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Published: 16 y
 
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Re:


Based on the lack of teaching about the total body role of Iodine in medical college texts, according to Prof. Abraham, my opinion is that these people really know very little about Iodine and thyroid.

Couple that with the fact that all the tests baseline were established on an iodine-deficient population.

Couple that with the fact that the Japanese eat on average 13.8 mg of Iodine daily, whereas an iodoral is 12.5 mg and something seems odd, since Japanese women seem to have healthy babies.

I can only wonder how I would have "tested" over the time when I was taking iodine. I was probably hypo and hyper thyroid at different points, were I tested, and I'm sure someone would have been happy to charge me $$ to "treat" me.

You're in a gray area allright. If it were me, I'd seek out only an MD who has substantial clinical experience with iodine , and not rely on a general practitioner. It could be the kid is perfectly fine, and those tests are based on all the other little babies who were in fact substantially iodine-deficient. But, I don't know and there also could be other factors involved in your situation that even you aren't aware of. Bottom line for me if it were me, would be to seek out an MD with substantial knowledge and experience in iodine supplementation and the total bodily role of iodine.

If your own doctor whom you've hired won't share test results with you, that's probably not a good sign - I'd find another, before any damage is done.


 

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