Paul Saladino· MD
their hormones are broken because of their gut problems their inflammation problems and their insulin resistance and if you correct those things it just fixes itself you don't have to focus on the hormones
The evidence is convergent. Multiple independent sources reach the same conclusion, the underlying mechanism is well-characterized, and even the field's most cautious voices treat it as worth doing.
their hormones are broken because of their gut problems their inflammation problems and their insulin resistance and if you correct those things it just fixes itself you don't have to focus on the hormones
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yes from a hormonal perspective a lot of times fixing the inflammation fixing the insulin resistance and the hormones just automatically correct themselves
the hormones are a really good test of what's going on in your body they're like a stress test they're an indicator but they're not usually the the original problem the original problem usually lies inflammation or insulin resistance or autoimmunity and that is driving the hormonal imbalances
my first thought is always it's almost never primarily a hormonal issue I think the hormones give us indicators of their a litmus test for other systems in our body whether it's nutrient adequacy whether its overall sleep quality whether it's inflammation whether it's insulin resistance