boris
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- Joined
- Oct 1, 2019
- Messages
- 2,345
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What the article is sharing is that because of the decline in infections, body temperature has declined.
Okay, flim flam, it is suggested. However, it was never suggested that it's caused by hypothyroid. And of course, you did not state that.The article does not state this, it's merely suggested as a possible hypothesis at the end.
Okay, flim flam, it is suggested. However, it was never suggested that it's caused by hypothyroid. And of course, you did not state that.
So what if the article really states it and the reader considers that he is on a quest to accept new truths that he hasn't encountered before and be open to the consideration that there is another explanation? Instead of being dismissive and treat everything he hasn't encountered as not true at all?Okay, so just because something isn't explicitly stated in an article, we can't use our knowledge to speculate on a reason? We have to outsource that to the writer of an article?
So what if the article doesn't state that it could be due to hypothyroidism? We know hypothyroidism results in lower temps. Should I just forget everything that I've learned from Ray Peat, Broda Barnes, and other sources everytime I read any sort of health article, and limit my thinking to what the author explicitly states or hypothesizes?
Okay, flim flam, it is suggested. However, it was never suggested that it's caused by hypothyroid. And of course, you did not state that.
In this forum, hypothyroid is common knowledge. What isn't common knowledge is low-grade infection/inflammation causing body temperature to rise.Well hypothryoidism has been all but erased from common knowledge, so I don’t see why that matters that it wasn’t suggested.
News outlets go for the catchiest topics that will get the most traffic. What makes for a sexier read, hypothyroidism or pathogenic infections?
How you conflate things. Infections causing fever is common knowledge. But those infections are high grade infections. Still common knowledge? Low grade infections don't cause fever. Still common knowledge?a kid you learn infections cause fever. I think you could say it's common knowledge.
Failing to see the logic you're making.But many walk around inflamed nowadays, so body temperatures should be higher. Which makes the case for hypothyroidism being rampant, not good health.
Failing to see the logic you're making.
That is well stated, however that isn't common knowledge. Do people usually relate to having an infection when their temps are 37C or below?Infections cause a rise in temperature. It's a spectrum.
I'm not disputing that. See what I quoted out of your statement.Do you agree with the author that good health caused the drop in body temperature?
Failing to see the logic you're making.
“Most human enzymes function optimally at a temperature of approximately 37°C. An increase of temperature from 0° to 37°C increases the rate of the reaction by increasing the vibrational energy of the substrates. The maximum activity for most human enzymes occurs near 37°C because denaturation (loss of secondary and tertiary structure) occurs at higher temperatures.” Mark's Basic Medical Biochemistry 2013
I don't have one. Fish heads have thyroid glands in them. Chicken necks have them often removed although you may be able to get necks with thyroid glands intact, but fish heads usually have the thyroid in them. So soup with them will contain natural thyroid.