Ashwagondha leave Feeling sluggish? Having a hard time getting out of bed in the morning? Gaining weight?
Many people with vague symptoms like
these turn to dietary supplements that promise to jump-start metabolism
by bolstering their thyroids with a mix of vitamins and minerals.
Bladderwrack seaweed, iodine and an herb called ashwagondha are among the common ingredients.
But these over-the-counter products may
also contain something that’s not so natural: thyroid hormones that
should be dispensed only by prescription.
Researchers who tested 10 popular,
thyroid-boosting products sold online found that nine contained the
hormones thyroxine (T4) or triiodothyronine (T3), sometimes both.
The amounts varied, but in some cases
the recommended daily dose contained amounts of thyroid hormone as high
as or higher than delivered by prescription medications, according to
the report, published in November in Thyroid, a scientific journal.
At the recommended daily dose of four
capsules, one supplement delivered 91 micrograms of T4 and 16.5
micrograms of T3, the researchers found. In clinical practice, the
starting dose of T4 for patients with low thyroid function is just 25
micrograms a day; some older patients are given half that amount. A dose
of 75 micrograms a day is sufficient to restore function in many petite
women.
“This supplement could give you as much
thyroid hormone as you get in a prescription drug or more,” said Dr.
Victor Bernet, chairman of endocrinology at the Mayo Clinic in
Jacksonville, Fla., and senior author of the study.
He became interested in thyroid-support
supplements after seeing a patient with inexplicable test results. The
patient eventually admitted that he had been taking a supplement that a
friend recommended for “low energy.”
Thyroid disease is common — and more
common in women, affecting one in 10 older than 50. Patients may suffer
fatigue, lethargy and weight gain, but not everyone with those symptoms
has the illness. Patients taking thyroid hormone should be checked
regularly by a physician, Bernet said.
“Thyroid hormone has a narrow therapeutic window,” he said, and “it’s easy to go over or under” the optimal dosages.
Taking too much can disrupt the body’s
ability to regulate hormone levels, and may trigger thyroid disease in a
healthy person, Bernet said. Excessive doses of thyroid hormone can
also cause anxiety, insomnia and emotional changes, as well as bone loss
and serious heart problems.
Officials with trade groups that
represent supplement manufacturers said they were troubled by the
study’s findings and would welcome regulatory enforcement against what
one called the “few bad actors” producing adulterated products.
“No dietary supplements should contain
prescription drugs, period,” said John Shaw, chief executive officer of
the Natural Products Association. “They are illegal and should be
removed from the market,” he said, adding, “We don’t want dangerous
products out there.”
Both Shaw and Duffy MacKay, of the
Council for Responsible Nutrition, another supplement trade association,
suggested the tested products did not represent all of them, even
though nine of 10 contained detectable levels of medication.
MacKay, a naturopathic doctor, said most
consumers do not use “obscure” products like thyroid-support
supplements. “This is a real fringe category, the outsiders of the
outsiders of the outsiders,” he said.
While the US Food and Drug
Administration can take action against unsafe supplements once they are
on the market, the regulations governing supplements differ
substantially from those for conventional medications, which go through
extensive testing before approval. Under the Dietary Supplement Health
and Education Act of 1994, supplement manufacturers are required to
ensure that products are safe before putting them on the market.
An FDA spokeswoman said the agency has
stepped up enforcement in recent years, in one case issuing warning
letters about widespread violations of good manufacturing practices at
an Atrium Inc. plant in Wautoma, Wis., that makes red yeast rice and
other supplements. She declined to say whether the agency would be
investigating thyroid-support products.
Doctors are also concerned about iodine,
an ingredient in about half the thyroid-boosting supplements. In order
for the body to make thyroid hormone, it needs iodine, but excessive
amounts of the element may be harmful, Bernet noted.
The recent study did not analyze the
iodine content in thyroid-support supplements, but labels on five of the
products listed it as an ingredient, with amounts of 100 to 240
micrograms in the recommended daily dose. The recommended daily
allowance for adults is 150 micrograms (slightly more for women who are
pregnant or breast-feeding). A teaspoon of iodized salt contains 400
micrograms.
For iodine, as for thyroid hormone, Bernet said, there is a “sweet spot” in the diet; too much or too little may be harmful.
He and his co-authors did not make it
easy for consumers who want to avoid supplements contaminated with
thyroid hormone: The published paper did not identify the tested
products.
Bernet’s advice was to avoid all of
these supplements. “You can’t trust any of these things,” he said. “You
don’t know what’s in them.”
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