Finally, vitamin A, thyroid, and a manly metabolism

Finally, vitamin A, thyroid and “manly” metabolism

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Problems with thyroid and vitamin A cause men to have belly fat, hair loss, and other male problems…could this be the source of all your health and sex problems?

——-Important Message—–

I discovered that the cause of my erectile dysfunction is this invisible poison in my blood…

…and it only takes 1/8 of a teaspoon of this invisible poison to make your penis flaccid…

But we eat this invisible poison every day with practically every meal, without realizing how this invisible poison devastates our insides and makes us fat, flaccid, and sick.

Specifically, it makes us resistant to insulin.

It increases fibrosis in the body and in the penis.

And it deposits dangerous fat around our middle. This fat is more likely to lead to premature aging, heart attack, and stroke…

And yet not one doctor in 10,000 has a clue about the damage this invisible poison causes.

It’s not that doctors are stupid.

I’ll tell you the very disturbing reason why your doctor doesn’t know about the invisible poison yet…

Here’s the surprising truth about this invisible poison and how you can recover from being fat, flaccid, and sick all the time like I used to be.

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Finally, vitamin A, thyroid and manly metabolism

Thyroid hormone is the master hormone.

It controls our metabolic rate.

1–5% of the population suffers from hypothyroidism – that’s clinically defined low thyroid hormone.

Many more may be suffering from subclinical hypothyroidism – that’s not at the official cutoff level for hypothyroidism but still functionally low in thyroid hormone.


Some studies put the rate of subclinical hypothyroidism at near 10%.

The negative effects of low thyroid hormone levels vary – based on our individual weaknesses.
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Because thyroid hormone provides the energy for every cell, symptoms are numerous and variable.

The Mayo Clinic lists classic hypothyroid symptoms as:

Can a common vitamin improve our thyroid function?

This study examined women at risk of low thyroid. 84 women between the ages of 17 and 50 years old took part in the study.

Two-thirds of the participants were obese and the rest were not.

Scientists took blood samples from the women before and after the experiment.

These samples included the two most important markers of low thyroid.

The researchers gave vitamin A supplements to all of the women for a four-month period. The dose was 25,000 international units.

In the present study, we investigate the impact of vitamin A supplementation on thyroid function…


Then the scientists compared the blood tests from before and after vitamin A supplementation.

Vitamin A supplementation improved the two most important markers of thyroid function…

Thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) levels decreased significantly.

This points to higher thyroid levels and indicates improved thyroid function as a result of vitamin A supplementation.

The thyroid hormone level itself also increased. This confirmed the TSH results.

Vitamin A caused a significant reduction in thyroid-stimulating hormone while active thyroid hormone levels increased


The study confirmed the increase in thyroid hormone by looking at another hormone – the storage form of thyroid hormone. This decreased.

A lot of thyroid hormone is converted from the storage form to the active form in the liver.

Once it’s made active, thyroid hormone can work on our metabolism. So the decrease in storage thyroid hormone is another good sign.

This indicates a better conversion rate – it indicates a higher amount of active thyroid hormone.

The study saw improvements in both the obese, at-risk participants and the non-obese participants.

Women tend to be selected for these studies because of the higher prevalence of thyroid problems in women.

But hypothyroidism is a problem for men too.

And this result with vitamin A supplementation should transfer to males.

The finding is supported by studies that included both male and female children.

For example:

This Moroccan study looked at the effect of Vitamin A supplementation in children.

Over half of the 298 children were boys.

These researchers found that vitamin A supplementation significantly reduced thyroid-stimulating hormone in children with vitamin A deficiency or insufficiency.

Thyroid-stimulating hormone should be low. That is a good result, and it’s in agreement with the study I talked about above.

”Our findings suggest thyroid-stimulating hormone was reduced by vitamin A treatment.”


Improvements in thyroid function could help you lose weight (if your thyroid is low).

Increased metabolism from thyroid hormone means more calories are burned, even at rest.

More calories burned means fewer calories stored as fat.

Optimizing vitamin A could restore healthy thyroid hormone levels and youthful metabolism.

Some health organizations consider high-dose vitamin A to be risky. Supplementation should not be undertaken lightly.

I recommend discussing supplementation with an informed doctor.

Both vitamin A and thyroid hormone need to be in balance. More is not always better.

—-Curious about Vitamin A? Keep reading—-

Did you know that Matt Cook takes this supplement?

A specific form of vitamin A, retinyl palmitate, is just one of many crucial and interesting nutritional substances in the supplement that Matt Cook takes. It’s called Urgent Male Assist.

If you’re curious about maintaining your healthy Vitamin A levels and gaining your sexual confidence back, try Urgent Male Assist.

Click here to get the Urgent Male Assist supplement that Matt Cook takes daily.

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Matt Cook is editor-in-chief of Daily Medical Discoveries. Matt has been a full time health researcher for 26 years. ABC News interviewed Matt on sexual health issues not long ago. Matt is widely quoted on over 1,000,000 websites. He has over 300,000 daily newsletter readers. Daily Medical Discoveries finds hidden, buried or ignored medical studies through the lens of 100 years of proven science. Matt heads up the editorial team of scientists and health researchers. Each discovery is based upon primary studies from peer reviewed science sources following the Daily Medical Discoveries 7 Step Process to ensure accuracy.
Cleveland Clinic - Hypothyroidism and Hyperthyroidism http://www.clevelandclinicmeded.com/medicalpubs/diseasemanagement/endocrinology/hypothyroidism-and-hyperthyroidism/The epidemiology of thyroid disease https://academic.oup.com/bmb/article/99/1/39/298307/The-epidemiology-of-thyroid-diseaseThe effect of vitamin A supplementation on thyroid function in premenopausal women. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23378454The Effects of Vitamin A Deficiency and Vitamin A Supplementation on Thyroid Function in Goitrous Children https://academic.oup.com/jcem/article-lookup/doi/10.1210/jc.2004-0862

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