This is a short blog post to remind people about my books.
The Thyroid Patient’s Manual, Recovering with T3 and The CT3M Handbook are part of a series of books – the Recovering from Hypothyroidism series.
The Thyroid Patient’s Manual is effectively the first book in the series and is the best all-around thyroid book to read to give a solid grounding in the new paradigm for thyroid treatment. It will help many thyroid patients understand whether they have undiagnosed thyroid issues and help those who are disappointed that their treatment appears not to be working. This book covers all the main thyroid hormone treatments and how to use them in practice as well as a host of other important and relevant information. It has a Chapter on using each of the main thyroid treatments: T4, natural desiccated thyroid (NDT), T4/T3 and T3-Only.
Recovering with T3 is the second book in the Recovering from Hypothyroidism series. It is essential for those who ultimately need to use T3 (Liothyronine) only or mostly in order to get well. It explains my own story and why I needed T3, plus all the information that someone would need to know about T3, thyroid labs when on T3, cortisol and related topics. Plus of course, it contains a detailed protocol for managing treatment, including the optional part of my protocol for correcting low cortisol (CT3M). Plus a lot more.
The CT3M Handbook is the third in the series and it provides additional information, over what is already in Recovering with T3, on the Circadian T3 Method (CT3M). CT3M is a protocol that can help someone improve cortisol levels, which are frequently low in thyroid patients.
Here is a Youtube video that explains the rationale behind all of this: https://youtu.be/BYooaLjtlII
For more information on each book see the respective book pages on the website. Note: the book pages also have a drop down menu for each book which includes the online retailers (including Amazon) that sell the books:
https://paulrobinsonthyroid.com/the-thyroid-patients-manual and
https://paulrobinsonthyroid.com/recovering-with-t3 and
https://paulrobinsonthyroid.com/the-ct3m-handbook
Best wishes,
Paul