Endogenous hormonePrescription therapy existsRequires monitoring
Thyroid hormones set the body's metabolic rate, affecting energy, weight, mood, temperature, and heart rate. Thyroid problems are common and treatable.
The thyroid gland produces T4 and T3, regulated by TSH from the pituitary. Together they set metabolic rate — influencing energy, body weight, temperature, mood, skin, hair, and heart rate. Both underactive (hypothyroid) and overactive (hyperthyroid) states are common and well-characterized.
Thyroid status is assessed by blood tests — typically TSH first, then free T4 and free T3, plus thyroid antibodies when autoimmune disease is suspected. Interpretation is clinical, not a single number.
Hypothyroidism is commonly and effectively treated with thyroid hormone replacement under a provider, with dose guided by labs and symptoms. Hyperthyroidism has its own established treatments. Both require diagnosis and monitoring.
Fatigue, weight change, temperature intolerance, or mood changes warrant thyroid evaluation by a licensed provider.
Usually TSH, often with free T4; free T3 and antibodies are added based on the picture.
Yes — an underactive thyroid commonly does, which is why testing is worthwhile when symptoms persist.
If you'd like help applying this information to your own health, schedule a consultation with the Bearing team.
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