.
The drugs such as Paxil, Prozac and Zoloft that treat depression are
supposed to raise brain levels of these neurotransmitters. Doctors can
also raise brain levels of serotonin by prescribing pills containing T3, a
hormone produced by peripheral tissue from T4, which is produced by the
thyroid gland. They also prescribe T3 by itself or together with
antidepressants. Depression is common among people who have too much or
too little thyroid hormone. Doctors usually treat low thyroid function
with T4 also known as Levothroid and many people become even more
depressed. They treat this depression by prescribing T3 as well as T4.
Try to balance T3 and T4 so you will not be taking too much thyroid and
harm yourself. 1)If you now take 100 mcg of Levothroid (T4): 2) Lower T4
(Levothroid) to 50 mcg and add Cytomel (T3) 5 mcg each day. 3) One month
later, have your doctor draw blood for TSH. 4) If it is normal, you are on
the correct dose and should get blood tests TSH once a year. 5) If TSH is
too high, increase Cytomel to 10 mcg and hold Levothroid at 50. 6) Draw
monthly TSH until it is normal. Keep on raising Cytomel by 5 mcg until TSH
is normal.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Depression Related Articles:
Why Some Women are Desperate
Recognizing Acute Stress
Depression: A Treatable Illness
8 Things You Can Do For Someone Suffering from Depression
Anxiety and Depression Treatment - 5 Tips for Beating Depression
Midlife: Single & Depressed? Try Dancing
How to Cope With Stress and Anxiety
Omega 3 EPA: Nature’s Very Own Anti-Depressant
Stop Your Destructive Inner Voice
The Scoop on Stress
|