Glutathione: A power tool in Hashimoto’s management
Our bodies have to work hard to deal with hundreds of toxic chemicals in our daily environment, in our food, and our water. Even if you eat a clean, organic diet and use non-toxic products, it’s impossible to completely avoid them. Thankfully, certain natural compounds can boost levels of our most powerful antioxidant, glutathione, in our bodies and help us better manage Hashimoto’s disease.
Glutathione is a powerful defense against toxins and inflammation. It protects the body’s cells from damage, it helps detoxify the body, and supports optimal immune function. It’s a vital tool in managing Hashimoto’s hypothyroidism.
When glutathione levels drop too low, this makes you more susceptible to autoimmune diseases such as Hashimoto’s, multiple food sensitivities, chemical and heavy metal sensitivities, chronic inflammatory disorders, leaky gut, and other immune-related issues.
By ensuring your glutathione levels stay at robust levels, you provide your body with an army of soldiers ready to “take a bullet” and shield your cells from the destructive forces of toxins and inflammation that can flare Hashimoto’s hypothyroidism.
Things that deplete glutathione
In an ideal world, we have plenty of glutathione. Our bodies make sufficient amounts and the glutathione system is not overly taxed. Sadly, the modern world is far from ideal. Chronic stress, environmental toxins, diets low in nutrients but high in inflammatory triggers, sleep deprivation, smoking, sugar, excess alcohol, and other stressors slowly deplete glutathione levels. Glutathione levels also decrease naturally as a result of aging.
A straight glutathione supplement is not effective taken orally. Instead, people can take glutathione through a liposomal cream, nebulizer, suppository, IV drip, or injections. S-acetyl-glutathione, reduced glutathione, and oral liposomal glutathione are forms that are absorbable orally. These methods will help raise glutathione levels and your general antioxidant status, which can reduce inflammation and improve health.
Glutathione is powerful but not cheap. Learn how to make your own oral liposomal glutathione here. It’s a lot cheaper this way and still very effective!
Another method that raises glutathione uses precursors to boost levels and recycle glutathione within cells.
Glutathione recycling helps with Hashimoto’s flares
Recycling glutathione entails taking existing glutathione the body has already used in self-defense and rebuilding it so it can work for us again in managing Hashimoto’s.
Research shows a link between poor glutathione recycling and autoimmune diseases such as Hashimoto’s hypothyroidism. In other words, if you’re not recycling glutathione well you’re at more risk of developing autoimmune disease or flaring an existing thyroid autoimmunity. Healthy glutathione recycling is a vital tool in managing Hashimoto’s.
Glutathione recycling helps repair leaky gut
Glutathione recycling also helps repair leaky gut and protect it from permeability. Leaky gut can lead to or exacerbate Hashimoto’s hypothyroidism, multiple food sensitivities, and chronic inflammation. When glutathione recycling is insufficient, a person is more prone to developing leaky gut and all that maladies that accompany it. Glutathione recycling is vital to good gut health.
Boost glutathione recycling for Hashimoto’s
The most important first step to boost glutathione recycling and better manage Hashimoto’s hypothyroidism is to remove the stressors depleting glutathione levels to the best of your ability. Look at your life around sleep deprivation, smoking, foods that cause inflammation, sugars and processed foods, excess alcohol, and other factors.
In addition to addressing lifestyle factors, a variety of nutritional and botanical compounds have been shown to support glutathione recycling. They include:
- N-acetyl-cysteine
- Alpha-lipoic acid
- L-glutamine
- Selenium
- Cordyceps
- Gotu kola
- Milk thistle
Booting your glutathione levels and supporting glutathione recycling can significantly help you manage Hashimoto’s hypothyroidism, inflammatory disorders, chemical sensitivities, food sensitivities, and more.