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Dear All, I am attaching some health tips. I hope you would like it and find it usefull. Sweta Sharma
From India, Calcutta
Attached Files (Download Requires Membership)
File Type: pdf Never Feel Sick Again.pdf (46.6 KB, 939 views)
File Type: doc fruit and vegetable.doc (103.0 KB, 875 views)
File Type: xls Fitness.xls (17.0 KB, 781 views)
File Type: xls Amount Water To Drink.xls (19.0 KB, 693 views)

Very good piece of information, Shweta ! Very Useful Keep it up . Rajkumar Jaiswal 981887-0002
From India, Delhi
Lets Learn About this...

Thyroid Gland & Thyroid Hormones

The thyroid gland lies in the front of the neck between the skin and the voice box. It has a right and left lobe
each about five centimetres in length and joined in the midline. The entire gland weighs less than an ounce
(about 20 grams). Despite its small size it is an extremely important organ which controls our metabolism and
is responsible for the normal working of every cell in the body. It achieves this by manufacturing the
hormones thyroxine (T4) and triiodothyronine (T3) and secreting them into the bloodstream. Iodine is an
important constituent of these hormones. There are four atoms of iodine in each molecule of thyroxine, hence
the abbreviation T4, and three atoms of iodine in each molecule of triiodothyronine or T3.
These 2 types of
thyroid hormones are easily measurable in the blood, thyroxine (T4) and

triiodothyronine
(T3). For technical reasons, it is easier and less expensive to measure the T4 level, so T3
is usually not measured on screening tests.
Please be clear on which test you are looking at. There continues to be some confusion among doctors,
nurses, lab techs, and patients on which test is which. In particular, the "Total T3", "Free T3" and "T3 Uptake
tests" are very confusing, and are not the same test.

Thyroxine (T4)
: This shows the total amount of the T4. High levels may be due to hyperthyroidism, however
technical artifact occurs when estrogen levels are higher from pregnancy, birth control pills or estrogen
replacement therapy. A Free T4 (see below) can avoid this interference.

T3 Resin Uptake or Thyroid Uptake
: This is a test that confuses doctors, nurses, and patients. First, this is
not a thyroid test, but a test on the proteins that carry thyroid around in your blood stream. Not only that, a
high test number may indicate a low level of the protein! The method of reporting varies from lab to lab. The
proper use of the test is to compute the free thyroxine index.

Free Thyroxine Index (FTI or T7)
: A mathematical computation allows the lab to estimate the free thyroxine


index from the T4 and T3 Uptake tests. The results tell us how much thyroid hormone is free in the blood
stream to work on the body. Unlike the T4 alone, it is not affected by estrogen levels.
Free T4
: This test directly measures the free T4 in the blood rather than estimating it like the FTI. It is a more
reliable , but a little more expensive test. Some labs now do the Free T4 routinely rather than the Total T4.

Total T3
: This is usually not ordered as a screening test, but rather when thyroid disease is being evaluated.
T3 is the more potent and shorter lived version of thyroid hormone. Some people with high thyroid levels
secrete more T3 than T4. In these (overactive) hyperthyroid cases the T4 can be normal, the T3 high, and the
TSH low. The Total T3 reports the total amount of T3 in the bloodstream, including T3 bound to carrier
proteins plus freely circulating T3.

Free T3
: This test measures only the portion of thyroid hormone T3 that is "free", that is, not bound to carrier
proteins.

Thyroid Stimulating Hormone (TSH)
: This protein hormone is secreted by the pituitary gland and regulates
the thyroid gland. A high level suggests your thyroid is underactive, and a low level suggests your thyroid is
overactive.:)

Keep a good health. :-P


From India, Madras
nice information hope u would like this
From Pakistan, Karachi
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