Why You Still Feel Awful Even Though Your Thyroid Levels Are “Normal”
If you’re taking thyroid medication but still battling fatigue, weight gain, brain fog, or hair loss — you’re not imagining it. Here’s what most providers in the St. George area aren’t checking.
Every day, people across Washington County — from St. George to Hurricane to Ivins — leave their doctor’s office with the same frustrating answer: “Your TSH looks normal. Everything’s fine.” Yet they drive home exhausted, foggy, unable to lose weight, and losing handfuls of hair in the shower.
If that’s you, you deserve a better explanation. At Elemental Natural Medicine, we practice functional medicine — which means we don’t just manage your numbers. We ask why.
The problem with “normal” TSH
Standard thyroid care in most conventional settings revolves around a single marker: thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH). But this one number tells an incomplete story.[1]
Conventional practice typically flags TSH as abnormal above roughly 4.5 mIU/L. Most functional medicine practitioners prefer an optimal range closer to 1.0–2.5 mIU/L — a meaningfully narrower target that better aligns with symptom resolution.[4] And TSH alone misses critical information entirely: how much T3 (the active hormone) your cells are actually receiving, whether you’re producing thyroid antibodies that are silently attacking your gland, and whether your body is converting T4 into usable T3 at all.
This matters enormously. Hashimoto’s thyroiditis — the most common cause of hypothyroidism in the developed world — is first and foremost an immune system problem, not a thyroid problem.[3] When we treat only the thyroid and ignore the immune system, the root cause continues unchecked.
Common symptoms that get dismissed
Patients in Southern Utah often come to us after years of being told their labs are “fine” while experiencing a constellation of symptoms that functional medicine recognizes as warning signs:
These symptoms are real. They are not “just stress.” And they often persist on thyroid medication because the medication is replacing a hormone — but not addressing why your immune system is attacking your thyroid in the first place.[5]
What a complete thyroid panel actually looks like
A thorough functional medicine thyroid workup goes well beyond TSH. Here’s what we evaluate at Elemental Natural Medicine:
| Marker | Why it matters | Often missed? |
|---|---|---|
| TSH | Pituitary signal to the thyroid; important but insufficient alone | Usually run |
| Free T4 | The inactive storage hormone your body must convert to active T3 | Sometimes run |
| Free T3 | The active hormone your cells actually use for energy & metabolism | Often skipped |
| Reverse T3 (rT3) | Blocks T3 receptors; elevated in chronic stress, illness & inflammation | Rarely ordered |
| TPO Antibodies | Key diagnostic marker for Hashimoto’s autoimmunity | Often skipped |
| Thyroglobulin Antibodies | Second autoimmune marker; can be elevated when TPO is normal | Rarely ordered |
Elevated cortisol from chronic stress can inhibit the conversion of T4 to T3, reduce T3 receptor efficiency, and drive up reverse T3 — creating a state of functional hypothyroidism at the cellular level even when TSH and T4 look perfectly normal.[6]
The root causes we investigate
For patients with Hashimoto’s or persistent hypothyroid symptoms, functional medicine looks upstream at the triggers driving immune dysfunction. The research points to several key areas:[1,3,5]
The gut–thyroid connection: Southern Utah’s missing link
One of the most overlooked drivers of thyroid dysfunction is gut health — what researchers at the Institute for Functional Medicine call the nutrient–GI–thyroid axis.[2]
Over 70% of the immune system resides in the gut. When the gut lining is compromised — a condition known as intestinal permeability or “leaky gut” — undigested food particles and bacterial byproducts enter the bloodstream, triggering an immune response that can cross-react with thyroid tissue.[3]
The relationship becomes a cycle: Hashimoto’s slows gut motility, which worsens bacterial imbalances, which further inflames the immune system. Studies have found that zonulin, a measurable marker of gut permeability, is frequently elevated in Hashimoto’s patients.[6] Healing the gut is often the single most important step in calming thyroid autoimmunity.
Why this matters for patients in St. George & Washington County
Southern Utah presents some unique considerations for thyroid health. Our high-desert environment, intense UV exposure, stress patterns common in active and agricultural communities, and regional water supply factors are all elements that warrant individualized evaluation as part of a complete thyroid workup.
At Elemental Natural Medicine, we work with patients throughout the greater St. George area — including Washington, Hurricane, Santa Clara, Ivins, and Cedar City — who have been told their thyroid is “fine” but continue to feel far from it. We bring a root-cause, whole-body lens to thyroid care that most conventional practices in Southern Utah simply aren’t structured to provide.
What a functional medicine approach looks like in practice
A functional medicine approach to thyroid health is individualized. It begins with comprehensive testing — not just TSH, but a full thyroid panel with antibodies, nutrient levels (vitamin D, zinc, selenium, ferritin, B12), adrenal function markers, and a thorough assessment of gut health.[4]
From there, care is built around your specific findings. That might include dietary changes (removing gluten and inflammatory foods to reduce immune reactivity), gut healing protocols, targeted supplementation, stress support strategies, or — when necessary — bioidentical hormone optimization working alongside your existing prescribers.
The goal is not to replace your current care. It’s to finally answer the question your current care has left open: why your thyroid stopped working, and what needs to change for you to genuinely feel well again.[5,8]
Ready to get real answers in Southern Utah?
Elemental Natural Medicine serves patients throughout St. George, Washington, Hurricane, Ivins, Santa Clara, and Cedar City. If you’re still symptomatic despite “normal” labs, it’s time for a deeper look.
Schedule a Thyroid Consultation