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Hashimoto's Thyroiditis
Symptoms, T3 & T4, and the Path to Reversal
A root-cause look at the most common autoimmune thyroid condition — and how gut health, ketogenic eating and intermittent fasting are changing the conversation.
Hashimoto's thyroiditis is the most prevalent autoimmune disease in the world, yet it is frequently under-diagnosed or managed purely with synthetic thyroid hormone — with no attention paid to the immune dysfunction driving it. This page offers a 10-question symptom screen, a clear explanation of T3 and T4, and a summary of the most compelling emerging evidence for reversal through gut healing, low-carbohydrate nutrition and intermittent fasting.
10-Question Hashimoto's Symptom Questionnaire
For each question, select the answer that best reflects how you have felt over the past 3 months. This is a screening tool only — not a diagnosis. A positive result should be followed up with a TSH, Free T3, Free T4 and anti-TPO antibody blood test.
Understanding T3 and T4: The Thyroid Hormones
The thyroid gland produces two primary hormones, both of which are essential for regulating metabolism, energy production, mood and virtually every cell in the body. In Hashimoto's, autoimmune antibodies damage thyroid tissue, progressively impairing their production.
T4 — Thyroxine (Storage Form)
- Comprises roughly 80% of thyroid output
- Largely inactive — it is a precursor hormone
- Must be converted to T3 in peripheral tissues (liver, gut, kidneys)
- Measured as Free T4 (FT4) in blood tests
- Levothyroxine — the most prescribed thyroid drug — is synthetic T4
- If conversion to T3 is impaired (e.g. by gut dysbiosis), symptoms persist even with normal T4
T3 — Triiodothyronine (Active Form)
- The biologically active thyroid hormone
- Controls metabolic rate, temperature regulation, mood and cognition
- Around 20% is produced directly by the thyroid; 80% is converted from T4
- Gut bacteria produce enzymes essential for this T4→T3 conversion
- Measured as Free T3 (FT3) — often not tested by GPs, yet more clinically relevant
- Low T3 is associated with fatigue, brain fog, depression, cold sensitivity and weight gain
Research published in Frontiers in Cellular and Infection Microbiology (2024) confirms that gut microbiome disruption reduces short-chain fatty acids, which impairs T cell regulation — and that certain gut bacteria produce the deiodinase enzymes required to convert T4 into active T3. Gut dysbiosis therefore affects thyroid hormone availability at a biochemical level. (see studies below)
The Key Antibodies in Hashimoto's
Two antibodies are the diagnostic markers of Hashimoto's:
- Anti-TPO (anti-thyroid peroxidase) — the most sensitive marker. TPO is the enzyme that synthesises thyroid hormones. When these antibodies are elevated, it signals active autoimmune attack on thyroid tissue.
- Anti-Tg (anti-thyroglobulin) — antibodies against thyroglobulin, the protein precursor to T3 and T4. Elevated in around 80% of Hashimoto's cases.
The goal of any root-cause approach is not merely to normalise TSH — it is to measurably reduce anti-TPO and anti-Tg antibodies. This is now achievable through dietary and gut-based interventions.
Can Hashimoto's Be Reversed?
Conventional medicine views Hashimoto's as a lifelong condition requiring permanent hormone replacement. The emerging integrative and functional medicine view is more optimistic: while the genetic predisposition remains, the autoimmune activity driving it can be significantly reduced — or placed into remission — by addressing root causes rather than symptoms alone.
"Hashimoto's thyroiditis is not simply a thyroid disease. The emerging research on the gut-thyroid axis reveals a condition deeply interconnected with gut health — one in which dysbiosis, leaky gut, SIBO, and impaired microbial immune regulation each play meaningful roles in both the onset and perpetuation of thyroid autoimmunity." — Healthpath, 2025
The Root Cause: Leaky Gut and Autoimmune Activation
Increased intestinal permeability — or "leaky gut" — appears to be a prerequisite for autoimmunity. Peer-reviewed research confirms elevated zonulin (a marker of gut permeability) in patients with Hashimoto's. When the gut wall is compromised, food antigens and bacterial fragments enter the bloodstream and trigger immune responses. Molecular mimicry — where immune antibodies intended for foreign proteins mistakenly attack structurally similar thyroid tissue — is the likely mechanism connecting leaky gut to Hashimoto's. (studies)
The Ketogenic Diet, Intermittent Fasting & Gut Healing Protocol
The convergence of three approaches creates a powerful, synergistic protocol for reducing Hashimoto's activity:
1. Gut Healing: The Foundation
- Remove all gluten (molecular mimicry with thyroid tissue is well-established)
- Remove dairy casein — a second major inflammatory protein
- Remove processed foods, sugar and refined carbohydrates
- Add fermented foods: kefir (non-dairy), sauerkraut, kimchi
- Supplement selenium (essential for deiodinase enzymes converting T4→T3), zinc and vitamin D
- Consider a structured gut-healing protocol (see GAPS below)
2. Ketogenic Diet — Anti-Inflammatory & Insulin-Lowering
- Very low carbohydrate eating reduces systemic inflammation — a driver of autoimmune activity
- Lowers insulin, which in Hashimoto's patients is frequently elevated and itself promotes inflammation
- Focus: organic non-starchy vegetables, grass-fed meats, oily fish (omega-3), olive oil, coconut oil, avocado
- Avoid inflammatory "keto" foods: processed meats, seed oils, artificial sweeteners, dairy (in early stages)
- Research suggests a combined low-carb / Autoimmune Protocol (AIP) approach may be optimal
3. Intermittent Fasting — Autophagy & Immune Reset
- Fasting periods activate autophagy — the cellular repair process that clears damaged immune complexes
- Enhances insulin sensitivity, reducing one driver of chronic inflammation
- A 16:8 approach (eating within an 8-hour window) is well-tolerated in most thyroid patients
- Important: ensure adequate caloric and nutrient intake during eating windows — under-eating impairs thyroid conversion
- Those with adrenal co-dysfunction should start gently (12:12) and progress slowly
Dr Natasha Campbell-McBride & the GAPS Protocol
Dr Campbell-McBride — neurologist, nutritionist and author of Gut and Psychology Syndrome and Gut and Physiology Syndrome — explicitly includes Hashimoto's disease, hormonal problems and autoimmune thyroid conditions in her GAPS conditions list.
Her position is unequivocal: all autoimmune disease originates in the gut. When the gut wall heals, she argues, the immune system rebalances itself and autoimmune antibody activity diminishes. She has stated directly: "They can be cured. I have many people with rheumatoid arthritis, multiple sclerosis, psoriasis, and other autoimmune conditions that have recovered fully."
The GAPS protocol removes all grains, starchy vegetables, legumes and sugars — effectively a grain-free, whole-food protocol with strong overlap with both ketogenic and AIP principles — while adding therapeutic amounts of bone broth, fermented foods and animal fats to actively repair the gut lining.
Key note for Hashimoto's: Dr Campbell-McBride's protocol recommends gluten avoidance for life in Hashimoto's patients, even after gut healing — consistent with the broader functional medicine literature. The GAPS protocol is typically followed for a minimum of two years.
Dr Izabella Wentz — The Thyroid Pharmacist
Dr Wentz, author of the New York Times bestseller Hashimoto's Protocol, has built a substantial evidence base around the root-cause reversal of Hashimoto's. Her published work and clinical experience supports the combination of gut healing, dietary elimination, targeted nutrient supplementation and stress reduction as a 90-day protocol capable of measurably reducing antibody levels. Her collaboration with ketogenic fasting specialist Ben Azadi has further explored the thyroid-smart application of keto and intermittent fasting for Hashimoto's patients — including a "low and slow" carbohydrate reduction approach for those with adrenal co-dysfunction or hypoglycaemia. (see studies)
Ayurvedic Perspective
From an Ayurvedic standpoint, Hashimoto's is a predominantly Vata-Pitta disorder. Vata's quality of irregularity and dryness — seen in the erratic immune signalling and the dry skin, constipation and cold sensitivity of hypothyroidism — is combined with Pitta's inflammatory quality as the immune system turns on itself. The thyroid in Ayurveda is governed by Agni (digestive fire) and sits at the junction of the Vata and Pitta regions of the body. Restoring Agni through warm, easily digestible, nourishing foods — and reducing ama (metabolic toxins) through dietary discipline and fasting — is the Ayurvedic path that maps directly onto what modern functional medicine is now confirming: heal the gut, reduce inflammation, restore hormonal balance.