Does Thyroid Medication Boost Performance?

Amozoc

Veteran
Aug 6, 2016
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At least fifteen Olympic Gold Medals, including nine from Carl Lewis, were won by athletes using thyroid medication. But it’s not just fast-twitch athletes using the drug – Ryan Hall, the marathoner also has a prescription for it, as do elite distance runners Galen Rupp and Bob Kennedy. The U.S. Anti-Doping Agency as well as U.K. Anti-Doping requested that The World Anti-Doping Agency issue a ban on thyroid medication because they believe it is being used by athletes to increase performance by speeding recovery.
But currently (as of 2016), thyroid medication isn’t banned by any doping agencies – though it does raise the question, since it’s a drug being widely used by so many top level athletes, is it actually a performance enhancer?
First, let’s take a look at what the thyroid is, and what it does…
Your thyroid is a vascular structure that basically looks like a butterfly wrapped around your windpipe – two lobes connected by a broad central isthmus, with the “wings” spreading over and wrapping around your larynx and trachea.

Hormone-wise, we’re concerned with two: the first is thyroxine (T4) and the second is triiodothyronine (T3). Thyroxine is generally considered the inactive thyroid hormone and needs to be converted to T3 to have the (usually) desired physiological effect. . This is done by deiodinase enzymes, of which there are 3 types – D1 and D2, which initiate the conversion of T4 to T3, plus D3, which is involved in the deactivation process.
Circulating T3 is derived from the thyroid gland and by enzymatic deiodination of T4 in liver and kidney.
So how would it be possible for these hormones to help boost performance? Well, if your thyroid isn’t functioning properly, and not producing enough active hormone (called hypothyroidism), you might feel fatigued or depressed, and possibly gain fat. Basically, if you think the usual symptoms of overtraining, that’s what it feels like when you have a lowered thyroid – and intense training has been linked to a decrease in T3 through a lowered conversion rate of T4.(1)
Thyroid hormones are also thought to be closely involved in training adaptations as well as metabolic control (2). That first part is self-explanatory – training adaptations are the way your body copes with training – by getting stronger or whatever the specific training stimulus causes by way of response. The second part relates to the fact that thyroid hormones regulate macronutrient metabolism (carbohydrates, fats, and proteins). Thyroid hormone also serves to increase the rate at which cells release energy from carbs, enhance the anabolic effects of protein (synthesis), and mobilize fats for use as energy.
In 1982, researchers performed a study on 29 healthy female runners who had been putting in about 14 training miles per week. First, they tested their thyroid hormones, then had them basically double their mileage (an attempt to produce overtraining symptoms through increasing volume too rapidly). After the women increased their mileage, they were retested, and it was found that their thyroid levels were impaired. Two years later, a follow up showed these same women running 50 miles per week, with no thyroid impairment. (3) So it likely wasn’t the mileage per se, it was the sudden jump in volume.
But that’s exactly what overtraining is – when you reach beyond where your body has been equipped to function, and do so for an extended period of time. I’m not saying that using thyroid medication can prevent overtraining, but it’s likely to be a piece of the puzzle.

Research in this area is lacking, and while numerous studies have confirmed a degree of correlation between a lowered thyroid and overtraining, there is a chicken/egg dilemma here, and we can’t be 100% certain what’s happening in terms of causation. There also haven’t been any studies that have specifically examined the use of thyroid hormone (either T3 or T4) and its effects on training.
What happens if you start giving an athlete thyroid medication? We know that bodybuilders use it for their contest preparation, and that it helps get rid of fat – but they’re probably using it in doses that athletes don’t need. Plus, there are pretty severs consequences for over-medication with thyroid drugs, like fatigue, weakness, decreased sleep quality…basically, once again, we’re talking about a ton of symptoms that are associated with overtraining. In precontest bodybuilders, we see these symptoms quite regularly, but they’re able to push through them with copious amounts of anabolic agents and other pharmaceuticals.


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Even if you are using HGH and not taking T4 you are wasting your money and time


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There's a sponsor on here who has a t3/t4 tab that has 100mc of t4 and 20mc t3 is that to much t4 to take a day and is that enough t3 to take because I thought 25mcg of t3 was a replacement dose
 
There's a sponsor on here who has a t3/t4 tab that has 100mc of t4 and 20mc t3 is that to much t4 to take a day and is that enough t3 to take because I thought 25mcg of t3 was a replacement dose

Inam waiting international order of t4 but if its takes a lot of time maybe will be good idea get it domestic could you give me please the sponsor name ? Thanks


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Its where i am waiting for. Number 1 source of Pharma products


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Its where i am waiting for. Number 1 source of Pharma products


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Thank you :) My NOVOTHYRAL combo is a very good products that I recommend to anyone needing T3. T3 is no longer used by itself anywhere in Europe in medical treatment protocols because its more effective in this combo.

Best Regards
 
So guys is it better to run T4 by itself at 100 mcg a day higher? or is it better to run T3 and T4 together and if so what are the best doses
 
So guys is it better to run T4 by itself at 100 mcg a day higher? or is it better to run T3 and T4 together and if so what are the best doses

T3 and T4
The full name of T3 is triiodothyronine, and T4's full name is tetraiodothyronine or thyroxine. T3 and T4 control your body's metabolism. If you don't have enough of them, then your metabolism slows down. Your metabolic rate dictates how quickly you process food, how fast your heart beats, how much heat your body creates—and even how quickly you can think. In essence, T3 and T4 are in charge of how your body uses energy.

T3 and T4 are not equal in strength; T3 is the more active hormone of the two. While T3 is stronger, taking synthetic T4 hormone is considered the standard treatment for hypothyroidism. The reason for this is because most of the T3 in our bodies actually used to be T4. When T4 hormones come into contact with other cells in the bloodstream, they give up an iodine atom to interact with those cells. When T4 loses an iodine atom, it becomes T3.

When this T4 into T3 conversion occurs, T3 then conveys the metabolic "message" to the other cells throughout the body. The benefit of taking only T4 therapy is that you're allowing your body to perform some of the actions it is meant to do, which is taking T4 and changing it into T3. The half life of T4 is also longer compared to T3 (7 days versus 24 hours), that means that it will stay for a longer time in your body after ingestion.


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T3 and T4
The full name of T3 is triiodothyronine, and T4's full name is tetraiodothyronine or thyroxine. T3 and T4 control your body's metabolism. If you don't have enough of them, then your metabolism slows down. Your metabolic rate dictates how quickly you process food, how fast your heart beats, how much heat your body creates—and even how quickly you can think. In essence, T3 and T4 are in charge of how your body uses energy.

T3 and T4 are not equal in strength; T3 is the more active hormone of the two. While T3 is stronger, taking synthetic T4 hormone is considered the standard treatment for hypothyroidism. The reason for this is because most of the T3 in our bodies actually used to be T4. When T4 hormones come into contact with other cells in the bloodstream, they give up an iodine atom to interact with those cells. When T4 loses an iodine atom, it becomes T3.

When this T4 into T3 conversion occurs, T3 then conveys the metabolic "message" to the other cells throughout the body. The benefit of taking only T4 therapy is that you're allowing your body to perform some of the actions it is meant to do, which is taking T4 and changing it into T3. The half life of T4 is also longer compared to T3 (7 days versus 24 hours), that means that it will stay for a longer time in your body after ingestion.


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What's your protocol on t4 when running hgh
 
Just 100 mcg everyday first thing in the morning empty stomach


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