The body temperature is a result of the thyroid stimulation
of the cells. Trying to manage a patient on thyroid medicine using only thyroid
blood tests as a guide is a little like trying to write your name with a floppy
pencil.
Thyroid blood tests measure the hormone levels in the
blood
stream. Thyroid hormones do not have their activity in the blood stream, however,
but in the
cells of the body.
Currently, there is no way to measure directly
what is happening outside the confines of the blood stream, especially at the
level of the
nuclear membrane receptors.
Body temperature patterns correlate far better with a person's
low thyroid symptoms, than do thyroid
blood tests, because rather than
trying to estimate what might happen at the cell, they better reflect what has
happened in the cells of the body.
Note: Imagine you were trying to write your name with
a rubber pencil that was 3 feet long, while holding the end away from the point.
You could press down, but it might wiggle this way, or that, and be hard to
manage. But if you held it down by the point, you'd have a lot better chance
of being able to read your name when you were done. Likewise, when doctors make
sure T4 levels look about right on the blood tests, that T4 may get converted
to T3 (which is 4 times more active than T4), or it might get converted to RT3
which is totally inactive. How much goes one way or the other can change readily
(on the order of days or perhaps even hours) depending on the circumstances.
Managing patients while
taking body temperature patterns into account
is like holding the pencil down by the point.
Although it is common practice, it is not proper to give thyroid
medicine without regard to body
temperature patterns. Body temperature
patterns are what correlate the best with the symptoms.
Evaluation or management that does
not take body temperature
patterns into account could not be considered thorough or conscientious.