Adrenal fatigue blog 25/02/2009
27.February, 2009
Is Stress Slowing Down Your Thyroid?
23.February, 2009
Got thyroid problems? Symptoms may include:
* Intolerance to cold
* Always cold
* Weight gain
* Lethargy
* Dry skin
* Slow speech
* Swelling of eyelids
* Thick tongue
* Impaired memory
* Constipation
* Much more…
Stress may be the ROOT CAUSE of your hypothyroid condition. Have your adrenal glands assessed via saliva testing.
For more info: http://undergroundwellness.com/hormone_balancing.php
Contact sean@undergroundwellness.com for your FREE consultation.
http://www.undergroundwellness.com
Duration : 0:7:34
Cortisol Connection (Burn fat, stop pain)
21.February, 2009
Learn why elevated cortisol hormone levels and Adrenal Fatigue can cause weight gain and pain. Testing via Saliva. You will not be able to burn fat if you have high cortisol.
Duration : 0:6:30
Dr Larson hypoglycemia, her own experience
19.February, 2009
Hypoglycemia can cause all kinds of symptoms many of which feel like a psychiatric disorder.
This according to Stephen Gyland, MD who he, himself, had suffered the devastating effects of hypoglycemia, had sought medical treatment, but was misdiagnosed and mistreated.
Hi, this is Larry Hobbs @ fatnews.com.
A few of these symptoms include:
Nervousness
Irritability
Exhaustion
Faintness, dizziness,
Depression
Vertigo,
Drowsiness
Headaches
Digestive problems
Forgetfulness
Insomnia
Constant worrying / Unprovoked anxieties
and many more which are I listed in another video on this subject.
Joan Mathews Larson, PhD, who has been treating people with addictions, anxiety and depression with natural supplements for 30 years, notes that she experienced this herself and was misdiagnosed and mistreated.
Let me read from her wonderful website, HealthRecovery.com, which, I believe, is taken from her book, “Depression-Free”.
Hypoglycemia is a word many doctors hate.
Some doctors call it a FAD disease and refuse to do the lab tests necessary to prove or disprove your suspicions.
I have never been able to figure out this block in their scientific thinking,
especially because the American Medical Association awarded its “Distinguished Medal of Honor” for the discovery of hypoglycemia to Seale Harris M.D. in 1929.
At that time the sugar intake in the United States was modest.
Now we are averaging one hundred forty pounds per year, per person and our carbohydrate sensitive (hypoglycemic) population is at an all time high.
My own interest in this metabolic disorder is experiential.
As a busy young wife and mother of three, I skipped meals and snacked on cookies and mugs of coffee all day long for energy.
Eventually I began to get “spells” of light-headedness.
I felt anxious and jumpy.
By early evening, I hardly had enough go-power to make supper before collapsing.
Finally, I saw several different physicians seeking answers.
None asked me how I was eating.
Instead I was given assorted prescriptions for tranquilizers and anti-anxiety drugs that only made me feel worse.
One internist told me I needed cortisone.
His high dose prescription sent me to the medical section of the public library for more facts.
I discovered I could expect cortisone to bestow a moon-face, a buffalo hump on my upper shoulders
and very unstable mental state.
As my original symptoms were still with me, I quickly discontinued the prescription.
At that point, this same medical doctor called my husband to advise him that, if I would not continue his prescription, I should see a psychiatrist.
Fortunately, by that time I had found a book on hypoglycemia by an endocrinologist, Dr. John Tintera.
As he described the symptoms of unstable glucose metabolism and its corresponding adrenal exhaustion, I felt like I was reading my own autobiography.
His message was clear:
no more cookies, sweet snacks, or caffeine.
Clean up my act or the medical doctors would have me drugged up and miserable.
I know how hard it is to get off refined sugars with no support.
It’s a miserable struggle!
But just at that time in my life, my husband died suddenly from a heart attack.
I knew then I had to have a clear head and some energy to support three young children alone.
The chips were down!
I found another M.D. who himself was hypoglycemic and he agreed to test me.
My glucose level soared into the diabetic range and then dropped like a roller coaster down to insulin-shock levels.
I was trying to read during this six-hour test, and after three hours I kept rereading the same lines over and over with no comprehension.
The insight that lab test gave me, saved me from becoming a life-long diabetic.
I immediately took the refined sugars out of my cupboards and my mouth.
Slowly my lightheadedness faded and my energy returned.
My shakiness and loss of concentration disappeared.
At a time when I had to work, go back to college, and raise my family simultaneously, my brain was up to the task.
It seemed like a miracle.
For 30 years, Joan Mathews Larson, PhD has been treating addiction, anxiety and depression with natural supplements in order to correct the underlying biochemical problems which cause these conditions.
Dr. Larson is the author of “7 Weeks to Sobriety”, “Depression Free”, and “7 Weeks to Emotional Healing”.
Duration : 0:6:1
Achieving Optimal Health through Natural Medicine (Part 2)
19.February, 2009
http://www.DrAieta.com/ Dr. Frank Aieta is a Naturopathic Physician with a private practice in West Hartford Connecticut. He is an expert in the treatment of chronic disease through the use of natural medicine. Dr. Aieta specializes in acupuncture, clinical nutrition, physical medicine, botanical medicine, homeopathic medicine and the use of bio-identical hormones.
Duration : 0:9:43
The devastating effects of hypoglycemia, Dr. Larson’s own experience
17.February, 2009
Hypoglycemia can cause all kinds of symptoms many of which feel like a psychiatric disorder.
This according to Stephen Gyland, MD who he, himself, had suffered the devastating effects of hypoglycemia, had sought medical treatment, but was misdiagnosed and mistreated.
Hi, this is Larry Hobbs @ fatnews.com.
A few of these symptoms include:
Nervousness
Irritability
Exhaustion
Faintness, dizziness,
Depression
Vertigo,
Drowsiness
Headaches
Digestive problems
Forgetfulness
Insomnia
Constant worrying / Unprovoked anxieties
and many more which are I listed in another video on this subject.
Joan Mathews Larson, PhD, who has been treating people with addictions, anxiety and depression with natural supplements for 30 years, notes that she experienced this herself and was misdiagnosed and mistreated.
Let me read from her wonderful website, HealthRecovery.com, which, I believe, is taken from her book, “Depression-Free”.
Hypoglycemia is a word many doctors hate.
Some doctors call it a FAD disease and refuse to do the lab tests necessary to prove or disprove your suspicions.
I have never been able to figure out this block in their scientific thinking,
especially because the American Medical Association awarded its “Distinguished Medal of Honor” for the discovery of hypoglycemia to Seale Harris M.D. in 1929.
At that time the sugar intake in the United States was modest.
Now we are averaging one hundred forty pounds per year, per person and our carbohydrate sensitive (hypoglycemic) population is at an all time high.
My own interest in this metabolic disorder is experiential.
As a busy young wife and mother of three, I skipped meals and snacked on cookies and mugs of coffee all day long for energy.
Eventually I began to get “spells” of light-headedness.
I felt anxious and jumpy.
By early evening, I hardly had enough go-power to make supper before collapsing.
Finally, I saw several different physicians seeking answers.
None asked me how I was eating.
Instead I was given assorted prescriptions for tranquilizers and anti-anxiety drugs that only made me feel worse.
One internist told me I needed cortisone.
His high dose prescription sent me to the medical section of the public library for more facts.
I discovered I could expect cortisone to bestow a moon-face, a buffalo hump on my upper shoulders
and very unstable mental state.
As my original symptoms were still with me, I quickly discontinued the prescription.
At that point, this same medical doctor called my husband to advise him that, if I would not continue his prescription, I should see a psychiatrist.
Fortunately, by that time I had found a book on hypoglycemia by an endocrinologist, Dr. John Tintera.
As he described the symptoms of unstable glucose metabolism and its corresponding adrenal exhaustion, I felt like I was reading my own autobiography.
His message was clear:
no more cookies, sweet snacks, or caffeine.
Clean up my act or the medical doctors would have me drugged up and miserable.
I know how hard it is to get off refined sugars with no support.
It’s a miserable struggle!
But just at that time in my life, my husband died suddenly from a heart attack.
I knew then I had to have a clear head and some energy to support three young children alone.
The chips were down!
I found another M.D. who himself was hypoglycemic and he agreed to test me.
My glucose level soared into the diabetic range and then dropped like a roller coaster down to insulin-shock levels.
I was trying to read during this six-hour test, and after three hours I kept rereading the same lines over and over with no comprehension.
The insight that lab test gave me, saved me from becoming a life-long diabetic.
I immediately took the refined sugars out of my cupboards and my mouth.
Slowly my lightheadedness faded and my energy returned.
My shakiness and loss of concentration disappeared.
At a time when I had to work, go back to college, and raise my family simultaneously, my brain was up to the task.
It seemed like a miracle.
For 30 years, Joan Mathews Larson, PhD has been treating addiction, anxiety and depression with natural supplements in order to correct the underlying biochemical problems which cause these conditions.
Dr. Larson is the author of “7 Weeks to Sobriety”, “Depression Free”, and “7 Weeks to Emotional Healing”.
Duration : 0:6:1
Dr. Center BodyLogicMD San Diego on why most doctors do not prescribe bioidentical hormones
17.February, 2009
Dr. Stephen Center BodyLogicMD San Diego Explains why traditional doctors do not prescribe bioidentical hormones.
Duration : 0:1:28
Adrenal gland - Free one liners : FPGEE NAPLEX Test Preparation Guide
15.February, 2009
Use our free FPGEE Test practice test questions to help you study for the FPGEE Test. Review free material for the exam so that you’ll be prepared when you take your test. FPGEE Exam Study Guide Reviews FPGEE Test Prep Tips - Improve Foreign Pharmacy Graduate Equivalency Examination (FPGEE) Score Results - Answer FPGEE Test Course Sample Practice Test Questions with FPGEE Secrets - Go Stress Free from FPGEE Test Registration to FPGEE Test Date. How to raise your FPGEE Exam score with just a few hours of study. Written by test taking experts. Guaranteed. FPGEE Test study guide reviews FPGEE Exam prep tips. Improve FPGEE score results. Answer Foreign Pharmacy Graduate Equivalency Examination (FPGEE) course sample practice test questions with FPGEE Secrets. Go stress free from FPGEE Test registration to FPGEE Test date
Adrenal Gland
Free One liners from
all-exams.com
Adrenal cortex is originated from
Mesoderm
Adrenal medulla is originated from
Medula
Write down the different anatomy partS of adrenal part ?
Capsule
Zone glomerulosa
Zone faciculata
Zone reticularis
Medula
Which part of adrenal gland produce aldosterone ?
Zone glomerulosa
Controlled by renin angiotension
Which part of adrenal gland produce cortisol and sex hormone ?
Zone fasiculatis
F = FSH
Who regulates the secretion of aldosterone ?
ACTH
Hypothalamic CRH
What is the function of zone reticularis ?
Release of sex hormones (androgens)
Which part of adrenal gland produce catecholamine ?
Medulla
Which is controlled by sympathetic nerves
Reference
Source: These liners are copied from all-exams.com with permission
DO NOT VIOLATE THE COPYRIGHT RULE OF ALL-EXAMS.COM
Duration : 0:0:39
re: Juice Feasting & Fastinggurl31
15.February, 2009
Video response to fastinggurl31’s experience running the juice feast gauntlet.
Duration : 0:7:29
Part 2 of my adrenal fatigue recovery blog
Using Dr Wilson’s Adrenal protocol