Thyroid Autoimmune Lab Tests
Autoimmune disease is defined as a 'Hyper-immune' attack on self-tissue as the immune system attacks an enemy that cannot or will not die.
There tends to be an unnecessary mystery around auto-immune disorders and like many named diagnoses, we are sometimes lead to believe they are curses we have inherited from our ancestors or unexplainable phenomena that have no known cure. I will try to refute such myths and shed a bit of light on disease in general so that the average person on the street may better understand management of their own condition.
In 25 years of practice, I’ve seen the failings of both models and have experienced my share of disappointments in attempting to give patients a fuller life. Quite simply, both models do not work. In my quest to find a solution for the tremendous suffering that autoimmune conditions bring upon their victims, I first had to admit that what I was doing just did not work. It was so frustrating; my brain could not rest and my mind would not be at ease. Though I take no credit of my own in the methods of correction this book will lay out, I am ecstatic over the hundreds of patients I have been able to help since discovering the solution. The “solution” to treating patients with autoimmune disease lies in understanding the mechanism. The mechanism assumes knowledge of biochemistry, anatomy, physiology and neurology.
I simply stand on the shoulders of the many far more intellectual than I who have paved the way to help those in need. My hope is that this book brings true HOPE to those who have suffered too long!
The difference between Hashimoto’s and Graves’ is that Graves Disease always expresses itself as hyperthyroidism and Hashimoto’s patients are more typically hypothyroid; though they can experience some hyperthyroid symptoms like those listed above, more often those symptoms stem from subsequent adrenal dysfunction happening concurrently. Hashimoto’s patients ultimately experience hypothyroid symptoms which we have and will discuss in more detail.
Unfortunately, in the current healthcare system, these people typically don’t get evaluated from an autoimmune perspective, which may be a hidden blessing since the traditional medical approach to autoimmune disorders is currently quite barbaric.
Hashimoto’s disease is far more common than Graves but both are autoimmune, i.e., caused by an immune attack against the tissue; they just have different outcomes. If you can understand the mechanism of the Hashimoto’s immune attack, then you can equate much of it to all autoimmune disorders.
We first need to address the mechanism involved. All autoimmune diseases may have some type of genotypic component, i.e., there may be a latent gene that the individual has carried in an unexpressed state for a period of years until some ‘event’ that triggered a immune response suddenly ‘turned on’ the gene. If this exists, and the autoimmune disease truly has genetic components, the practitioner’s job is to rightly manage the patient to diminish the immune response and calming the attack.
Once a gene is expressed, it will always stay ‘turned on’. We will walk you through procedures to keep it ‘calmed down’ to stop the destruction mode. Other processes can ‘turn on’ an autoimmune attack like environmental compounds, some types of endocrine imbalance, toxic chemical exposures, abnormal stress responses, antigen responses, as well as the person’s preexisting genotype. So, the combination of all these things and some genetic susceptibility leads to an autoimmune disorder.
The autoimmune response is an inflammatory response, which produces chemicals called cytokines, which are part of the body’s natural defense system against outside invaders. The body’s immune system may be separated into a Th1 and a Th2 response. The Th1 response may be thought of as the police force, the body’s initial strike force against an invader or what is called an antigen. When an antigen is present, the Th1 system fires and kills the virus; should the bug be of a nasty persuasion and strong enough to resist the Th1 response, the Th2 system kicks in, creates antibodies against the virus, tagging them so appropriate white blood cells can finish them off. A person with an autoimmune disease has this process stuck in the ‘on’ position, either hyper-Th1 or hyper-Th2, which prolonged, destroys the tissue where the antigen is recognized.
Hence, both the traditional medical and the traditional alternative models of care are doomed to failure. The most important battle to fight is to calm down their immune response and stop the destruction.


