Explore effective tips for thyroid health using hormone optimization to improve your well-being and metabolism.
In this educational post, I guide you through the most important—and often misunderstood—aspects of thyroid physiology and testing. I explain why relying solely on thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) can miss clinically significant issues, how free T4 and free T3 work together, and why low free T3 is a common, underdiagnosed driver of lingering symptoms such as fatigue, cold intolerance, digestive changes, mood shifts, and difficulty with weight management. I present up-to-date research on deiodinase enzymes, the impact of stress, aging, GLP-1 medications, and restrictive dieting on T4-to-T3 conversion, and how functional and integrative strategies can restore thyroid signaling. I also share how our multidisciplinary team—led medically by Dr. Maria Guadalupe Cardenas, MD (Board Certified in Internal Medicine; NPI #1164426749; Texas MD License #J2933) and clinically by me, Dr. Alex Jimenez, DC, APRN, FNP-BC, CFMP, IFMCP, ATN, CCST—coordinates chiropractic care with internal medicine oversight, functional medicine, rehabilitation, and personal injury services at Injury Medical Clinic PA (Mission Plaza Injury Medical Clinic) in El Paso, Texas. Together, we employ a modern, evidence-based approach to optimize thyroid function and whole-person health.
I have spent nearly two decades refining my approach to hormone and metabolic health because many patients—especially women over 45—were still experiencing lingering symptoms after their standard care appeared “normal.” As a clinician, I noticed that even when estrogen, progesterone, and testosterone were optimized, a substantial percentage of patients reported persistent issues: low energy, mild depression or anxiety, cold hands and feet, thinning hair, bloating or constipation, and difficulty losing or maintaining weight. These are classic symptoms of low thyroid effect at the cellular level.
Early in my journey, conventional training had taught me what almost every clinician learns: use TSH (thyroid-stimulating hormone) as the primary screening test. If TSH is elevated above the reference threshold (often 4.5–5.0 mIU/L), treat with synthetic T4 (levothyroxine), and expect symptoms to resolve as TSH normalizes. Today, we know that this approach is far too narrow. It misses a large group of patients whose free T3 is suboptimal while TSH and free T4 appear “normal.” This is the clinical blind spot that explains so many unresolved symptoms.
To truly understand thyroid status, patients need:
These three values paint a complete picture of thyroid production, conversion, and cellular activation. Without free T3, we are only guessing whether thyroid hormone is actually engaging receptors and driving metabolic processes that keep you warm, energetic, cognitively sharp, and metabolically stable.
Let me take you on a clear, step-by-step journey through thyroid physiology:
Why this matters: Free T3 does not significantly modulate TSH. You can have normal TSH and free T4 while your free T3 is low, leaving you fully symptomatic for low thyroid at the tissue level. If free T3 is not measured, you may be told your thyroid is normal—even when the cells are starving for active hormone.
The conversion of T4 to T3 relies heavily on deiodinase-1 (D1) and deiodinase-2 (D2). These enzymes are exquisitely sensitive to physiologic stressors:
The physiological logic is straightforward: when the body perceives threat or scarcity, it prioritizes survival over performance. A chief “metabolic brake” is the reduction of T3 availability.
When free T3 is suboptimal, patients may experience:
These symptoms reflect the system-wide reach of T3: when cellular thyroid signaling slows, mitochondrial energy generation dips, tissue turnover slows, neuromodulation shifts, and autonomic balance changes.
Lab slips provide a reference range built from population averages, which may overrepresent individuals with chronic illness. “Normal” doesn’t always mean optimal. For free T3, standard adult ranges often span approximately 2.1–4.5 pg/mL (may vary by lab). Patients in the lower third of this range can have higher associations with adverse outcomes—cardiometabolic disease, inflammatory states, and all-cause mortality—compared with those in the upper third.
Clinically, we aim for the upper end of the reference range for symptomatic patients when appropriate and safe, because that is where metabolic resilience typically improves. Pediatric populations provide a clue: healthy 18-year-olds tend to have much higher free T3 levels than older adults; infants may have free T3 values above 10 pg/mL—reminding us that thyroid tone governs growth, repair, and robust metabolism in youth.
For many adults, a free T3 around 4.0–5.0 pg/mL (depending on individual risk factors) can represent a practical “sweet spot” where energy, temperature regulation, cognition, and mood stabilize without tipping into hyperthyroid risk. The exact target is individualized, but the guiding principle is to recognize that the low-normal band of free T3 often correlates with symptoms.
TSH primarily monitors the pituitary’s perception of circulating T4. If T4 is adequate and TSH is in range, standard algorithms may declare success even if T3 is low at the tissue level. Because free T3 acts inside cells, symptom relief depends on its activity. Thus, a TSH-normal, T4-normal, T3-low profile is the classic footprint of underconversion—a common pattern, (often) age-related, and highly responsive to integrative strategies.
This is why, in our clinic, TSH, free T4, and free T3 are considered the baseline thyroid panel for patients with metabolic, mood, or thermoregulatory symptoms.
Our approach begins with the physiology:
Key strategies include:
Patients often ask whether starting thyroid medication means they will “be on it forever.” The answer depends on the underlying cause. In primary hypothyroidism, lifelong replacement is common. But in underconversion syndromes driven by stress, caloric restriction, aging, or reversible metabolic factors, low-dose combination therapy can be a bridge to metabolic restoration while lifestyle and integrative care address root causes. If medication is discontinued, pituitary feedback resumes, TSH rises appropriately, and thyroid gland stimulation returns. It is a dynamic loop, not a permanent shutdown.
At Injury Medical Clinic PA (Mission Plaza Injury Medical Clinic) in El Paso, Texas, our integrative model brings together chiropractic care, internal medicine oversight, functional medicine, rehabilitation, and personal injury services. I practice as both a chiropractor and a family nurse practitioner, allowing me to bridge musculoskeletal, neurophysiological, and metabolic domains. Our medical director and collaborative physician is Dr. Maria Guadalupe Cardenas, MD, Board Certified in Internal Medicine (NPI #1164426749; Texas MD License #J2933). With over 40 years of experience, Dr. Cardenas ensures rigorous medical oversight, diagnostics, and safety across our multidisciplinary programs.
Here’s how chiropractic care fits into thyroid optimization:
Dr. Cardenas’s oversight ensures appropriate lab monitoring, medication titration, and management of complex comorbidities. Together, we align chiropractic care with medical therapies, ensuring that mechanical, endocrine, and behavioral interventions move in the same direction.
For clinical perspectives on how we weave musculoskeletal care into metabolic recovery, explore my observations and case narratives:
Functional medicine is the scaffold of our thyroid approach. We address the root drivers of underconversion and receptor resistance:
These pillars are individualized and continuously monitored by our team. We use repeat labs, symptom scales, and functional movement assessments to ensure interventions are working.
In personal injury contexts, patients frequently present with pain, sleep disturbance, high stress, and limited movement—conditions that suppress T3. Our multidisciplinary model is especially valuable here:
By aligning these components, we help injured patients regain metabolic resilience, thereby accelerating tissue healing and improving daily function.
Our baseline thyroid assessment includes:
Why each test:
When lifestyle and integrative strategies do not adequately raise free T3 and relieve symptoms, we consider low-dose combination therapy:
Rationale:
Safety:
This is not universally true. It depends on the cause:
Your body’s pituitary–thyroid feedback loop is designed to resume stimulation when exogenous hormone is reduced. We partner with patients through structured taper plans and ongoing lifestyle support.
At Injury Medical Clinic PA (Mission Plaza Injury Medical Clinic), our structure is designed for integrative excellence:
This model is common in high-functioning integrative clinics: an MD provides medical oversight. At the same time, chiropractic and functional providers implement day-to-day protocols that resolve root causes and restore whole-person health.
Your health is a systems story. When hormones, nerves, circulation, nutrition, sleep, and stress move in harmony, thyroid signaling comes back online, and symptoms resolve.
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Professional Scope of Practice *
The information herein on "Hormone Optimization Tips for Thyroid Health Success" is not intended to replace a one-on-one relationship with a qualified health care professional or licensed physician and is not medical advice. We encourage you to make healthcare decisions based on your research and partnership with a qualified healthcare professional.
Blog Information & Scope Discussions
Welcome to El Paso's Premier Fitness, Injury Care Clinic & Wellness Blog, where Dr. Alex Jimenez, DC, FNP-C, a Multi-State board-certified Family Practice Nurse Practitioner (FNP-BC) and Chiropractor (DC), presents insights on how our multidisciplinary team is dedicated to holistic healing and personalized care. Our practice aligns with evidence-based treatment protocols inspired by integrative medicine principles, similar to those found on this site and our family practice-based chiromed.com site, focusing on restoring health naturally for patients of all ages.
Our areas of multidisciplinary practice include Wellness & Nutrition, Chronic Pain, Personal Injury, Auto Accident Care, Work Injuries, Back Injury, Low Back Pain, Neck Pain, Migraine Headaches, Sports Injuries, Severe Sciatica, Scoliosis, Complex Herniated Discs, Fibromyalgia, Chronic Pain, Complex Injuries, Stress Management, Functional Medicine Treatments, and in-scope care protocols.
Our information scope is multidisciplinary, focusing on musculoskeletal and physical medicine, wellness, contributing etiological viscerosomatic disturbances within clinical presentations, associated somato-visceral reflex clinical dynamics, subluxation complexes, sensitive health issues, and functional medicine articles, topics, and discussions.
We provide and present clinical collaboration with specialists from various disciplines. Each specialist is governed by their professional scope of practice and their jurisdiction of licensure. We use functional health & wellness protocols to treat and support care for musculoskeletal injuries or disorders.
Our videos, posts, topics, and insights address clinical matters and issues that are directly or indirectly related to our clinical scope of practice.
Our office has made a reasonable effort to provide supportive citations and has identified relevant research studies that support our posts. We provide copies of supporting research studies upon request to regulatory boards and the public.
We understand that we cover matters that require an additional explanation of how they may assist in a particular care plan or treatment protocol; therefore, to discuss the subject matter above further, please feel free to ask Dr. Alex Jimenez, DC, APRN, FNP-BC, or contact us at 915-850-0900.
We are here to help you and your family.
Blessings
Dr. Alex Jimenez DC, MSACP, APRN, FNP-BC*, CCST, IFMCP, CFMP, ATN
email: coach@elpasofunctionalmedicine.com
Multidisciplinary Licensing & Board Certifications:
Licensed as a Doctor of Chiropractic (DC) in Texas & New Mexico*
Texas DC License #: TX5807, Verified: TX5807
New Mexico DC License #: NM-DC2182, Verified: NM-DC2182
Multi-State Advanced Practice Registered Nurse (APRN*) in Texas & Multi-States
Multistate Compact APRN License by Endorsement (42 States)
Texas APRN License #: 1191402, Verified: 1191402 *
Florida APRN License #: 11043890, Verified: APRN11043890 *
Verify Link: Nursys License Verifier
* Prescriptive Authority Authorized
ANCC FNP-BC: Board Certified Nurse Practitioner*
Compact Status: Multi-State License: Authorized to Practice in 40 States*
Graduate with Honors: ICHS: MSN-FNP (Family Nurse Practitioner Program)
Degree Granted. Master's in Family Practice MSN Diploma (Cum Laude)
Dr. Alex Jimenez, DC, APRN, FNP-BC*, CFMP, IFMCP, ATN, CCST
(Board Certified: Family Practice Nurse Practitioner—Multistate)*
(Licensed Nurse Practitioner & Chiropractor - Multistate)*
Clinical Director
Digital Business Card
Dr. Maria Cardenas, MD
(Board Certified: Internal Medicine)
(Licensed Medical Doctor)
Medical Director, Clinical Director & Collaborative Physician
NPI # 1164426749
MD License #: J2933
Licenses and Board Certifications:
MD: Medical Doctor
DC: Doctor of Chiropractic
APRNP: Advanced Practice Registered Nurse
FNP-BC: Family Practice Specialization (Multi-State Board Certified)
RN: Registered Nurse (Multi-State Compact License)
CFMP: Certified Functional Medicine Provider
MSN-FNP: Master of Science in Family Practice Medicine
MSACP: Master of Science in Advanced Clinical Practice
IFMCP: Institute of Functional Medicine
CCST: Certified Chiropractic Spinal Trauma
ATN: Advanced Translational Neutrogenomics
Memberships & Associations:
TCA: Texas Chiropractic Association: Member ID: 104311
AANP: American Association of Nurse Practitioners: Member ID: 2198960
ANA: American Nurse Association: Member ID: 06458222 (District TX01)
TNA: Texas Nurse Association: Member ID: 06458222
NPI: 1205907805
| Primary Taxonomy | Selected Taxonomy | State | License Number |
|---|---|---|---|
| No | 111N00000X - Chiropractor | NM | DC2182 |
| Yes | 111N00000X - Chiropractor | TX | DC5807 |
| Yes | 363LF0000X - Nurse Practitioner - Family | TX | 1191402 |
| Yes | 363LF0000X - Nurse Practitioner - Family | FL | 11043890 |
| Yes | 363LF0000X - Nurse Practitioner - Family | CO | C-APN.0105610-C-NP |
| Yes | 363LF0000X - Nurse Practitioner - Family | NY | N25929 |
Dr. Alex Jimenez, DC, APRN, FNP-BC*, CFMP, IFMCP, ATN, CCST
(Board Certified: Family Practice Nurse Practitioner—Multistate)*
(Licensed Nurse Practitioner & Chiropractor - Multistate)*
Clinical Director
Digital Business Card
Dr. Maria Cardenas, MD
(Board Certified: Internal Medicine)*
(Licensed Medical Doctor)*
Medical Director, Clinical Director & Collaborative Physician
NPI # 1164426749
MD License #: J2933
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