WindFish1993
New Member
Following up on this as I think I might have come across a possible cause for all of this why I suspect could be hypothyroidism.
Starting with all of the symptoms: I noticed my hands would get cold and stiff, my memory was shot, I had large weight fluctuations, poor libido, my hair was thinning, ED, muscle weakness. TRT helped with some of these, but I suspect it was only masking the issue.
I found some videos and pubmed articles that discuss what suppresses SHBG. Carbohydrate, sunflower oils, etc. What increases SHBG; your thyroid hormones and olive oil and some other things. As your SHBG goes down your androgens decrease too as it is all part of the feedback loop.
Less thyroid hormones, mean less SHBG production, so then cholesterol goes up, testosterone goes down and you get stuck in this negative loop.
I was only ever tested for TSH which has always been between 1.5-2 which is a normal healthy range, but TSH is just the signal for the thyroid to produce T3 and T4. It is possible to have normal TSH and deficient T3&4. In the same way we see men with normal LH and FSH but low testosterone.
Current theory is that T3/4 are deficient and that supplementing with thyroid medication could bring them into a normal range which could bring SHBG into a normal range which should bring Total T back into range. I will be requesting a lab test from my PCP soon to see if my theory is correct. If so, it could mean going from daily injections to a daily pill instead. Hopefully this also adds to the knowledge bank for others with low SHBG.
The video:
The pubmed article: Opposite effects of thyroid hormones on binding proteins for steroid hormones (sex hormone-binding globulin and corticosteroid-binding globulin) in humans - PubMed
Article which discusses what impacts SHBG:
SHBG – A Modulator to be Modulated | ZRT Laboratory
Starting with all of the symptoms: I noticed my hands would get cold and stiff, my memory was shot, I had large weight fluctuations, poor libido, my hair was thinning, ED, muscle weakness. TRT helped with some of these, but I suspect it was only masking the issue.
I found some videos and pubmed articles that discuss what suppresses SHBG. Carbohydrate, sunflower oils, etc. What increases SHBG; your thyroid hormones and olive oil and some other things. As your SHBG goes down your androgens decrease too as it is all part of the feedback loop.
Less thyroid hormones, mean less SHBG production, so then cholesterol goes up, testosterone goes down and you get stuck in this negative loop.
I was only ever tested for TSH which has always been between 1.5-2 which is a normal healthy range, but TSH is just the signal for the thyroid to produce T3 and T4. It is possible to have normal TSH and deficient T3&4. In the same way we see men with normal LH and FSH but low testosterone.
Current theory is that T3/4 are deficient and that supplementing with thyroid medication could bring them into a normal range which could bring SHBG into a normal range which should bring Total T back into range. I will be requesting a lab test from my PCP soon to see if my theory is correct. If so, it could mean going from daily injections to a daily pill instead. Hopefully this also adds to the knowledge bank for others with low SHBG.
The video:
The pubmed article: Opposite effects of thyroid hormones on binding proteins for steroid hormones (sex hormone-binding globulin and corticosteroid-binding globulin) in humans - PubMed
Article which discusses what impacts SHBG:
SHBG – A Modulator to be Modulated | ZRT Laboratory