Hormone Health Hub: Expert Insights on Testing, Balance & Better Living — selenium deficiency and thyroid
Selenium, Immunity & Viral Protection: What the Evidence Shows
Posted by Hormone Lab UK Editorial Team on
Selenium is an essential trace element with a critical role in immune function, antioxidant defence, and thyroid health. Research links selenium deficiency to increased viral replication, more severe infection outcomes, and a higher likelihood of viral mutation into new strains. Heavy metal exposure from mercury and arsenic can further deplete selenium, compounding the risk. This article explains the science behind selenium’s role in viral protection, the geographical link between selenium-deficient soils and emerging infectious diseases, and how at-home ICP-MS testing can confirm whether your selenium levels are adequate.
Part 1-Clearing up Confusion about Reverse T3: The Deiodinases & Thyroid Hormone Bioavailability
Posted by Ben White on
Thyroid symptoms can persist even when thyroxine (T4) levels appear normal — because thyroid function is profoundly affected by anything that disrupts the conversion of T4 to the active hormone T3 at the cellular level. In Part 1 of this two-part series, Margaret Groves of ZRT Laboratory explains the three deiodinase enzymes (D1, D2 and D3) that act as gatekeepers to intracellular thyroid hormone bioavailability, what affects circulating levels of T3 and reverse T3, and why selenium, iodine and inflammatory conditions all play a critical role.
Thyroid Synthesis and Selenium: A Closer Look
Posted by Ben White on
Normal thyroid blood tests don’t always explain why patients still suffer from fatigue, cold intolerance, brain fog and weight gain. In this in-depth clinical article, ZRT Laboratory explains the critical role of selenium in thyroid hormone synthesis and T4-to-T3 conversion, how heavy metals like mercury and arsenic sequester selenium and inactivate protective antioxidant enzymes, and why this can trigger Hashimoto’s thyroiditis — even when TSH, T4 and T3 appear normal.
How to Protect Ourselves Against Thyroid Imbalance?
Posted by Ben White on
The thyroid gland is under constant threat from modern life — oestrogen dominance, chronic stress, iodine and selenium deficiency, heavy metal toxicity and xenoestrogen exposure all suppress its function. This article outlines 7 key action steps you can take to protect your thyroid, from hormone rebalancing and stress reduction to targeted nutritional support and testing.