The case report we present here was originally published
in 1995. The case study was not blinded, but it was highly systematic.
Three clinicians (a neuropsychiatrist; a physical therapist; and myself,
a chiropractic physician) working in our separate clinical practices in
different locations, evaluated the patient using objective measures. The
data that I presented in the report of this case report fifteen years
ago, and again now, was collected by the three
independent clinicians each of whom worked simultaneously with the patient.
This systematic single case shows three noteworthy features of the
patient: First, she was hypothyroid; second, she met the American College of Rheumatology criteria for fibromyalgia; and
third, she no longer met those criteria and fully recovered when we
switched her to T3 therapy after T4 and
desiccated thyroid had failed to benefit her. It is worth emphasizing
that the patient continued to meet the criteria
for fibromyalgia when being treated with T4 (Synthroid) and then with
desiccated thyroid (Armour). However, she quickly and dramatically
recovered—no longer meeting the criteria for fibromyalgia—when we
switched her treatment to plain T3 (Cytomel) with her daily dose well within the physiologic range.
I asked that Thyroid Science republish this case report for two
reasons: First, many people have requested reprints of the original case
report. To get reprints, these patients and clinicians had to contact my office.
The reason is that the
paper is no longer available online or in an accessible journal. In
1996, McDowell Publishing Company, LLC, who owned the journal that first
published the report, sold the journal to Haworth Medical Press. The latter
publisher, however, did not make available the journal issue that the case report
had been published
in. Thyroid Science's open-access republishing of the paper now
makes it perpetually available to anyone who finds its contents of
interest.
My second reason for asking that Thyroid Science
republish the report is the utter failure of fibromyalgia researchers in
general to open their eyes to an obvious truth: that inadequate
thyroid hormone regulation is the main underlying mechanisms of most
patients so-called fibromyalgia. That I say that this is an obvious
truth does not mean that all cases of fibromyalgia are easily solved
simply by treating treating the patient with the proper form and dosage
of thyroid hormone. As my colleague David Derry, MD, long ago pointed
out in the British Journal of Medicine, living long years with untreated
or undertreated hypothyroidism causes most patients to accrue secondary,
tertiary, and other health complications that also must be disentangled
from the enlarging clinical knot that further encumbers the patients.
That a patient's fibromyaliga is long-standing usually means that
successful recovery is a more complicated process.
Nonetheless, deductively formulated theory (the
mathematical physicist's tool of victory that is absent from the
intellectual armamentarium of the fibromyalgia establishment) shows
unequivocally that the main underlying mechanism of fibromyalgia is too
little thyroid hormone regulation. The inadequate thyroid hypothesis accounts for virtually
all objective evidence we have on fibromyalgia. In stark contrast,
no other hypothesis accounts for more than a minute
fraction. Ignoring this fact forsakes fibromyalgia patients the world
over, but it brings in a king's ransom from the purchase of ineffective
and potentially harmful "fibromyalgia drugs" such as Lyrica and Cymbalta.
Why do fibromyalgia researchers in general ignore the obvious? Through
more than two decades of involvement in this field, I have learned a list of disreputable
reasons: prejudice against the possibility of a causative thyroid
connection, ignorance of basic and clinical thyroidology, egotistical pursuit of
failed pet theories, and corruption through acceptance of
judgment-forming grants and other perks from Big Pharma to develop drugs for fibromyalgia that are
palliative at best and harmful at worst.
Despite many prominent fibromyalgia researchers claiming to be pursuing
the underlying mechanism(s) of what we call fibromyalgia, they look
everywhere but in the right direction. But while the researchers have
spent decades looking in all the wrong directions, countless fibromyalgia
patients—such as the female I describe in the case report—have recovered
full health by the intelligent use of thyroid hormone as part of a
comprehensive program of metabolic rehabilitation. Many have
accomplished this by taking their health care into their own hands,
while others have had the help of enlightened and collaborative
clinicians.
My friend and colleague Richard L. Garrison, MD, for example, with T3
therapy and other assertive thyroid therapies, helped countless fibromyalgia patients
to recover their health. This infuriated jealous
physicians who had gaven the patients quack diagnoses of psychiatric
disorders. Dr. Garrison was brutally punished for his crime of being
scientific, humanitarian, and effective with patients. But emails I still receive some 3 years
after his death tell me that for every physician who detested his clinical
successes with fibromyalgia patients is at least matched by recovered patients
who still adore him for enabling them to recover their health.
I republish this 1995 report with sorrow in my heart over the
persecution of courageous
physicians such as Dr. Richard L. Garrison who relieved so many patients
suffering with the intelligent use of thyroid hormone. My sorrow is even
deeper, however, over the millions of fibromyalgia patients who today
are improperly treated for profit with Big Pharma's drugs. As my
colleagues and I showed many years ago (and typified by the case we
republish today in Thyroid Science), the continued suffering of
most of those people is avoidable. But sadly, we now live in a world
where drug companies and researchers they fund steadily more make their
fortunes from sustaining the suffering of other human beings.
Max Planck, PhD
Circa 1947 |
I find it more than difficult at times to live with the
awareness that millions of fibromyalgia patients spend their lives
suffering needlessly. But I find some solace in a famous statement by
physicist Max Planck, the founder of quantum theory: "A new scientific
truth does not triumph by convincing its opponents and making them see
the light, but rather because its opponents eventually die, and a new
generation grows up that is familiar with it."
And happily, a new generation appears to me to be sprouting
in the field of fibromyalgia. At this time, Ian R. Carroll, MD at
Stanford University School of Medicine is conducting a study of T3 for fibromyalgia patients. The
title of his study is, "T3 for
Fibromyalgia: a Pilot Double-blind Non-randomized Clinical Trial." I
have no idea yet how this study will unfold. No research team I am aware
other than mine has extensive research and clinical experience in treating fibromyalgia
patients effectively with T3. But Dr. Carroll was unaware of my research team
and our work until recently, when I learned of his study and sent him a copy of my book
The Metabolic Treatment of
Fibromyalgia. As his pilot study nears its end, he and I have just begun to correspond.
With no intent of malice, but only the hope of seeing
the relief of untold and unnecessary human suffering, I am impatient for the passing
of that generation of closed-minded fibromyalgia researchers. Before
much more time passes, I hope to see a new and enlightened generation of
researchers and clinicians that declines to assign the label "fibromyalgia"
to people with chronic widespread pain and simply treats them
effectively for their hypothyroidism or thyroid hormone resistance. In
the mean time, if the case we republish
today leads to even one patient's pain relief tomorrow, I will
pleased indeed that I wrote the report fifteen years ago.
Original Abstract. The
main purpose of this case report is to illustrate a clinical observation
common to me: that fibromyalgia patients with central hypothyroidism who
fail to benefit from T4 or desiccated thyroid completely recover when
they switch to T3. Changing status in the patient was evaluated in three
ways: a psychiatrist used a depression inventory, a physical therapist
performed functional musculoskeletal assessments, and I performed algometer tender point exams and monitored symptoms. I hope the
description of the management of this case provides a protocol that
other clinicians will use with fibromyalgia patients similar to the one
who is the subject of this report.
Key Words. Algometry • Desiccated thyroid •
Fibromyalgia • Hypothyroidism • T3 • T4 • TSH
Lowe, J.C.: T3-Induced recovery from fibromyalgia by a
hypothyroid patient resistant to
T4 and desiccated thyroid. Thyroid Science, 5(6):1-7,
2010.